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A Case of Spring Fever

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Case of Spring Fever
Full film
Production
company
Release date
1940
Running time
8:15[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

A Case of Spring Fever is a 1940 American short industrial film produced by the Jam Handy Organization for Chevrolet. The black-and-white film is partially animated, partially live-action. It follows the story of Gilbert, a man whose wish that he never sees a spring again is granted by Coily the Spring Sprite, who makes springs vanish.[2]

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Transcription

Plot

Gilbert's wife phones his golfing buddies to tell them that he won't be able to join them today, as he is stuck at home repairing the springs in his couch. Frustrated, Gilbert fumes that he never wants to see another spring "as long as I live," prompting the appearance of Coily, a "spring sprite." Coily brusquely grants Gilbert's wish, and removes all springs from his life. Initially relieved at no longer having to fix the couch, Gilbert quickly finds that he is unable to use most of the devices in his home, including his pocket watch, window blinds, rotary phone, and even his car, all of which rely on springs for their functionality. Every time Gilbert attempts to use a spring-based device, Coily taunts him with the phrase, "No springs!" Gilbert begs Coily to let him retract his wish, which Coily does, on the condition that Gilbert never wish away springs again.

Gilbert joins his friends at the golf course, talking endlessly about the benefits of springs. He astutely explains the mechanics of a spring and provides various examples of devices, processes, and physical reactions for which springs are necessary. Gilbert's friends become bored, then irritated, at his pontificating. At length, Gilbert is forced to stop one of the men from making the same anti-spring wish that he once made, and Coily briefly reappears to laugh.[3]

Analysis

Though a documentary, A Case of Spring Fever eschews some features typical of the genre, instead dramatizing its events and introducing a supernatural character. It also has a parodic or mockumentary character; Gilbert is a comic figure who is infantilized by his wife and subsequently bores his friends. Nonetheless, Gilbert's claims about springs are presented as factual. For Donald Levin, "the film's use of the codes and conventions of the documentary work to increase our understanding about our shared social world, and at the same time critique and parody Gilbert's (and, by extension, its own) attempt to communicate that understanding".[3]

Legacy

A Case of Spring Fever was parodied in "Bart the Lover", a season three episode of The Simpsons, in which an educational film about zinc includes a supernatural being who makes all zinc disappear.[2] The film was also the subject of mockery in the 12th episode of the tenth season of Mystery Science Theater 3000 alongside the 1976 horror film Squirm. Chris Morgan called the short film "a worthy choice for the final short [featured on Mystery Science Theater 3000], a strange film with an even stranger premise".[4]

References

  1. ^ "A Case Of Spring Fever (1940) Theatrical Cartoon". The Big Cartoon DataBase. Retrieved May 5, 2020.[dead link]
  2. ^ a b Oakes, Brian (2010). "Building films for business: Jamison Handy and the industrial animation of the Jam Handy Organization". Film History. 22 (1): 95–107. doi:10.2979/fil.2010.22.1.95. S2CID 192073563.
  3. ^ a b Levin, Donald (2006). "Reconstructing reality: The industrial film as faux documentary". In Rhodes, Gary D.; Parris Springer, John (eds.). Docufictions: Essays on the Intersection of Documentary and Fictional Filmmaking. McFarland. pp. 88–101.
  4. ^ Morgan, Chris (2015). The Comic Galaxy of Mystery Science Theater 3000: Twelve Classic Episodes and the Movies They Lampoon. McFarland. pp. 157–8.

Further reading

External links

This page was last edited on 23 February 2024, at 09:31
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