A Hick a Slick and a Chick (1948) Poster

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7/10
I got ideas
lee_eisenberg20 March 2010
One of Arthur Davis's few cartoons as a director (Warner Bros. couldn't afford to keep four animation units opened, so they closed his) features a yokel mouse going to see his sweetheart, only to find her with a suaver mouse. The suaver mouse seems to be prepared for anything. But what about ermine? Obviously the male-female relationships are a little dated, but I think that if a cartoon makes you laugh, then it's a good one. As it was, "A Hick a Slick and a Chick" appeared in Cheech and Chong's "Up in Smoke". Interesting how these things turn out.

Anyway, worth seeing, if only once. Just don't get any ideas.
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7/10
Warner Bros.' Cartooning Prophets cram a lot of warnings . . .
oscaralbert22 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
. . . intended for We Americans of (The Then) Far Future into the seven minutes of A HICK, A SLICK, AND A CHICK. It's said that "two are company, but three's a crowd," and this maxim is borne out in HICK as much as it's come to pass in Present Day USA. The two guys in HICK portend our now-endemic O.J. Simpson/Clarence Thomas/Tiger Woods Syndrome as ethnic guys Hell-bent upon displaying a White Trophy Mate. The HICK and the SLICK of the title are both BROWN mice, while Daisy Lou is at least as White as Mariah Carey. Warner names the gangster thug rodent "Blackie," while the seemingly-harmless runt with a Bill Cosby-like spit-eating grin goes by "Elmo." Speaking of serial sex predators, the trio's Holy Grail proves to be an "Ermine" (or white weasel, aka "stoat") winter belly fur coat of the sort favored by the Roman Cult of Sexual Perversions that's been around for a couple thousand years. The Jerry Sandusky's of that world were just getting a toe-hold (or finger-grab) dug into America's nooks and crannies when Warner released HICK. This sad saga ends with the said trophy being literally carved out of tender Pussycat butt, which is Warner's way of saying that you cannot make a Commander-in-Chief out of a Sow's Ear!
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10/10
Very unusual cartoon even for Art Davis, known for such unique stuff.
gcarras22 August 2007
This short, which according to more recent info (I tried to correct the date) is from early 1948, is a Cinecolor short and makes unique use of the Popeye storyline with a country bumpkin mouse instead of the Popeye type (Warners themselves would use this for their live monkey short "Orange Blossoms For Violet" and their Daffy Duck cartoon, "Mussle Tussle"), with a mouse Elmo (Stan Freberg and Mel Blanc) planning on an ermine quest--but gets on the ermine in an unusual way...

Great three iris shot opening of the three mice, and use of "Rural Rhymthm", the old Hoosier Hot Shots novelty number. One of Warner Brothers last cartoons about sweetheart mice till Chuck Jones's "Mouse Warming". I noticed something these two have in common--more "sexy" girl mouse leads, a recurring musical theme ("Rural Rhythm" for "A Hick, A SLick, and a Chick", and "L'Amours, ToJours," for "Mouse Warming" (neither mentioned din their respective entries), the supporting appearance of famous WB cats in otherways nearly oneshot cartoons (Sylvetser, here, and Claude in the latter--Art Davis loved depicted Sylvester differently in terms of voice in this and "Cats as Cats Can", but, then this was an early effort of Sylvester) also this and "Mouse Warming" seem to to be the only use (not counting that one Speedy Gonzales shorts with him as a mouse Lothario whose stealing "senereeta mice" is discarded, to use teen or young adult mouse protagonists (though Blackie, the villain, is clearly adult!). BTW the names..the Hick-Elmo and Chick-Daisy Lou. Other sweetheart mouse characters in WB cartoons were either totally adult-type (Friz Freleng's Frankie and Johnny tribute from 1937 "He was her man" and Robert McKimson's Honeymousers) or totally cute kid like (Ironically Tex Avery's "squeaky" (Bernice Hansen voiced) mouse toons!).

And look for a special iris out, too.
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8/10
For Historical purposes only.
lukeneedssand29 June 2021
This is just a weird cartoon, and Definitely intended for the Adult audience back then, and Probably now. Of course with some very Wrong portrayal of Sexes in terms of The Modern century, But Still interesting to watch. I'm not too mind-blown by the animation, It almost feels like a Looney tunes cartoon taking place in the universe of Disney's the Great mouse Detective. Storywise its alright, but A little too simple for my liking. A cartoon hidden in the basements of Looney tunes history, and a great cartoon for the Historical aspect.
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10/10
Two's Company, Three's A Crowd
Dawalk-114 October 2017
This is one of the Merrie Melodies I didn't see when I was little/younger. While looking at the title cards that aren't unavailable due to the Blue Ribbon Merrie Melodies title cards used in some of those shorts' places instead in the WB cartoon filmography listing on the archived version of Dave Mackey's site, this one caught my attention and I decided to view it a few nights ago. I'm so glad I did and that I made the right choice of what to check out next. I've since added this to my favorite LT/MM one-shots list.

I don't believe I'm as familiar with Art Davis's directorial works, as I know in the 1940s, he had the directorial position and animation unit in operation for three years and I think once more for one year in the '60s. But this is one directed by him that I enjoyed. One good way that I can describe this, it's like if the country mouse (Elmo) and the city mouse (Blackie) were in a rivalry competing for the affections of a female country mouse (Daisy Lou). Because that's basically what it is. To impress and win over Daisy Lou, Elmo sets out to search for and fetch an ermine coat. But while he does this, he has the misadventure of accidentally ending up drunk and the confusing irony of just so happening to have a run-in with a cat named Herman. I'll leave how Elmo manages to achieve success for anybody reading this to discover for himself/herself.

I like the characters so much that I wish more could've been done with them. As I think that this is one of those one-off shorts that are worthy of more with enough potential and would rather see more of them than some of the more common WB cartoon featurette characters. The animation quality is as much of high quality as are several, other WB cartoons from this decade, as well as the layouts and backgrounds. The music is fine as usual. The voice work is well done. One of my favorites from the '40s. I'd like to see this brought to DVD and I can't wait for the day that it does. Recommended.
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10/10
One of Art Davis' very finest
nnwahler23 April 2017
Of all the Warner cartoons, this is the one that reminds me most of a Jay Ward TV cartoon—no real mystery, as Bill Scott wrote the script.

Of all the Davis cartoons (and he directed many fine ones in the three years he was director), this one and "Riff Raffy Daffy" are probably the cream of the crop. The interaction of the three characters is simply hysterical, particularly when the hero Elmo searches drunkenly for a coat made of ermine; he then sees a cat's food dish with the name Herman, and he vanquishes the cat through sheer stupidity. I can just picture George Of The Jungle or Bullwinkle speaking this dialogue.

All three voice artists shine here, but I award special kudos to Stan Freberg in the Elmo role. Unlike Mel Blanc, all of whose voices I can link to the same voice timbre, there's no common thread uniting all of Freberg's voices…..a dumb character, a clever rodent, or a feminine voice. I can't trace any of them to the same guy.

No real matter. Director Art Davis reportedly called this his own favorite among all the cartoons he directed.
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