The Lion Tamer
The Lion Tamer
| 02 February 1934 (USA)
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The Lion Tamer is a 1934 animated short film produced by the Van Beuren Studios and directed by Vernon Stallings and starring Charles J. Correll and Freeman F. Gosden as the voices of their popular radio characters, Amos 'n' Andy.

Reviews
Tetrady not as good as all the hype
Ogosmith Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.
Claire Dunne One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
Staci Frederick Blistering performances.
Michael_Elliott The Lion Tamer (1934) ** (out of 4) The second and final film in the Amos 'n' Andy cartoon series has our two "heroes" working at a circus where Andy is supposed to "tame" a fake lion but of course a real lion gets into the cage with him. I watched the two Amos 'n' Andy shorts back-to-back and there's no question that this one here is miles better than the first. I thought this one here actually featured a few funny moments even if the screenplay wasn't all that original. Even by 1934 there had been films where someone was supposed to be messing with a fake animal only to have a real one takes its place. I thought the scenes of Andy pushing the lion around were actually quite funny. I also thought the scene where we see inside the fake lion outfit to be funny as well. As for the rest of the film, it's certainly a product of its own time as most of the humor is just not funny and there's no doubt that the stereotypes aren't going to sit well with modern audiences. With that said, for the most part there's nothing overly offensive here once you get past the fact that it's two white guys doing the voices of the black men.
MartinHafer Back in the late 1920s, the "Amos 'n Andy" radio show debuted and it was a bit hit through the 1930s and 40s. However, there was one major problem in marketing the film--the voice actors were all white guys pretending to be black guys--very, very, very stereotypically stupid black guys. Now they tried making one film with these voice actors, "Check and Double Check". Aside from not being funny, the film also suffered because these men wore black-face throughout! So how could they solve this problem? Make "Amos 'n Andy" cartoons--and "The Lion Tamer" is one of them.The film consists of some animation that make the characters seem buffoonish--and I am sure that many folks seeing the cartoon today would be offended. However, the film made one other serious mistake--it just wasn't funny. It consists of Andy pretending to be a lion tamer--with Calhoun and Lightning wearing a lion costume. Surprise, surprise....a real lion breaks loose and he thinks this real lion is a fake...and hilarity is supposed to ensue...and doesn't. Not very good and mostly of interest for historical reasons.
ackstasis Amos 'n' Andy were two very stereotypical African Americans, voiced by Charles J. Correll and Freeman F. Gosden, who hosted a popular radio programme that ran between 1928 and 1960. In 1930, when RKO decided to make a film featuring the two characters, apparently nobody thought it problematic that everybody's favourite Black personalities were actually very White. No matter – Correll and Gosden appeared in black-face, and the film was a considerable commercial success, despite the critics hating it. Indeed, Gosden later described 'Check and Double Check (1930)' as "just about the worst movie ever." A planned sequel never came into fruition, but the two comedians later lent their voices to two short-subject cartoons featuring their trademark characters, 'The Rasslin' Match (1934)' and 'The Lion Tamer (1934).'I haven't seen the former, but 'The Lion Tamer' is nothing to write home about. Crudely-drawn, with an entirely predictable storyline, the nine-minute cartoon is largely uninteresting fair, saved only by the intriguing characterisations of the two leads. Though Amos and Andy are largely condemned nowadays as being racist creations, the characters really do work. They are stereotypes, yes, but, more importantly, each man has a distinct and identifiable personality, emphasised frequently through their repeated use of personal catchphrases (I don't know why, but I laughed every time Andy exclaimed 'Hotdog!"). Of course, when there are two lions – one fake, one real – and Andy is to "tame" the fake one, you can guess pretty far ahead of schedule where this story is leading. Of historical interest, but not much more.
rbverhoef 'The Lion Tamer' is an animated short starring Andy Brown and Amos Jones, two black men with the voices of Charles J. Correll and Freeman F. Gosden. I have not seen other cartoons with these two characters and after this one I do not really want to. The story that involves Andy as a lion tamer, a fake lion with two men in a suite, and a real dangerous one is as predictable as these things can be. You can probably guess the outcome by reading the sentence before this one.Besides the story that is not good we have a racist kind of animation. The black men (and the black audience watching the lion tamer for that matter) are caricatures, which is not necessarily a bad thing, but here it is sort of offending. Of course you should watch pass that, but with a predictable cartoon like 'The Lion Tamer' that's pretty hard.
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