NOTE: Please do not take any of the little nitpicks in this review (or any of my other reviews, for that matter) seriously. I write these reviews in the hopes of making people laugh. Those nitpicks are really just dumb little observations that I'm attempting to make jokes out of, not complaints that add to whether or not I like something.
NOTE #2: No disrespect is meant towards anyone who worked on the special I am reviewing today. I'm sure they are all very nice and talented people.
NOTE #3: If you like this special, that is great. Go ahead and like it. I'm not judging you.
Who wants to talk about another Peanuts TV special? I do!
By the 1980s, the folks making these Charlie Brown specials probably realized that they'd run out of holidays. There was a Christmas special, a Halloween special, a Thanksgiving special, an Easter special, even an Arbor Day special. And presumably, they realized that folks would think A Charlie Brown Cinco De Mayo was a dumb idea... actually, what WOULD that special be like? Would Snoopy have some sort of stereotypical Mexican alter ego? In what way would Charlie Brown get put the wringer?
Well, anyhow, before they started recycling holidays (I personally like It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown and I Want a Dog For Christmas, Charlie Brown, but I know I'm probably in the minority), the folks making these specials started whipping up specials with plotlines that probably would've worked better for episodes of The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show than full-length specials. Though, to be fair, they were doing this as far back as 1974 - It's a Mystery, Charlie Brown isn't anything to write home about.
Long story short, at one point somebody asked, "What if Snoopy decided to join the circus?" and that's how we got Life is a Circus, Charlie Brown. This is one of those specials that you rarely see people talk about. Airing on CBS on October 24th, 1980, the only truly noteworthy things about it are that A) it won an Emmy for Outstanding Animated Program and B) it introduced a character named Fifi, who would appear again years later in The Peanuts Movie. Oh, and it was one of the first Peanuts specials to be released on VHS.
I have never seen this special before. As a rule of thumb, if it never aired on TV at any point in the 2000s, chances are it's a Peanuts special that I've never seen (unless it was included as a bonus feature on the DVD of one of the holiday specials, like It's Arbor Day, Charlie Brown was). But what luck, it's on Apple TV, so I can watch it now and do a review of it. Is Life is a Circus, Charlie Brown good? Let's find out, shall we?
The special wastes no time in getting the plot set up. It begins with Snoopy (voiced by Bill Melendez) being awoken by the sound of calliope music and following it to a big circus parade going on. He watches as the elephants, camels, and giraffes walk out of their car, hitching a ride in the process...
And this is where the "THING THAT MAKES THIS SPECIAL DATED" Alarm goes off: most circuses have gotten rid of their animal acts because we've realized that the loud music, bright lights, and cheering crowds provide much stress to elephants and giraffes. Why do you think the Dumbo remake ended with Dumbo and his mother being released into the wild?
Anyhow, Snoopy spots a girl walking out of the car with three poodles, one of whom is the aforementioned Fifi.
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She was drastically redesigned for The Peanuts Movie... which was probably for the best. She doesn't look much like a Peanuts character here. |
And upon seeing her, Snoopy falls head over furry heels in love and follows her into the big top.
After that, we cut to Peppermint Patty (Brent Hauer) calling up Charlie Brown (Michael Mandy) on the phone to spew out some exposition. Specifically, she tells him that the circus was in town - and what luck, both of their schools were closed so they could go see it. Dang, MY school never closed just because there was a circus in town. Though I guess that's because a circus never came to my area. I probably wouldn't have wanted to go anyway, since I'm terrified of clowns.
This was the closest thing to a circus in my neck of the woods. Actually, that sign is probably part of the reason why I'm afraid of clowns... |
So it's off to the circus for Charlie Brown, Peppermint Patty, Lucy (Kristen Fullerton), Linus (Rocky Reilly), Schroeder (Christopher Donohue), and Marcie (Shannon Cohn). I wonder why Sally's not with them... maybe she's afraid of clowns too?
At the circus, we learn something new about Peppermint Patty - she likes to mix popcorn with her cotton candy. And by "mix", I mean she dumps popcorn onto Charlie Brown's cotton candy and it sticks on. Is it weird that I'm wondering what that would taste like? Hey, if putting CARAMEL on your cotton candy tastes good...
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Did you know that cotton candy is also called "fairy floss"? Hey, if I can't be funny, I think I should at least try to be educational... |
Once the show starts up, an announcer - whose voice we actually hear, believe it or not, as opposed to just a trombone sound - introduces that girl from before, Polly (Casey Carlson), and her poodles. Their act consists of Polly standing there with a baton while the poodles flip in the air. That's an exciting circus act? You don't need to go to a circus to see a dog do a flip, just stay home and offer your schnauzer a dog treat.
I should also add that Polly has horrible taste in fashion. Where'd she get that hat, at a Yellow Submarine Fan Convention? And that DRESS... she really needs to stop letting the clowns choose her wardrobe.
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Does Fifi's being the only poodle with eyelashes imply that she wears mascara? Does she apply it herself or does Polly put it on her? |
Charlie Brown and his friends are very surprised to see Snoopy, now wearing a blue bow on his head, among the poodles. "How did he ever get into a circus act?" Charlie Brown wonders. Chuck, you should know by now that your dog is someone who can do whatever the heck he wants, logic behind it be darned. Maybe the Head Beagle pulled a few strings on his behalf...
Despite the fact that Snoopy proves not to be much of a circus performer and looks incredibly embarassed, everyone else is excited that Snoopy has a career... even though he already has, like, fifty. Flying Ace, lawyer, writer, Beagle Scout troop leader, hockey player, member of the French Foreign Legion, the list is endless. "He doesn't need a career! His career is being my dog!" Charlie Brown points out. He does have a point - he's Snoopy's owner, so shouldn't he have some say in whether or not the circus takes Snoopy?
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Welcome to the Realm of Never Knowing What's Going On, Charlie Brown. I'm a regular here, I'll show you around... |
The crowd goes wild for Polly and her dogs, because apparently they're very easily impressed. After the show, Polly tells Snoopy that they'll need to do a little training. Or maybe all he needs is a kiss from Fifi.
Quick question, are we going to get any explanation as to why this young girl is working for the circus? Are her parents circus employees as well? Are child labor laws just not a thing in the Peanuts world?
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Ah, puppy love. |
Polly gets a call from the guy who owns the circus, and he says that they should change Snoopy's name to Hugo (maybe he's a big fan of British actor Hugo Weaving). Meanwhile, Charlie Brown discovers that Snoopy still hasn't come home and runs back to the circus just in time to see the circus car drive off with him in it. Again, I guess Charlie Brown, Snoopy's legal owner, has no say in this?
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Those sneaky dogcatchers, disguising their wagons as circus cars... |
So now Snoopy is stuck in a circus car with an elephant, a giraffe, two camels, a couple bears, a bison, what looks like a pair of ibex, and... I'm honestly not sure what that yellowish animal is. A raccoon? Have circuses ever had raccoon acts?
And since we now know that the folks in charge of character designs for these specials (Charles Schultz himself? I'm not sure) can indeed draw accurate-looking bison, why did the ones in You're in the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown look so weird?
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Well, it could be worse. They could've stuffed Snoopy into a Volkswagen Beetle with the clowns (how DO clowns do that trick, anyway?). |
When he starts to get cold, he tries to use a giant pile of hay in the car as a blanket. But wouldn't you know it, it's NOT a pile of hay. It's a very, very, very big lion. Like, I know lions are big, but I'm pretty sure they're not THAT big. Is Snoopy just tiny?
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"If you start singing 'The Lion Sleeps Tonight', so help me I will have you as a midnight snack." |
In the morning, it's time to do some more training. First, Polly puts Snoopy on a unicycle, and once he gets the hang of it she decides to have him do it on a high wire. Okay, I have to say something - walking on a very thin wire, like, ten feet in the air is dangerous enough, but having someone ride across that wire on a WOBBLY UNICYCLE? I think people who actually do this are nuts. You might as well put on a seal costume and jump into shark-infested waters.
While Polly is putting Snoopy's life at risk, Charlie Brown talks to Linus about how his dog ditched him to join the circus. Linus suggests that maybe Snoopy just needed a more exciting life. "He got his food and lodging from me. I expected SOME loyalty..." Charlie Brown laments. Honestly, Charles, after Charlie Brown's All-Stars, I'm not sure why you were expecting any loyalty from Snoopy at all.
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"What do your parents have to say about this, by the way?" "Oh, what they always say: 'Wah-WAH-wah-wah-WAH-wah-WAH-wah-WAH..." |
Snoopy, Polly, and the poodles perform again, and then the circus owner gets another idea: what if Snoopy and Fifi did a trapeze act? So we get about a minute of the two dogs swinging around like acrobats. After that, we cut back to Charlie Brown and Linus. Charlie Brown explains to Linus (and us) how he got Snoopy in the first place: when he was little, he was playing in a sandbox at a playground, and all of a sudden some other kid poured a bucket of sand on his head. For some reason. I guess that other kid was just a sadist. Charlie Brown started crying, and his mother ran over and took him home. The next day, they went to the Daisy Hill Puppy Farm, and Charlie Brown's parents bought him Snoopy. A later Peanuts special, 1991's Snoopy's Reunion, would ignore this and make the explanation "Charlie Brown, at his usual age, went out and bought a dog because he was depressed after getting clobbered in baseball again." Continuity is for chumps.
Not particularly sympathetic to Charlie Brown's plight, unsurprisingly, is Lucy, who boards up Snoopy's doghouse. As for Linus, he apparently decides to go see Snoopy's next performance:
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Yeah, don't think I didn't notice the top of his head poking out in the lower left corner, animators. |
Snoopy and Fifi do their trapeze act, and the crowd goes wild for it. But the circus owner isn't done meddling with the act - he thinks it "needs more color and class". So what does he have Polly do? He has her mix up a giant vat of pink food coloring and dunk Snoopy in it. I'm pretty sure this qualifies as animal abuse. Say what you will about the Ringling Brothers, at least they didn't power-wash any of their elephants with green paint.
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If I had a nickel for every time I've reviewed a cartoon where a black and white dog got turned pink, I'd have two nickels. Which isn't a lot, but... yeah, you know how the meme goes. |
She tries to do it to Fifi too, but Snoopy defends her, resulting in POLLY getting dunked in the food coloring and turning pink while the two dogs make a run for it. Snoopy is still pink, but now he can head back to Charlie Brown. Fifi, however, decides to return to the circus... even though she knows Polly wants to dunk her in pink food coloring. Ah well, have fun being Pepto Bismol-colored, Fifi...
That night, Charlie Brown is woken up by the sound of Snoopy taking a shower to wash the food coloring off (and his parents are likely wondering why there are pink paw prints all over their house). Snoopy has learned a valuable lesson - no girl is worth getting painted pink over. The special ends with America's favorite beagle going to sleep... though I'm not sure how exactly he expects to sleep when there's a giant neon sign next to his head.
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"I should've known better than to expect romance in a Peanuts production to work out. Linus is still whining about that Melody Melody chick..." |
What's the Verdict?
Life is a Circus, Charlie Brown is mediocre. I've noticed that the Snoopy-focused specials don't work particularly well, mostly because what makes Snoopy funny in the comics is the things he "thinks" (especially when he's interacting with Woodstock). Since, unlike Garfield, Snoopy doesn't "talk" in the specials, that goes out the window and we're stuck just watching him do stuff - and that works well for characters like, say, the Pink Panther and Wile E. Coyote, but those characters are given great physical comedy to do to make up for the lack of dialogue. Snoopy isn't. He just... does stuff and it's not funny.
In fact, very little about this special is funny. The closest thing to a joke is Lucy boarding up Snoopy's doghouse, and even that didn't have a punchline to it. Most of the other Peanuts characters, even Charlie Brown, have nothing to do - why not have Charlie Brown chase after the circus, following it to each new location and trying to get Snoopy back? Why not have Peppermint Patty be inspired to start her own circus after seeing the show and drag the other kids into it? And, to be honest, the absence of Sally is very much felt. I know that's going to sound weird considering that the first two Peanuts specials I reviewed either ALSO didn't feature her (You're in the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown) or only gave her two or three lines (Charlie Brown's All-Stars) but seriously, where is she? And where's Woodstock, for that matter? He's Snoopy's BEST FRIEND, why not have him tag along? Why are we wasting so much time on Polly instead of the existing Peanuts characters?
Look, I'm not gonna say that this is the worst Peanuts special. I'll take it over It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown or Happy New Year, Charlie Brown. But aside from the animation and the score (and, surprisingly for something about a circus, the lack of clowns), there really isn't much of substance here. Maybe they should've actually made that A Charlie Brown Cinco De Mayo special I talked about earlier instead...
But at least we've learned a valuable lesson from this special. It's that circuses suck. They dunk dogs in vats of pink food coloring and make them risk their lives doing stupid tricks for our own amusement. I've never been to a circus, and I think I'll keep it that way.