Mild-mannered average guy Mr. Walker (Goofy) turns into violent Mr. Wheeler when he starts driving. Back on his feet, Mr. Walker finds it nearly impossible to cross the street.
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When I was a kid, my grandmother ran a driving school and it worked out of the same office as my mom and uncle's shared insurance office (in other words a family business right in Manhattan). I would sit around without too much to do, except that there was always this short, Motor Mania, on a VHS tape - students had to watch a video as part of the class to get their licenses (still do fyi in New York state) - and I would watch it many, many times to the point where I could recite it by heart. But it wasn't simply boredom and it being the only cartoon-centric thing available (there was also a Phil Donahue special about drunk driving I watched too, but I digress) - this is genuinely brilliant comedy AND as information.Is it exaggerated? Well, yeah, it's a cartoon! But it doesn't mean that there isn't a sense that someone like "Mr. Wheeler" out there (it's a Jekyll and Hyde scenario where a nice guy, "Mr. Walker", leaves the house and as soon as he's behind the wheel he turns into a hideous, rage-filled MONSTER). It's narration over a lot of mad incidents that happen to "Mr Wheeler" as he goes about on the road getting into accidents, getting impatient and horrible while in traffic, and other nightmare scenarios.What makes it so effective is that its a well-paced and quick movie, except that there is a beat where it shows how the monster Wheeler can be an ass even while being slow on the road (at one point he drives slowly as a giant back-up is behind him honking relentlessly), and that the comedy comes from a very real place, almost too real. If you've been in a family where this kind of thing was normal - having family members who get so mad behind the wheel and anxious even as they have been driving their whole lives and can/should know better - it's relatable. It's not something that is out of place to show at a driving school, even as it has its share of gags, all leading up to Wheeler's (relative) demise In other words, it's a great pre-driving ed for a pre-pubescent, and aside from the personal connection to it it's among the finest work Disney studios did at the time.
Disney's short Motor Mania concerns Goofy as Mr. Walker, a calm, competent pedestrian who is just your average Joe as he walks down the street every day. But when Mr. Walker gets behind the wheel of a vehicle, he turns into "Mr. Wheeler," a venomous, hateful man, consumed by road rage. Nobody every drives fast enough for Mr. Wheeler, it seems, and it doesn't help his big mouth and reckless driving get him into more accidents than the average person. What happens to Mr. Walker when he gets behind the wheel and how come he can't simply drive without being filled to the brim with malice and hatefulness?Unfortunately, what I will now call "The Walker/Wheeler Complex," some people can be the nicest, most warm- hearted people when they're simply walking down the street but as soon as they get in a car, they become consumed by rage and morose feelings that they lash out at other drivers. It's a sad, true reality Jack Kinney's Motor Mania illustrates very well, with quick-moving action scenes and moments that inspire laughs as well as winces because of true and relevant they actually are. Despite being part of a whole other world, Disney, with their variety of short films offering social commentary on a number of issues, prove once more they were and still are very much in the loop.Directed by: Jack Kinney.
I've been wanting to find this on video ever since I saw it in Traffic School after receiving a traffic ticket 15 or 20 years ago! I guess our Traffic School instructor meant to use it as a funny way of showing us what not to do while driving. Now, finally, it will be available in Disney's Treasures Series, the Complete Goofy.The Jeckyl/Hyde transformation feels just like what happens to me when I get behind the wheel of a car. The best comedy is the kind you can see yourself in, and that you can relate to. Disney hit the nail on the head in this one. I didn't realize drivers had this same problem in 1950!
NOTE: CONTAINS BRIEF SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND INFORMATIONDisney here combine two themes to create this cartoon. One is their version of the classic Jeckyl/Hyde story, the other being an exaggerated account of motorists when in their cars. The comedy is brilliant, the animation is superb, and although the cartoon is not the greatest thing since sliced bread, it is certainly one to look out