The Magic Fluke (1949) Poster

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6/10
The Magic Fluke
CinemaSerf16 February 2024
"Lips", the fox, conducts a successful jazz band until he gets an offer of $50,000 to go and conduct the symphony orchestra. Like the proverbial bat out of hell, he has gone - abandoning his friend the crow whilst he - now called "Foxini" - reaps the rewards of his new-found celebrity. It turns out that the crow is a rather loyal friend to his former bandmate, but that isn't reciprocated as stardom has clearly gone to his head! Things is, though, thanks to the well-intentioned crow, his baton has been swapped for a magician's wand so the performance, well it doesn't quite go to plan, and as we all know - fame is a fickle friend. The mixture of theatrical magic, music and a lively score make this quite a fun and quickly paced enterprise that doesn't labour it's clear message of reaping what you sow.
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8/10
Second short done by UPA for Columbia and the second Academy Award nomination for UPA!
llltdesq4 October 2002
In the late 1940s, Columbia decided to farm out the production of their animated shorts and UPA offered to do them. Columbia had visions of just continuing along the same lines as before and do cartoons heavily weighted towards the standard talking anthropomorphic animals and made it clear they wanted the Fox and Crow characters to continue. UPA really didn't want to just do the same old thing, but needed the contract, so the first two shorts they made were Fox and Crow, but both were atypical of the series Columbia had done previously. This is the second (and last) Fox and Crow UPA made and both are very good. The third short UPA made proved so popular (and more lucrative for Columbia) that they saw the light and gave UPA their head and let them do pretty much what they wanted, as long as it made a profit. The third cartoon? Ragtime Bear, which featured the first appearance of one Quincy Magoo and the rest,as they say, is history. Magic Fluke is a funny, well animated marvel and worth watching. Recommended.
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10/10
Magic Fluke is another funny Fox and Crow cartoon from the newly formed UPA
tavm27 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Just discovered this, the second Fox and Crow cartoon made by UPA for distribution by Columbia. With the Crow narrating, we're treated to him and the Fox as swing musicians at a nightclub just as the Fox gets an offer to lead a live symphony orchestra. He drops the Crow right then. Much later, the destitute Crow comes upon a large hall and sees the Fox once again, now a successful conductor. But no one can find his baton so the Crow steals one from a magician nearby and gives it to his old pal who leads in the same music that Bugs Bunny played in Rhapsody Rabbit years back. Like in that earlier short, some disaster results since the wand of the Fox is indeed magical as we witness the tricks that result...Quite hilarious, this cartoon, that it seems a shame that after one more cartoon, Punchy de Leon, the Fox and Crow were no more. I suppose UPA, being such an independent unit, didn't want to handle characters created by anybody else and went about creating their own like Mr. Magoo and Gerald McBoing Boing. But those characters probably wouldn't have had a chance if Columbia hadn't made them use their most successful creations at the time first.
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