Krazy Kat in โRitzy Hotelโ (1932)

The Scrappy cartoons have always been a favorite of mine, and maybe always will be-but, in the past,the collectors of 16mm cartoons I was often chatting with would often here a less-than-favorable review of them โ saying โThe Krazy Kats are betterโ. While I *had* a lot of Krazy Kats, I usually wouldnโt pursue them in the same way I would the Scrappys, so I ended up with a lot of Scrappys and only a handful of Krazys comparatively over the years. That isnโt to say I didnโt enjoy them. They were just in a category somewhere below the Scrappys, and when I found some for sale, the Scrappy I didnโt have would be bought first.
Now, all these years later, Iโm way, way less likely to focus on collecting film and more about restoring things from film. Thereโs just too much to do, but I do think, possibly, at some point, Iโll still want to get more Krazys than I have currently.
Of course, The Columbia Krazy Kat isnโt really Krazy Kat at all, at least not in the sense of the brilliant comic strip. The Columbia Krazys are their own entity, bearing more a resemblance to every other studioโs cute 30s characters and the expected population of animals. I have to admit I really like most anything with that formula, so, in that way, the early ones are great. This one, Ritzy Hotel (1932) has all the elements of the best of the series โ great animation, funny gags and a happy Joe DeNat score. What could be better?
Ben Harrison and Manny Gould were exclusively helming the direction of the series from 1926, when Mitnzโs studio was in New York, moved to the west coast into the beginning of the sound era though 1933, then continuing to direct some of the cartoons along with the Color Rhapsodies series. It was a popular enough series through those early 30s years, then really began to lose steam in the mid-30s as so many cartoon series do.
Iโve been really enjoying reading your thoughts on these cartoons, and the information each person brings as well. I canโt wait until the end of the school year and the current giant pile of restoration and Blu-ray stuff Iโm sorting through to be a little less overwhelming so I can spend a little time writing a little more too!
This weekโs print is from Tommy Stathesโ collection- he was kind enough to lend. Itโs sadly warping a little here and there, but still a good watch. Thanks Tommy, and have a good week all!

