Symphony in Slang (1951)

7m
Running Time

June 16, 1951
Release Date

Symphony in Slang (1951)

7m
Running Time

June 16, 1951
Release Date

External Links & Social Media
Network & Production Companies
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Plot.

At the gates of Heaven, the admitting officials have a hard time understanding a newcomer's life story with all his contemporary slang.

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This Movie Is About.

Details.

Release Date
June 16, 1951

Status
Released

Running Time
7m

Genres

Wiki.

Symphony in Slang is a 1951 cartoon short directed by Tex Avery, written by Rich Hogan and released with the feature film No Questions Asked by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Minimalist and abstract in style (many of the "gags" are created either with single, still frames or limited animation), it tells the story of a man (voiced by radio actor John Brown of My Friend Irma and The Life of Riley fame), who finds himself at the Pearly Gates explaining the story of his life to a bewildered Saint Peter and Noah Webster (also Brown) using slang of that era. The majority of the short is made up of sight gags based on Peter and Webster's imagined, literal understandings of such phrases as "I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth" and "Outside it was raining cats and dogs."

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