This was the first appearance of the redesigned Woody Woodpecker, intended to make him more appealing -- no buckteeth. The ongoing competition to turn out the best short cartoons in the business were still on. The Fleischers were out of it, Paul Terry was idling at Fox with his guaranteed contracts, and Disney was distracted by features and the aftermath of a strike. Meanwhile, Tex Avery was being given a free hand at MGM, and Schlesinger had just sold his cartoon factory to Warner Brothers.
But to turn out the best cartoons you needed a good character and good scripts. Lantz could buy talent, particularly talent eager to escape from Uncle Walt, but what about stars? A brief attempt to revive Oswald the Lucky Rabbit turned out too precious to stomach. Andy Panda was too bland and Wally Walrus was a good supporting comic, but nothing more. Woody Woodpecker had color, energy and sound. All he needed was a new look and a couple of vehicles to show him off to best advantage.
And that's this movie. Seamus Culhane was an old hand in the field -- he'd been directing cartoons since 1930, and he directed this one for speed and energy, splitting Woody into five or six images at some points. The whole thing explodes off the screen and is a fine, funny cartoon. Plus it's a wonderful handling of the music from 'The Barber of Seville'.