During a camping trip to Yellowstain National Park,
Mom, in high-heeled hiking books (Winchell), goes hunting, leaving Baby Herman
in Roger’s care. As you might have guessed, trouble happens as Herman casually
crawls from the edge of one disaster to another, leaving Roger to pick up the
pieces.
Charles Solomon said in his review, “The frenetic
bunny confronts a swarm of angry bees, a destructive beaver, a thick-witted
bear and a roller-coaster ride down a flume and into a murderous Rube
Goldberg-esque sawmill.”
Solomon continued, “Director Barry Cook accelerates
the pace of the gags as the film progresses, and by the time Roger and Baby
Herman land in the sawmill, the images are whizzing by at a breakneck speed
that makes MTV look sedate. There’s plenty of cartoon mayhem and wild, Tex
Avery-style takes: At one point, Roger’s eyes pop out of his head, leaving
grooves in the dirt.”
Made by a team of 220 artists as the Disney animation
studio in Orlando, FL, “Trail Mix-Up” claims richer backgrounds and more
polished animation than other recent studio cartoons. Its one major flaw is the
plot.
“Trail Mix-Up” is the third Roger Rabbit short after
four years, and all of them have followed the sequence made in the opening
scene of the 1988 film, “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” – only the individual jokes
and the setting have been changed.
I don’t think Disney artists have made new story lines
for the characters, seeing how there is now no talk about the sequel.
All of that aside, this is another short you can see
on Disney+. Check it out if you have been a fan of everything Roger Rabbit
related. You will still like this one and get lots of laughs.
Tomorrow I will be looking at a 90s comedy classic that
I just checked out earlier this year, and can’t believe I missed out on, in “Disney
Month 2025.”

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