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As they have a laugh at Pluto’s expense, the tree begins to shake! It soon falls down as we see the two happened to pick the tree Mickey also settled on.
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![pluto cartoon character 3d model pluto cartoon character 3d model](http://www.clipartbest.com/cliparts/niE/be9/niEbe96iA.jpeg)
Meanwhile, the pair have taken refuge in a tree. Pluto is unnerved by his snow doppelganger and seemingly forgets about the chipmunks. On the opposite side, a perfectly formed “snow Pluto” slides out with the real dog behind. This, of course, gets Pluto’s attention and he chases after them with the two forcing him to smash into a snow drift. One of them pegs Pluto in the butt with an acorn, and the two mock him by jumping around a twig that resembles a Christmas tree and barking. Chip (MacDonald) and Dale (Dessie Miller) are foraging for nuts and they take interest in mocking the dog. It’s not long before the dog is spotted by some would-be agitators. Here they are making fun of the happy puppy. In that short, they looked more like generic chipmunks and they were identical, it wasn’t until the 1947 Donald Duck cartoon conveniently titled Chip an’ Dale that the pair was more developed.Ĭhip and Dale are mostly going to act like jerks in this one. The chipmunks seem to be mostly associated with Donald Duck, but the pair’s unofficial debut came in the short Private Pluto where the two agitate the canine. Also showing up in this one is the duo of Chip and Dale. Mickey apparently had it written into his contract with The Walt Disney Company that anytime he had a speaking role in a short it was to be considered a Mickey Mouse cartoon, because this could have easily just been a Pluto cartoon. Despite being titled Pluto’s Christmas Tree, this Jack Hannah-directed cartoon short from 1952 is actually considered a Mickey Mouse cartoon. Today we’re doing the second look-back to one of the best Christmas specials ever conceived, as chosen by yours truly, and it’s one of my all-time favorites: Pluto’s Christmas Tree.