Could it be that we're just out of practice at deciphering Donald-speak? For me, it's been many years since I've needed to try.
In the old Disney shorts, Donald didn't have to give exposition dumps, it was all just about him losing his temper where it served its purpose adding to the chaos of his tantrums.Watching the premiere... Good grief, either Tony Anselmo's voice has changed or my hearing has, because I needed to turn on closed captioning to understand most of Donald Duck's dialogue. This is part of why I hate Donald Duck. That's one of the worst cartoon character voices ever devised.
and just the presentation looked incomplete, since the version I watched had all the action take place in a rectangle that was at a 45 degree angle, on top of what looked like an ink blotter, as though the rectangle was a photo on a desk.
ttps://youtu.be/LqRqKSud0DEWhat? That's not what the proper version of the episode that aired on TV looked like, so you can hardly blame its makers for how somebody else distorted it. Where did you see this?
(not to mention but she has that little duck accent, just like the nephews and To a lesser extant Donald).
In the old Disney shorts, Donald didn't have to give exposition dumps, it was all just about him losing his temper where it served its purpose adding to the chaos of his tantrums.
note: my wife didn't think Scrooge sounded Scottish. She didn't know David Tennant is himself Scottish because he used a different accent on Doctor Who.
Also, most Americans' idea of a Scottish accent is a caricature that's very different from the real thing. David Tennant is the first actual Scot to play Scrooge McDuck, and the second non-American (Alan Young was an English-born Canadian).
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