The Winged Horse

The Winged Horse
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit series

Oswald meets the Winged Horse.
Directed by Walter Lantz
Bill Nolan
Produced by Walter Lantz
Music by James Dietrich
Animation by Ray Abrams
Fred Avery
Bill Weber
Vet Anderson
Bunny Ellison
Studio Walter Lantz Productions
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) May 9, 1932
Color process Black and white
Running time 7:49
Language English
Preceded by Let's Eat
Followed by Cat Nipped

The Winged Horse, also known by its reissue title of The Wing Horse,[1] is a short theatrical cartoon by Walter Lantz Productions, featuring Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. It is the 59th Oswald short produced by Lantz's studio, and the 112th to feature the character.

Plot

Oswald is riding on an elephant, exploring a city in the Middle East. Joining him is a female teddy bear dancing inside a booth which is also on the elephant. Suddenly, the teddy bear's booth snags onto a hook of an overhead bar. In no time, a saluki, who wears a turban and rides a camel, comes by and takes her. But because Oswald isn't too faraway, the rabbit hears her distress call, and reverses direction. Not wanting Oswald to intervene, the saluki also charges forth.

When Oswald's elephant and the saluki's camel collide head on, the riders are thrown off and are unconscious for a few moments. While the elephant and the camel fight over the crash, the saluki, however, recovers quickly as that dog picks up the teddy bear, finds a flying carpet, and takes off. Oswald momentarily awakes but it was too late. Fortunately for the rabbit, a chance to get back his partner is found when he spots a stallion with wings inside a shop. Although the horse is very frail at first, he is able to get the stallion into shape on time before finally flying.

Up in the skies, the saluki is still on the carpet with the teddy bear. Surprisingly, Oswald and the stallion catch up from behind. The saluki then conjures a rifle, and manages to fire a few shots. When the teddy bear intervenes several times, the saluki, who is no longer interested in her, kicks the bruin off the carpet. Oswald and the stallion dive to catch her in mid-air. The saluki resumes firing the rifle until a shot is landed. Despite going down after being struck, the stallion is able to get back as the horse bites on and tears the carpet apart. All four of them start to plunge.

Back on the ground, Oswald's elephant and the saluki's camel are still pummeling each other over the collision incident. Just then, Oswald, the teddy bear, the saluki, and the horse drop on them. When the dust clears, Oswald and the teddy bear are both in one piece. But the saluki, stallion, elephant, and camel somehow fused bodies. The rabbit and the bruin then continue the exploration, riding on their new conjoined creatures.

References

  1. "The Walter Lantz Cartune Encyclopedia: 1932". The Walter Lantz Cartune Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
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