Frank Duck Brings 'Em Back Alive | |
Director: | Jack Hannah |
Producer: | Walt Disney |
Story: | Dick Kinney |
Starring: | Pinto Colvig Clarence Nash |
Music: | Oliver Wallace |
Animator: | Al Coe Andy Engman Hugh Fraser Jim Moore |
Layout Artist: | Yale Gracey |
Background Artist: | Thelma Witmer |
Studio: | Walt Disney Productions |
Distributor: | RKO Radio Pictures |
Color Process: | Technicolor |
Runtime: | 7 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Frank Duck Brings 'Em Back Alive is a 1946 animated short film produced by Walt Disney Productions and released by RKO Radio Pictures.[1] In this installment of the Donald & Goofy series, Donald Duck appears as "Frank Duck", a jungle explorer determined to capture a live "wild man", played by Goofy. The film was directed by Jack Hannah and features the voices of Clarence Nash as Donald and Pinto Colvig as Goofy.[2]
The character Frank Duck and the title of the film are spoofs of Frank Buck and his 1930 book Bring 'Em Back Alive which was adapted into a 1932 documentary film.
Goofy appears as a wild man living in an African jungle, gracefully swinging from vine to vine (a nod to Tarzan).
Employed by the Ajax Circus, Frank Duck (Donald) arrives in the jungle on a river boat in search of a wild man. After Goofy bungles an attempt to kill Frank, Frank presents the illiterate wild man with a contract which the wild man eventually eats. Frank tries to capture the wild man and put him into a cage, but the wild man escapes, seemingly unintentionally, and helps Frank load the empty cage onto his boat.
Upon realizing his mistake, Frank angrily returns with the cage and continues to chase the wild man until he chases him into a lion's den. Viewing them as food, the lion walks into the den and starts chasing them. In the ensuing chaos, Frank and the wild man find themselves wearing each other's clothes. The lion chases them back to Frank's boat, which the wild man hops into and drives away, leaving Frank to be chased by the lion.
The short was released on December 6, 2005, on Walt Disney Treasures: The Chronological Donald, Volume Two: 1942-1946.[3]