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The House of Tomorrow (1949 film)

The House of Tomorrow
Directed byTex Avery
Story byJack Cosgriff
Rich Hogan
Produced byFred Quimby
StarringFrank Graham
Tex Avery
Joi Lansing[1]
Narrated byFrank Graham
Don Messick
Music byScott Bradley
Animation byWalter Clinton
Michael Lah
Grant Simmons
Color processTechnicolor
Production
company
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • June 11, 1949 (1949-06-11)
Running time
7:00
LanguageEnglish

The House of Tomorrow is a 1949 animated theatrical short directed by Tex Avery.[2] It was part of a series of cartoons Avery did satirizing technology of the future which included: The Car of Tomorrow, The T.V. of Tomorrow, and The Farm of Tomorrow. These were spoofs of live-action promotional films that were commonly shown in theaters at the time.

The film is a straightforward narrated showcase of appliances said to be found in a typical house in the year 2050, roughly a hundred years after the cartoon was made, each one actually an outlandish joke. Most of the time, the inventions follow a similar pattern of being made for each member of the family, but ending with a fatal version for the "mother-in-law".

Plot

An off-screen narrator introduces The House of Tomorrow, a pre-fabricated luxury residence that unfolds from a tiny gift box. The house has separate entrances for each member of the family: for Fido, a tiny door surrounded by bones; for Junior, a door covered in muddy handprints; for the mother, a wide and curvy door to accommodate her large form from eating sweets; for the father, a saloon door; and, for the mother-in-law, a heavily barricaded door with a welcome mat that reads "SCRAM!"

Once inside, the narrator offers a tour of the house's modern conveniences, presented as a series of brief vignettes consisting of sight gags. The house contains all of the following:

  • Carpeting so lush and deep that a passing butler sinks into it up to his neck.
  • A climate control system that, with the push of a button, sends a raining thundercloud across the room
  • A trophy room where animal heads share space with a liquor bottle that was "killed" one New Year's Eve.
  • A button to fool tax assessors by transforming the home's appearance and its inhabitants into that of a dilapidated hovel resided in by poor people.
  • A machine to handle Junior's nonstop questions by yelling "Ahh, shaddap!" and plugging his mouth with a toilet plunger.
  • An automatic sandwich maker that shuffles slices of bread and cold cuts like playing cards before "dealing" the sandwiches to diners.
  • A tanning machine that flips the user with a giant spatula.
  • A guest chair that can adjust its shape for any visitor, whether tall, short, or the mother-in law (for her, it transforms into an electric chair).
  • A three-screen television set the whole family can watch at once: a cooking show for the mother, a western for Junior, and, for the "tired businessman," a film of a beautiful woman (Joi Lansing) in a bathing suit.
  • Individual medicine cabinets for each member of the family; the father's and mother's are filled with various hygiene implements, Junior's contains a single large bottle of castor oil with a spoon, and the mother-in-law's is filled with vials of poison.
  • An electric shaver that can remove not only stubble, but also almost all of a man's facial features.
  • A toaster that pops its users up in the air instead of the toast.
  • A juicer that removes the seeds from oranges by noisily spitting them into a spittoon.
  • A frying pan that prevents bacon from curling by hitting it with a tiny mallet.
  • An oven with a window to let one see everything inside (a roasting chicken screams for its modesty and pulls down a blind).
  • A device to remove the burps from radishes by pressing each one as it passes through, forcing out a literal burping sound.
  • A pressure cooker that can cook an entire meal at once; it's shown that it does so via the heat from a catastrophic explosion which sends all the food airborne, along with the stunned housewife herself.
  • A refrigerator with a built-in window for those curious about whether the light turns off when the door is closed. It reveals a little gnome-like creature pushing an "off" button each time.

As the narrator signs off, a typewritten letter suddenly appears on the screen:

PATRONS ATTENTION!!
Due to numerous requests of the tired business-men in the audience, we are going to show you the girl again.
The Management

The short then ends with a repeat of the film of Joi Lansing in her swimsuit.

See also

References

  1. ^ "AVERY…. Vol. 2??? WELL, IMAGINE THAT! -". cartoonresearch.com. 7 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  2. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 146–147. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7.

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