Monday, August 29, 2011

Skinny and Fatty

Blast from the past of "The CBS Children's Film Festival"







Skinny and Fatty (Chibideka monogatari)

Directed by N. Terao; written by Mitsuo Wakasugi and Seiya Yoshida

Cast: H. Sha (Kenkichi Komatsu), Y. Kataoke (Yuso Oyama)

(Japan, 1958, 46 minutes)

Watch entire film



Thanks go to Video Americain manager Scott Wallace Brown for tracking down a DVD-R version of this beloved chestnut from bygone days. Skinny and Fatty was easily my favorite movie from the CBS Children's Film Festival series, a 1967 television series hosted by the puppets 'n' puppeteer team of Kookla, Fran & Ollie. This 1958 children's film tells the story of chubby new-kid-in-school Oyama ("Fatty"), who is teased and ostracized until befriended by popular schoolmate Komatsu ("Skinny"), who shows him that he has to believe in himself and always try to do his best - even if he fails.





Skinny (Komatsu) and Fatty (Oyama)



Komatsu's attempt to help Oyama master the rope climb in gym class is particularly poignant, though not exactly tear-inducing this time around, viewing it 40 some years later.





Give 'em enough rope: "Don't quit!" Skinny implores Fatty



Like any good Baby Boomer, I was reared on KFO during the latter end of their original 1947-1957 run on NBC and ABC, probably first watching them in syndication in the early '60s (my childhood memory timeline really didn't start until JFK's assassination in November 1963 when I was 6 years old). But I really started to appreciate them when they moved to CBS to host this series featuring "films from all over the world especially for kids."





Behaving parents can watch, too!



As hosted by the "Kuklapolitan Players" - puppets Kukla ("doll" in Russian) and Ollie (aka Oliver J. Dragon), created and performed by Burr Tillstrom, and Fran Allison (who had been working together as early as 1948, with the original puppet pair appearing even earlier in 1939) - this hour-long program featured dubbed, edited versions of foreign films that were suitable for children. And that's what made it so special to the pre-Globalization know-nothing nudniks of my generation, raised as we were on a map of the world that still listed almost half of Africa as "West French Africa."





The Puppeteer Team: Burr Tillstrom and Fran Allison





The Kuklapolitan Players: Kookla, Ollie and Fran Allison



Sure, I was in elementary school by then, but I've always been visually oriented, and maps and books and National Geographic magazines were no substitute for seeing live-action kids from all over the globe eating, playing and studying in their native lands - kids who didn't look like me and who seemed to dress funny and eat weird stuff. I can safely say that everything I learned about foreign lands and cultures really started here (just as my friend Dave Cawley's lifelong fascination/obsession with All Things Japanese began with his exposure to '60s TV imports like Ultraman, Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot, Astroboy, Marine Boy, Gigantor, Tobor the 8th Man,and Speed Racer); in fact, Skinny and Fatty was probably the first foreign film I ever saw, and certainly the first Japanese movie. (And this is probably where we all first saw The Red Balloon, a film everyone from my generation knows!)



Two things I noticed right off the bat watching the film again was how trend-setting Japanese school kids were, toting their books around in little messenger bags that today have become, along with mp3 players and cell phones, de rigeur accessories for all young people. The other was a scene where Fatty tries to squeeze through a fence to catch up to Skinny, but gets stuck, to comic effect. The very same scene would be reenacted years later by Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver and his pudgy pal Larry Mondello in American TV's Leave It To Beaver program. I also noticed, in the scene where Komatsu's family is moving to a new home, that the Japanese pack their belongings in straw, instead of boxes. So many little, incidental details - the taking off of shoes when the children visit one another's houses; the everyday tea ceremonies; the communal bathing in which two unrelated boys cleanse each other - unfold in the film's 45 minutes to be stored away in viewer's cross-cultural memories. The film also touched lightly on the class system, for while the two boys may attend the same school, the well-fed Oyama is obviously from a wealthy family, while Komatsu's family is poor and must move away at picture's end to find work in the far-away mountain region.



The film uses athletic achievement as a narrative arc to show how Oyama's growing confidence under Komatsu's friendship and tutelege helps him achieve newfound popularity and belief in himself. At first, Oyama humiliates himself climbing the rope, but by year's end he is able to team up with his skinny friend to win accolades at the annual sports and games competition festival.





When Oyama pouts "I can't!"...





Komatsu says "Just do it, Oyama!"



The following clip highlights Oyama's progression from failure to success in competitive sports.





And, as the blogger at everydayfamily.com observed, not only does Komatsu teach Oyama the values of courage, friendship, self-pride and risk along the way, but "with the subject of bullying so up front these days, Skinny and Fatty addresses the issue with subtly and beauty."



By film's end, Oyama has learned to stand on his own two feet and runs to the hills to shout his thanks to his friend who's now physically far away but still near and dear to his heart.





The Climatic Finale: "Komatsu! Thank you!"



According to Pop-Cult.com, "The CBS Children's Film Festival was an hour-long program appearing sporadically beginning in 1967, until it joined the early-Saturday- afteroon schedule in 1971...The show ran in this format until 1977, when it was reduced to the half-hour CBS Saturday Film Festival, without the charming hosts. It continued to air irregularly until 1984."



(Trivial aside: Mystery Science Theater 3000's Joel Hodgson cited the CBS Children's Film Festival as one of his inspirations for creating the concept of MST. "It was just one of those shows from my childhood that prepared me for fully appreciating the greatness of MST in the future. You got to see a lot of goofy films from other lands." Even the framework - with a human host and two non-human sidekicks (with MST's Crow and Tom Servo filling in for Kukla and Ollie) introducing the films and then later talking about them and performing little skits - was similar to MST.)



Pop-Cult.com and other sites believe the titles that follow represent a complete listing of all of the films and programs shown during the Film Festival's run:



Adventure in Golden Bay - Czech, 1956

Adventure in the Hopfields - British, 1954

The Angel and Big Joe - American, 1975

Anoop and the Elephant - British, 1972

Bag on Bag - Russian, ?

A Bird of Africa - Japanese, ?

Birds Come Flying To Us - Bulgarian, 1971

Black Mountain - Soviet, 1970

The Blind Bird - Soviet, 1963

The Boy and the Airplane - ?

The Boy Who Wore Spectacles - Soviet, ?

The Boy With Glasses - Japanese, 1962

Bunnie - Polish, 1973

The Camerons - Australian, 1974

Captain Korda - Czech, 1970

Captain Mikula, the Kid - Yugoslavian, 1974

Charlie the Rascal - Swedish, ?

Chipmates - British, ?

The Chiffy Kids - British, 1976

Circus Adventure - Dutch, ?

Circus Angel - French, 1965

Clown - Spanish, 1969

Cold Pizza - Canadian, 1972

Countdown to Danger - British, 1967

Cry Wolf - British, 1968

Carole, I Love You - French, ?

Danger Point - British, 1971

Death of a Gaudy Dancer - Canadian, ?

Digby, the Biggest Dog in the World - British, 1973

Doggie and Three - Czech, 1955

Egghead's Robot - British, 1970

Elephant River - Ceylon, 1956

Felipa: North of the Border - American, 1971

The Firefighters - British, 1975

Flash the Sheepdog - British, 1966

Flay Away Dove - American, 1982

The Flying Sorcerer - British, 1973

For Boys Only is For Girls, Too - Czech, ?

A Friend - Italian, 1967

Friend or Foe - British, ?

Friends For Life - Soviet, 1971

Funny Stories - Soviet, 1962

Geronimo Jones - American, 1970

Get Used To It - ?

Ghost of a Chance - British, 1968

Giamador - ?

The Giant Eel - Czech, 1971

The Goalkeeper Also Lives on Our Street - Czech, 1957

The Golden Fish - French, 1959

Gosha the Bear - Soviet, 1971

Hand in Hand - British, 1960

Headline Hunters - British, 1967

Heidi - German/Austrian, 1965

Joey - American, 1964?

John and Julie - British, 1954

The Johnstown Monster - British, 1971

Jumping Over Puddles - Czech, 1970

The Legend of John Henry - ?

The Legend of Paul Bunyon - ?

Lionheart - British, 1968

The Little Bearkeepers - Czech, 1957

The Little Ones - British, 1965

Little Pig - Chinese, ?

The Little Wooden Horse - ?

Lone Wolf - Yugoslavian, 1972

Lost in Pajamas - Czech, 1966

Lucy and the Miracles - Czech, 1970

The Magnificent 6-1/2 - British, 1967

Mauro the Gypsy - British, ?

Me and You, Kangaroo - Australian, 1974

A Member of the Family - British, 1971

Miguel's Navidad - Mexico, ? Miguel: Up From Puerto Rico - American, 1970

Mischief - British, 1968

Mr . Horatio Knibbles - British, 1971

My Father, Sun-Sun Johnson - Jamaican, ?

My Main Man - ?

Nikkolina - Canadian, ?

Nina and the Street Kids - Swedish, ?

Nunu and the Zebra - South African, ?

On Snow White - Czech, 1972

The Orange Watering Cart - Hungarian, ?

Paddle to the Sea - Canadian, 1966

Paganini Strikes Again - British, 1974

Pero and His Companions - ?

The Promise - ?

The Ransome of Red Chief - Soviet, 1963

The Red Balloon - French, 1956

Soapbox Derby - Canadian, ?

Scramble - British, 1969

A Seafaring Dog - Soviet, ?

The Secret - ?

The Seven Ravens - German, 1937

Shok and Sher - Soviet, ?

Shopping Bag Lady - American, 1975

The Show Must Go On - Soviet, ?

Six Bears and a Clown - Czech, 1972

Sirius - Czech, 1974

Skinny and Fatty - Japanese, 1959

Stowaway in the Sky - French, 1959

Strange Holiday - Australian, 1969

That's My Name, Don't Wear it Out - British, ?

Three Nuts for Cinderella - Czech, 1973

Thunderstorm - French, ?

Ticko - Swedish, ?

Tiko and the Shark - Italian/French, 1965

Tjorven, Batsman, and Moses - Swedish, 1964

Tony and the Tick-Tock Dragon - Hungarian, ?

Turniphead - Italian, 1965

Tymancha's Friend - Soviet, 1970

Up in the Air - British, 1969

The Violin - Canadian, 1974

What Next? - British, 1974

Where's Johnny? - British, 1974

White Mane - Frenche, 1952

Winter of the Witch - British, 1969

The Yellow Slippers - Polish, 1961



The best site for detailed information about these films, as well as sample video clips, is the Kuklapolitan Website's CBS Children's Film Festival page at kukla.tv/cbs.html.



Video:

Watch "Skinny and Fatty" in its entirety (46:32)





Related links:

CBS Children's Film Festival (The Kuklapolitan Website)

CBS Children's Film Festival film listings (Pop-cult.com)

CBS Children's Film Festival (Wikipedia)

1967 CBS Children's Film Festival Commercial (YouTube)

1972 CBS Children's Film Festival Commercial (YouTube)

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