Showing posts with label Marcie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marcie. Show all posts

Sunday, June 6, 2021

What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown?


 Premiered May 30, 1983.

Charlie Brown (Brad Kesten) is adding new pictures to his photo album, including photos from his time as an exchange student in France (as seen in the movie Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (And Don't Come Back!)).  His sister Sally (Stacy Heather Tolkin) mentions that he never told her what happened after he and his friends left the chateau.  Chuck decides it's time to tell Sally about the last part of the trip:

After leaving the chateau, their rental car is involved in a collision and the car falls apart when it reaches the next town.

Snoopy (Bill Melendez) is able to trade it for another car because Marcie tells the rental agent (Monica Parker) that Snoopy is a World War I Flying Ace.  

Unfortunately, the only car available is an old one with a crank-starter.  This leads to Charlie Brown getting injured every time he has to crank the starter.

After a few miles, the gang checks their roadmap and realizes they've taken a wrong turn somewhere.  At nighttime, they stop and camp by the side of the road.  Linus (Jeremy Schoenenberg) feels that there's something familiar about the place and walks down to a nearby beach.  

He realizes it's Omaha Beach in Normandy, site of the famous D-Day allied invasion during World War II!  Linus imagines that he's watching soldiers and planes fight on the beach.

Later on, Linus brings his friends to the beach and tells them of its historical significance.  He leads them to the American cemetery and recalls comments by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.  The general stated that the soldiers who stormed the beach did so "not to gain anything for ourselves, not to fulfill any ambitions that America had for conquest, but just to preserve freedom, systems of self-government in the world."  

The gang sees white crosses for miles around them, each cross marking the resting place of someone who died during the invasion.  Since it starts to rain, Linus says they should return to their car.

Sometime later, they are lost again and ask a boy for directions.  He says they're on "the road to Ypres." Linus says that Ypres, Belgium is the site of a famous World War I battle.  They drive to a field of poppy flowers and Linus talks about their significance.  A legend says that when battles are fought, all white poppies turn red, and a white cross can be found at the center of every poppy.

They wander through the field and see WWI-era trenches and the British field dressing station, where Lt. Col. J.M. McCrae wrote the famous war poem "In Flanders Field."   Linus then recites the poem, which begins with these lines:

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

When Charlie Brown has finished recounting this story to Sally, he says Linus asked "what have we learned, Charlie Brown?"  

Review:
Charles Schulz and his collaborators Lee Mendelson and Bill Melendez were particularly proud of What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown, since it paid tribute to fallen soldiers and because it's so beautifully animated.  The special won a Peabody award for "distinguished achievement and meritorious public service."  If it's not obvious from my summary, the question "what have we learned" is also asking all of human kind what it has learned from fighting two world wars.  


It's worth noting that this is the only true sequel to any Peanuts animated film or TV special.  There is very little "continuity" from one special to the next, but What Have We Learned picks up right where Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (And Don't Come Back!) left off.  

I should mention that I had not seen What Have We Learned until a few years ago, so I bring no nostalgia to this review.  I have a degree in history and I've been interested in events that shape the world and boundaries of nations for my whole life.

Marcie (Michael Docker) translates a French inscription at the D-Day memorial.

As a Peanuts fan and a historian, I consider this a good introduction for children of a very serious topic.  I can imagine children watching this special and asking their parents and grandparents about D-Day and the Battle Of Ypres.  If I'd seen this special as a kid, I definitely would've hit the library in search of more information. 


This special contains very serious subject matter for a special aimed at kids.  Schulz and company show that they were up to the task, since the discussion of war never gets heavy-handed and strikes all the right tones.

It's appropriate that Linus is the kid who tells his friends about the battlefields.  He's always been the "emotional center" of animated Peanuts specials, ever since A Charlie Brown Christmas.  When Linus quotes Eisenhower's comments about D-Day, we hear audio of the real Eisenhower's voice (recorded during a 1964 CBS News interview at Normandy).  This adds more weight and depth to the special than simply having Linus speak the words.    


On a lighter note, there's a running gag involving a gaggle of ducks that swarms their car, much to Snoopy's consternation.  The ducks are funny (and funny looking) and provide a nice contrast to the more serious material.  The ducks also don't stick around long enough to wear out their welcome.


The voice actors are all well-cast and "sound like" their characters.  Linus carries the special, so his portrayer Jeremy Schoenenberg has to work harder than any other voice actor in What Have We Learned.  Schoenenberg is great here and he would play Linus in three other specials, plus The Charlie Brown And Snoopy Show.  


I mentioned animation above and it's absolutely gorgeous.  Mendelson, Melendez and their team give us beautiful drawings of cemeteries, beaches and small European towns.  For the depictions of war, Melendez and his animators mix actual rotoscoped WWII combat footage with traditional animation and it looks stunning.  Here's one example


And here's another:


However, What Have We Learned is not without flaws.  Like Bon Voyage, this special includes adults.  Once again, the adults featured here add nothing and they took me out of the special and brought me back to reality whenever they appeared onscreen.  


The other problem is a running gag involving the rental car's crank-starter.  Three times, when the car is started, Charlie Brown injures his hand while cranking the starter.  He doesn't just say "AAUGH!," he screams and writhes in agony, while Peppermint Patty (Victoria Vargas) mocks him.  The crank-related injuries feel extremely out of place in an otherwise great special.  I guess they were going for physical comedy, but it falls flat all three times.  


Music:
The soundtrack of What Have We Learned features music by Judy Munsen (who also worked on Bon Voyage) arranged by Dawn Atkinson.  It mostly consists of flute, piano and synthesizer tunes.  All of the music provides an excellent accompaniment to the special's subject matter.



Availability:
This special has been released on a DVD called Peanuts:Emmy Honored Collection.

I enjoyed What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown for all the reasons stated above Charlie and I recommend it to Peanuts fans of all ages.  It's a wonderful tribute to those who fought and died during the world wars.  Linus' lessons about the wars and the amazing rotoscoped scenes are impressive.  But the appearance of adults and the unfunny crank-starter scenes prevent me from giving it my highest rating.  

J.A. Morris' rating:








3 Sparkys.  

Friday, November 6, 2015

Race For Your Life, Charlie Brown


Premiered August 24, 1977.
Charlie Brown:I decided to come to camp, because I've never been much of a person.  I thought maybe coming to camp would help me grow up, and maybe make me into a leader.  I could use leadership qualities.
Peppermint Patty:You could say that again, Chuck.  You couldn't lead a dog on a leash.


Charlie Brown (Duncan Watson) and friends visit Camp Remote, located in the mountains.

 
As soon as they arrive, they're harassed by three bullies (Kirk Jue, Jordan Warren and Tom Muller)  and their very aggressive cat named Brutus (Jackson Beck).


The bullies tell Chuck and Sally that they run the camp and that Charlie Brown better not step out of line.  Brutus goes after Snoopy and Woodstock (both voiced by Bill Melendez) and gives them a scare.  Thankfully, Linus (Liam Martin) intervenes with his blanket and scares the bullies away.

"Fastest blanket in the West!"
Later on, Chuck tells Peppermint Patty (Stuart Brotman) that he feels like he's never done anything and that he decided to go to camp because it will help him grow up and possibly teach him how to be a leader.

The boys and girls stay in separate tents.  Charlie Brown lodges in a tent with Franklin (Joseph Biter), Schroeder (Greg Felton) and Linus.


The girls' tent consists of Peppermint Patty, Lucy (Melanie Kohn), Marcie (Jimmy Ahrens) and Sally (Gail Davis).  Peppermint Patty decides that every decision of the tent will be made democratically via secret ballots.  But Peppermint Patty ends up getting her way no matter how the others vote.


The kids face off in several competitions.

First up is Tug Of War.  Charlie Brown's team faces the bullies. 


Unfortunately for Chuck, the Bullies win by cheating.


During the potato sack race, Peppermint Patty's squad is matched against the bullies. 


Once again the bullies cheat their way to victory.  They use sacks that have holes in the bottom!


The final contest is the raft river race.

The bullies have won the previous two years and are confident they'll win again.  Their "raft" has a motor, radar and sonar.  To make matters worse, they inflate it by stealing air from the other kids' rafts.  But shortly into the race, the bullies crash into a dock!  This give the other kids a chance to take the lead.


Charlie Brown and Peppermint Patty's teams are doing well, but not for long.  The bullies move a sign at a fork in the river that leads the kids into a blasting range!  Thankfully, Snoopy is able to clear their path.


Shortly after that, disaster strikes.  A vicious thunder storm wrecks their rafts.  Charlie Brown worries when he can't find Snoopy and Woodstock.


The bird and the beagle are worried about each other, since they're separated during the wreck.


Charlie Brown and Peppermint Patty's teams put the race aside and join forces to find Woodstock and Snoopy.


Will they find their animal friends?  Can one of their teams win the race and finally give the bullies their much-deserved comeuppance?

Review:
Race For Your Life, Charlie Brown is Chuck's third feature film and it's the most visually striking so far.  Chuck and the gang are taken to places we've never seen in Peanuts animation before like Rocky Mountains, the desert, cattle farms and white water rapids.


Charlie Brown shows some development and self-awareness in this film, with his desire to grow up and become a leader.  While he does get called "blockhead" a few times, he does demonstrate a level of leadership we haven't seen before.

Schroeder brings his piano on the raft race.
There's a nice scene in the middle where the kids find a vacant cabin.  They dance together and sing "She'll Be Comin' 'Round The Mountain."  Maybe it's a diversion from the central story, but it's nice to see them having a good time and acting like kids.

While the other kids freak out, Charlie Brown remains level-headed.
I'll mention that very little kids might find the thunder storm scenes hard to handle, since Woodstock is put in jeopardy.  It's one of the most intense moments in any Peanuts film or special.

This movie includes some interesting pop culture references.  Snoopy's motorcycle helmet is likely meant to remind us of one worn by Peter Fonda in Easy Rider.  Peppermint Patty's raft flies the Women's Liberation flag, which is another nice touch.  

Snoopy encounters a somewhat goofy looking bear...
 
...who is apparently afraid of beagles!

Race For Your Life is not without faults.  The plot uses the "secret ballots" gag at least one time too many.  The bullies are never named.  Chuck and the others just call them "the bullies" or "those bullies," and the bullies never address each other by name.  Maybe they were supposed to be stand-ins for every real life bullies members of the audience have encountered?

The bullies trash the other kids' rafts!
I've said here before that I don't like to see adults in Charlie Brown cartoons.  But one presumes that there is some sort of adult supervision at Camp Remote.  Charlie Brown and the others find themselves in deadly scenarios more than once.  How could anyone allow the kids to compete in such a dangerous race?  And how could adults let the bullies' win by cheating over and over again?  In this regard, Race For Your Life reminds me of Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire (how could adults allow kids to risk their life in the Tri-Wizard Tournament?  But I digress).


The voice actors all well cast and "sound like" the characters they're portraying.  Duncan Watson and Stuart Brotman are especially good as Charlie Brown and Peppermint Patty.  The bullies are played by Kirk Jue, Jordan Warren and Tom Muller and they REALLY make you loathe the bullies and everything they do.

Brutus, the bullies' cat is voiced by Jackson Beck.


 He was a prolific voice actor on radio and cartoons from the 1930s through the 1990s.  Beck also voiced the character Brutus on a series of Popeye cartoons.  So perhaps Brutus the cat's name is something of an inside joke.


Music:
Ed Bogas and Judy Munsen composed the music for this movie and it's a very diverse score.  Scenes that feature Snoopy's motorcycle rides are punctuated by distorted electric guitar. 


The raft race is features bluegrass tunes.  Woodstock and Snoopy's explorations in the woods are accompanied by pastoral flute music.  Other music places the cello in the forefront.

Snoopy and Woodstock sail past the bullies.
Larry Finlayson sings the title song and another song later in the film.  Both songs were written by Bogas and Finlayson does a nice job handling vocal duties.  All in all, it's a good soundtrack.    

Race For Your Life, Charlie Brown is entertaining and action packed from start to finish and its plot even allows Charlie Brown to (sort of) achieve a rare victory.  It's recommended, but the problems listed above prevent it from receiving a higher rating.

J.A. Morris' rating:







 3 Sparkys.