Jump to content

Motor Mania: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
FlaBot (talk | contribs)
m robot Adding: fr:Motor Mania
h3 to h2
Line 18: Line 18:
'''''Motor Mania''''' is a [[cartoon]] made by [[the Walt Disney Company]] in 1950. In this madcap motoring animation, [[Goofy]] (marketed as being him - but apparently another character drawn in a similar style) transforms into a [[Jekyll and Hyde|Mr. Hyde]]-type split personality, when he gets behind the wheel and provides the lowdown on how ''not'' to drive safely.
'''''Motor Mania''''' is a [[cartoon]] made by [[the Walt Disney Company]] in 1950. In this madcap motoring animation, [[Goofy]] (marketed as being him - but apparently another character drawn in a similar style) transforms into a [[Jekyll and Hyde|Mr. Hyde]]-type split personality, when he gets behind the wheel and provides the lowdown on how ''not'' to drive safely.


===Synopsis===
==Synopsis==
The cartoon shows how the character, as the pleasant, friendly, and good-natured "Mr. Walker", undergoes a change in personality to the belligerent "Mr. Wheeler" when he gets behind the wheel of his car. Mr. Wheeler is self-centered, inconsiderate, and borderline violent. Upon reaching his destination in town (we are not shown the character's reason for traveling) and leaving his automobile, he reverts to the mild-mannered Mr. Walker, whereupon he is the victim of other motorists' unsafe (and sometimes even predatory) driving habits. However, once he returns to his car, he becomes Mr. Wheeler again, seeking to impose his own will upon traffic, to the point of blaming the tow truck that hauls him away for his slow pace after an auto accident.
The cartoon shows how the character, as the pleasant, friendly, and good-natured "Mr. Walker", undergoes a change in personality to the belligerent "Mr. Wheeler" when he gets behind the wheel of his car. Mr. Wheeler is self-centered, inconsiderate, and borderline violent. Upon reaching his destination in town (we are not shown the character's reason for traveling) and leaving his automobile, he reverts to the mild-mannered Mr. Walker, whereupon he is the victim of other motorists' unsafe (and sometimes even predatory) driving habits. However, once he returns to his car, he becomes Mr. Wheeler again, seeking to impose his own will upon traffic, to the point of blaming the tow truck that hauls him away for his slow pace after an auto accident.


This cartoon shows that road rage is not a new phenomenon, but an issue recurring each generation of drivers. Due to its subtle topicality, it and two 1965 Goofy cartoons about [[freeway]] safety (''[[Freewayphobia #1]]'' and ''[[Goofy's Freeway Trouble]]''), have been shown in driving schools across the continent.
This cartoon shows that road rage is not a new phenomenon, but an issue recurring each generation of drivers. Due to its subtle topicality, it and two 1965 Goofy cartoons about [[freeway]] safety (''[[Freewayphobia #1]]'' and ''[[Goofy's Freeway Trouble]]''), have been shown in driving schools across the continent.


===Trivia===
==Trivia==
{{trivia|date=February 2008}}
{{trivia|date=February 2008}}
{{refimprove|section|date=February 2008}}
{{refimprove|section|date=February 2008}}

Revision as of 10:15, 15 September 2008

Motor Mania
Motor Mania poster.
Directed byJack Kinney
Produced byWalt Disney
Animation byn/a
Color processTechnicolor
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Running time
7 min (one reel)

Motor Mania is a cartoon made by the Walt Disney Company in 1950. In this madcap motoring animation, Goofy (marketed as being him - but apparently another character drawn in a similar style) transforms into a Mr. Hyde-type split personality, when he gets behind the wheel and provides the lowdown on how not to drive safely.

Synopsis

The cartoon shows how the character, as the pleasant, friendly, and good-natured "Mr. Walker", undergoes a change in personality to the belligerent "Mr. Wheeler" when he gets behind the wheel of his car. Mr. Wheeler is self-centered, inconsiderate, and borderline violent. Upon reaching his destination in town (we are not shown the character's reason for traveling) and leaving his automobile, he reverts to the mild-mannered Mr. Walker, whereupon he is the victim of other motorists' unsafe (and sometimes even predatory) driving habits. However, once he returns to his car, he becomes Mr. Wheeler again, seeking to impose his own will upon traffic, to the point of blaming the tow truck that hauls him away for his slow pace after an auto accident.

This cartoon shows that road rage is not a new phenomenon, but an issue recurring each generation of drivers. Due to its subtle topicality, it and two 1965 Goofy cartoons about freeway safety (Freewayphobia #1 and Goofy's Freeway Trouble), have been shown in driving schools across the continent.

Trivia

  • Goofy's character, Mr. Walker, calls a neighbor "Mr. Geef", the name Goofy himself would go by in many of his "Goofy the Everyman" shorts of the 1950s.
  • This short was awarded the Buyer Trophy for the best film on traffic safety.
  • An excerpt of this cartoon was shown on the House of Mouse episode, Max's New Car.
  • "Motor mania" is also the name for J. Thaddeus Toad's craze for motorcars in the Wind in the Willows segment of The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad.