Woody is happily (and nuttily) driving down the street when his car breaks down. He tries to get a loan on it from a nearby wolf. The wolf agrees to give Woody the loan but exclaims if he doesn't receive payment in thirty days, he'll take Woody's car away. Sure enough, a title card tells us, "Thirty days have elapsed (and so has Woody's memory)". The wolf appears at Woody's door trying to serve him with a notice but the crafty woodpecker pretends he's not home. The wolf tries to trap him disguised as a deliveryman giving Woody a cake... but the woodpecker throws it in his face bellowing, "I don't like cheesecake!" Finally, the fox throws a punch at Woody and believes to have seriously injured him. He sympathetically agrees to forget about the loan only to be infuriated when Woody "recovers" holding a cuckoo clock and asking, "How about a loan on the clock, Doc?"
Title | The Loan Stranger |
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Year | 1942 |
Genre | Animation |
Country | United States of America |
Studio | Walter Lantz Productions, Universal Pictures |
Cast | Mel Blanc, Kent Rogers, Harold Peary |
Crew | Alex Lovy (Director), Walter Lantz (Producer), Ben Hardaway (Story), Milt Schaffer (Story), Darrell Calker (Original Music Composer), Frank Tipper (Animation) |
Keyword | cartoon, loan shark |
Release | Oct 18, 1942 |
Runtime | 7 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 6.60 / 10 by 8 users |
Popularity | 1 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | English |