Goofy Gymnastics is a 1949 Goofy cartoon directed by Jack Kinney.
Plot[]
Goofy comes home from work exhausted, so he decides to keep himself fit by working out and doing gymnastics.
He orders a home gym set and sends away for it. The package containing his gym set immediately arrives. After setting up the gym equipment in his home, Goofy dons his new workout suit which resembles a caveman loincloth. Goofy compares himself to a chart depicting a man with a muscular development and realizes his own body does not match the chart. Determined to build his musculature, Goofy plays the record for his gymnastic program which instructs him to start exercising by lifting the barbells.
At his first attempt to lift the barbells, Goofy inadvertently stands on the bars while struggling to lift weights. Then the barbells clasp with the bar landing on his hands. Goofy yet manages to quickly fix the barbells, and then attempt to lift from behind his back which causes him to fall forward. With the barbells over him on the floor, Goofy tries lifting them with his feet, only to have the weights close in on his hands and feet like two magnets. With his hands and feet trapped in the barbells, Goofy finds himself no choice but to lift up his rear end and move it back and forth as another attempt to lift the weight high. As a result, Goofy rolls himself forward and starts rolling on the barbells like wheels. To make matters worse, his workout suit falls over his head leaving his underwear fully exposed. Goofy shakes the suit off his head before rolling onto a board formed like a ramp. As Goofy falls over the board, the board briefly smacks his rear end, causing him to flip. This not only frees his hands and feet from the barbells, but also causes him to land on his feet with the barbells finally lifted over his head. Unfortunately, a fly lands on the barbells and adds Goofy more weight to lift. Goofy crashes through the floor and down several stories.
Goofy returns to his apartment exhausted as he was before. He compares himself to the muscle chart again, only to have it roll him up it, and then drop him back to the floor.
The next exercise is the "chin lift." While Goofy appears to be lifting his chin over the bar, his feet actually never leave the ground, for the bar he grips is just sliding up and down on the poles supporting it. When Goofy is finished with that, the bar slides down on his head, forming a bump. Goofy pushes the bump down inside himself and forms it on his arm, making himself believe he has built a muscle.
Finally, Goofy works on stretching a cable stretcher. In the process, Goofy gets tangled in the cable. As he opens the cable like a spider web to escape from it, the cable traps him again and yanks his workout suit off. Goofy crawls inside his suit, and then stretches the cable with his feet, only to fling himself across the room.
While flying across the room, Goofy grabs onto a set of lifting rings and swings back and forth until he repetitively crashes through the walls. He falls out a window in the ceiling, flipping in the atmosphere outside the building, and then falls back into his apartment through another window. He falls in stretching on another cable and dribbles on his butt like a basket ball until he reaches his mirror. As the cable pulls him back, his reflection comes to life and waves to him. The chaos continues as Goofy runs into his equipment that sends his flying across the room until he falls through a window. His foot hooks onto a ring suspended by a cable on the ceiling. Goofy flies out of the building again, across a street, and above several stories with the stretching behind. Goofy grabs the edge of a window, frightening a woman who lives in that apartment and prompting her to strike his hand with her high-heel shoe due to her mistaking him for a masher. Goofy gets dragged by the cable back into his apartment. As he crashes through the wall. he accidentally breaks the muscle chart out of the wall, making it appear that he has finally built his full musculature. Then Goofy falls asleep.
Characters[]
- Goofy (voiced by Pinto Colvig)
- Narrator (voiced by John McLeish)
Releases[]
Television[]
- Disneyland, episode #2.24: "The Goofy Sports Story"
- Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, episode #10.23: "In Shape with Von Drake"
- The Mouse Factory, episode #5: "Physical Fitness"
- Superstar Goofy
- The New Mickey Mouse Club, March 22, 1977
- Disney's Wonderful World, episode #26.4: "Baseball Fever"
- Walt Disney's Mickey and Donald, episode #75
- Good Morning, Mickey, episode #8
- The Roots of Goofy
- An All New Adventure of Disney's Sport Goofy
- Mickey's Mouse Tracks, episode #74
- Donald's Quack Attack, episode #92
- The Ink and Paint Club, episode #1.3: "Sports Goofy"
- House of Mouse, episode #3.3: "Salute to Sports"
Home video[]
- Walt Disney Cartoon Classics: Sport Goofy (VHS)
- Walt Disney Treasures: The Complete Goofy (DVD)
- Walt Disney's Classic Cartoon Favorites: Extreme Sports Fun (DVD)
Streaming[]
Notes[]
- In Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Roger and Eddie are shown watching this cartoon while hiding out in a movie theater, despite the fact that the film takes place in 1947 and this short was released two years later in 1949. Crew members claimed to have chosen this particular short, despite its inaccuracies, because it was the wackiest, craziest, silliest, nuttiest, funniest and zaniest thing they could find in the Disney Vault.
- The musical selections played on the record are "Sobre las Olas" (barbells), von Suppe's "Poet and Peasant Overture" (chin-up bar), "The Song of the Volga Boatmen" (cable expanders), and "Rock-a-Bye Baby" (Goofy being thrown all around the apartment and the city).
- As evidenced by Goofy's signature, his name in this short is "Jack Boyd", which also happens to be the name of an effects animator.
Gallery[]