A cartoonist falls victim to the very villains he has drawn. It's up to Beans the Cat to save the day.

Is it worth a watch? Honestly, if you like the frantic, rubber-hose era of animation where everything is constantly squashing and stretching, you’ll probably get a kick out of this. It's weirdly dark. If you prefer your cartoons to have a coherent sense of space or logic, maybe skip it. It’s definitely not for anyone w...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Jack King

Eduardo Notari
Community
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"Is it worth a watch? Honestly, if you like the frantic, rubber-hose era of animation where everything is constantly squashing and stretching, you’ll probably get a kick out of this. It's weirdly dark. If you prefer your cartoons to have a coherent sense of space or logic, maybe skip it. It’s definitely not for anyone who hates that 1930s chaotic energy. The whole premise is basically a fever dream. A cartoonist just wants to draw, but his own villains are fed up with the script. It’s meta, I gu..."
Melvin Millar
United States

