2000 B.C.
Two prehistoric friends, a clumsy cave dweller and his quick witted companion, stumble into a day packed with wild invention and slapstick mayhem. The duo tries clever fixes that promptly backfire, sending them on a chase through a landscape filled with oversized rocks, bouncing creatures, and... Read more
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About 2000 B.C.
Two prehistoric friends, a clumsy cave dweller and his quick witted companion, stumble into a day packed with wild invention and slapstick mayhem. The duo tries clever fixes that promptly backfire, sending them on a chase through a landscape filled with oversized rocks, bouncing creatures, and improbable contraptions. Visual humor carries the pace as the screen erupts with bold shapes, swift movements and luminous punchlines that land and vanish before you can blink. The jokes rely on timing and sight gags rather than dialogue, capturing the spirit of early Paul Terry Toons energy without getting tangled in sentiment.
Directed by Frank Moser, the 1931 short belongs to Paul Terry's Toons lineup, a compact studio run of animated humor that laid out brisk punchlines and simple visual ideas that defined early sound cartoons. The piece leans on timing and expressive poses rather than dialogue.
Box office data for this short isn't publicly documented, which is common for many 1930s cartoons. It would have appeared in theaters as part of a package program, paired with live action features and other animated shorts.
No major awards or nominations are recorded for this specific 1931 short. It sits among routine Toons outputs produced for quick distribution, rather than prestige pieces aimed at festival circuits. The absence of awards aligns with its function as disposable entertainment in a theater program.
Reception and themes are hard to pin down for such an early release, but this short exemplifies the era's preference for rapid sight gags and clear physical humor. It emphasizes invention and curiosity in a prehistoric setting, delivering lighthearted humor without lingering on sentiment or moralizing. The animation uses bold shapes and physical humor that would prefigure later cartoon styles, giving audiences of the time a reliable source of humor between feature films.
Details
- Release Date
- June 14, 1931
- Runtime
- 6m
- Type
- Movie
- Genres
- Animation, Comedy
- Country
- United States
- Studio
- Terrytoons +1 more
- External Links
- View on IMDB