Peace on Earth is a one-reel 1939 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon short directed by Hugh Harman, about a post-apocalyptic world populated only by animals, after human beings have gone extinct due to war. The film's copyright was renewed in 1966, and it will enter the American public domain on January 1, 2035.

Plot

On Christmas Eve, a grandfather squirrel visits his two young grandchildren, who ask him who the "men" are in the phrase "Peace on Earth, good will to men." He recalls that men went extinct when he was a young child. Through flashbacks, he remembers them only as "monsters" wearing "great, big iron pots on their heads" (helmets), "walked on their hind legs" (bipedalism), carrying "terrible-looking shootin'-irons with knives on the end of them" (bayonets), whose "eyes flashed" (goggles), and had "these tremendous big snoots (snouts), like this, that curled down and fastened onto their stomachs" (gas masks). Always going to war, finding an increasingly frivolous thing to fight over as soon as another was settled, they fight in scenes of devastation reminiscent of World War I until there are only two left. Each fatally shoots the other, and the last sight of a man is a hand curling into a fist as it slips under in a watery foxhole.

Animals — among them the young squirrel who would later become the grandfather — come out of hiding to find a Bible open to "Thou shalt not kill." An owl reads the words, taking it to be a good rulebook that men ignored. The owl finds “Ye shall rebuild the old wastes” (paraphrasing Isaiah 58:12 and 61:4). The animals agree, using men’s devices of war to build the town of Peaceville. There, in the present day, the grandchildren have fallen asleep, as their mother tucks them in.

Throughout the film, a Christmas carol of young rabbits and a squirrel, using the melody of "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing," is featured with altered lyrics emphasizing "peace on Earth, good will to men."

Voice Cast

  • Mel Blanc as Grandfather Squirrel (uncredited) and Ben Mankiewicz, host of Cartoon Alley, the cartoon was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. However, it is not listed in the official Nobel Prize nomination database. According to filmmaker and animation historian Greg Ford, the cartoon was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, but it didn't win nor did it lose, since the Nobel Prizes were called off that year (ironically) due to the onset of World War II.

Mankiewicz also claimed that the cartoon was the first about a serious subject by a major studio. In 1994, it was voted #40 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field.

It was also nominated for the 1939 Academy Award for Short Subjects (Cartoons). It did not claim that honor (which instead went to Walt Disney's Silly Symphony The Ugly Duckling).

Remake

Fred Quimby, William Hanna and Joseph Barbera remade the cartoon in CinemaScope in 1955. This version did not explain why humans were constantly at war, only that the deacon believed they were eager to kill each other for killing's sake; it also does not reference the line of rebuilding, instead quoting love your neighbor as yourself as the foundation for society's future. This new version was also nominated for the Best Animated Short Subject Oscar, but lost to Speedy Gonzales. This film was the last animated production for producer Fred Quimby before his retirement in May 1955.

Voice Cast

  • Elmore Vincent as The Old Choir Master Mouse (uncredited)