- Closed Mondays
-
Closed Mondays Directed by Bob Gardiner
Will VintonRelease date(s) 1974 Running time 11 mins. Country USA Language English Closed Mondays is an 11-minute animated film using animated three-dimensional clay figures, cocreated by Will Vinton and Bob Gardiner in 1974. It was produced by Lighthouse Productions, released by Pyramid Films in the USA, and won an Academy Award for Animated Short Film.
Plot summary
The film opens with the words "Closed Mondays" in white on a black background filling the screen, then the camera pulls out to show that the words are part of a sign that reads:
Aug 15–Oct 3
- One Woman Show -
Celia CrazelsnukOct 3–March 19
- Usual Crap -Closed Mondays
It is night. A small art gallery stands with its door slightly ajar and the lights on. A bulbous-nosed man with thinning grey hair, holding a brown bottle and apparently drunk, wanders in.
As he shuffles through the gallery, a small abstract sculpture is transformed and imitates the man behind his back and returns to its original shape without his noticing.
The drunk sees a picture of colorful musical notes that form a circle around a jagged shape resembling a red staircase in the middle of the picture. The picture moves to upbeat music for a moment and then returns to normal. Doubting his own eyes, the man looks again. The music begins to play, and a miniature man resembling the drunk skips down the stairs, stands on one of the circling musical notes, rides it for a while, then continues down the stairs to the bottom. The entire picture then becomes two abstract color/clay blobs that pulsate to the music.
Suddenly the music stops and the drunk is back in the gallery, where he makes a critical comment ("What was that guy thinking of?!") and staggers away.
The man sees a sculpture of a computerlike device with large lips and gauges for eyes. He laughs at the sculpture and flips a lever that starts it. The sculpture begins speaking rapidly and says it's a "replica of the model 505 type P electro brain," claims to be far superior to its creators, and carries out its "infinite mutation" program. The computer begins to stutter as it tries to say it has a short circuit and an error before changing into a talking globe, a talking apple, a colorful bust of Albert Einstein, a television, and finally a hand with smaller hands at the end of each of the fingers before entirely melting down into a shapeless mass of clay.
The drunk walks away after making another comment ("Blabbermouth computer!") and is frightened by some jungle animals reaching through a glassless window pane that turns out to be a harmless painting.
Feeling distressed, the drunk walks on, where he sees a painting of a medieval woman kneeling on a castle floor. She holds a brush in her hand and a bucket is beside her. The drunk asks her, "Hey… wassa matter?" She weeps and tells him, "Oh, if my master could have seen more of the beauty in life… Here I am on my knees, doomed to wear this sorrowful face, scrubbing this cold stone floor forever and forever and forever…" Then the painting returns to normal.
The drunk sees the still-open door and runs to get out of the gallery, but is stopped just before he gets there. He is a piece of statuary, and returns to his inanimate state before reaching the door.
The credits read:
- Voices by Todd Oleson & Holly Johnson
- Music by Bill Scream
- Created by Will Vinton & Bob Gardiner
External links
- Closed Mondays at the Internet Movie Database
- Information for the British Film Institute
- AFI FEST Festival Database information
- Video on YouTube
Academy Award for Animated Short Film (1961–1980) Ersatz (The Substitute) (1961) · The Hole (1962) · The Critic (1963) · The Pink Phink (1964) · The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics (1965) · A Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass Double Feature (1966) · The Box (1967) · Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968) · It's Tough to Be a Bird (1969) · Is It Always Right to Be Right? (1970) · The Crunch Bird (1971) · A Christmas Carol (1972) · Frank Film (1973) · Closed Mondays (1974) · Great (1975) · Leisure (1976) · The Sand Castle (1977) · Special Delivery (1978) · Every Child (1979) · The Fly (1980)
Complete list · (1932–1940) · (1941–1960) · (1961–1980) · (1981–2000) · (2001–2020) Categories:- 1974 films
- American films
- Animated short films
- Fantasy films
- Films shot in Oregon
- Stop-motion animated films
- Best Animated Short Academy Award winners
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.