Cartoon list


Bugs Bunny and the Three Bears 1944 Chuck Jones


Pixie & Dixie Mighty Mite 
Pixie and Dixie  Kit Kat Kit
Pixie and Dixie Rapid Robot






Sleep Happy is the 33rd animated cartoon short subject in the Woody Woodpecker series. Released theatrically on March 26, 1951, the film was produced by Walter Lantz Productions and distributed by Universal International.

As an exhausted Woody trudges through the streets trying to find a room for the night, he comes across a vacancy in Wally Walrus' house. Woody instantly falls asleep in Wally's bed and begins to snore in a variety of bizarre ways that drive him crazy all night long. When morning comes, Woody awakes refreshed and goes cheerfully on his way, while Wally is left to suffer the effects of sleep deprivation.





Half Empty Saddles is the 84th animated cartoon short subject in the Woody Woodpecker series. Released theatrically on April 21, 1958, the film was produced by Walter Lantz Productions and distributed by Universal International.

In the desert, Woody Woodpecker, riding a horse, is gaily strumming a guitar and singing a song of loot long lost. Only he has the map of its location. Woody enters the ghost town of Paradise, dismounts and studies the map. "X" marks the spot in the Snake-Eye Saloon, where the loot is hidden under the floor. Unbeknown to Woody, foul villain Dapper Dan Dooley, hiding in a barrel behind him, sees the map over his shoulder. Woody enters the saloon, closely followed by Dooley. Woody locates the "X" spot and finds a strongbox. Dooley grabs and opens the box, and he has his nose caught in a mousetrap. Woody recaptures the box and runs with it, only to lose it to Dooley again when Woody runs into a closed door. The box changes hands many times as Woody and Dooley, in a battle of wits and trickery, fight for its possession. Finally, Woody gains permanent possession of the box when Dooley, on a small wooden horse with a large rocket attached to its pole, is shot into space as both Woody and the horse give the famous Woody laugh.



Dime to Retire 1955


Daffy runs a hotel where rooms cost only a dime, but an escalating series of pests are expensive to get rid of.


Terry Toons: Wise Quacks 1953 Color


Six Terrytoons:  In "Wise Quacks," a duck wishes he could sing, but when he does, a fox exhibits him for money, making the duck wish to quack again.  The duck escapes and, having learned his lesson, goes home to mother.  In "Home Life," Sidney the Elephant wishes for something more interesting to do than counting coconuts, but realizes that more interesting jobs entail more risk.  In "Honorable Paint in Neck," a Japanese mouse proprietor makes use of a cat hoodlum's protection racket.  In "Mystery in the Moonlight," a cat defeats a mouse and a large DOG that apparently come from a horror movie the mouse was watching.  In "Two Ton Baby Sitter," Sidney the elephant is running a babysitting service, but sneezes his charges away until he can keep their feathers out of his trunk.  In "Klondike Strike Out," Hector Heathcoat is a "nothing" who finds gold by accident in the Klondike, but is claim-jumped by everyone else. Mannie Davis (”Wise”); Connie Rasinski (Home Life); Eddie Donnelly (Mystery in the Moonlight); Dave Tendlar (”Klondike Strike Out” and “Two Ton Babysitter”)

Lambert the Sheepish Lion 1951
The stork mistakenly delivers Lambert, a baby lion, to a flock of sheep. The mother won't let the stork take him back, so Lambert is raised as a sheep, but he just doesn't fit in. He grows up cowardly, until the day his mother is chased by a wolf.

The Sheepish Coyote 1959 C
Bucky, a young cowboy goes after a straying calf (Pepito).  So does the coyote, wearing sheep's clothing.  After a number of disguises, the coyote doesn't know what he is.





Niagara Fools 1956 Color
The park ranger at Niagara Falls boasts about his impeccable record of enforcing the prohibition related to going over the falls in a barrel. Woody Woodpecker is in the crowd and instantly decides to attempt it. The ranger tries endlessly to prevent Woody from succeeding, but ends up in a barrel going over the falls himself each and every time, much to the delight of on-looking tourists, who cheer loudly. Eventually, the ranger takes his district with him. The end result has the entire crew going over the falls in barrels. Finally, Woody joins the ranger, dressed up as a police officer, and gives him a ticket for going down the falls in barrel.




Hot Rod Huckster 1954


Woody Woodpecker is driving down the city street singing a "screwy" driving song. Used car owner Buzz Buzzard tries to interest Woody in buying a new car (after sabotaging the one he has, natch). He shows him various cars but they all are utterly lacking in quality and leave a lot to be desired. After getting him to try a hot rod with a record player under the hood (playing a record of "hot rod sounds" which, alas, gets switched to "animal sounds" on the record's other side), Buzz comes up with the idea of rejuvenating Woody's old car and selling it to him at a vast price. Woody's response to this is to put Buzz through the "rejuvenating machine" where the buzzard gets a car built around him and is driven home by Woody!

huckleberry Hound - Tough Little Termite 1958 C
The cool canine charmed audiences with his slow Southern drawl and fast wit. Get familiar with Pixie and Dixie, Mr. Jinks, Yogi Bear and his sidekick Boo Boo.




Pixie and Dixie - Rapid Robot 1959 Color


Jinks gets a cat robot to catch Pixie and Dixie for him. To get even, the mice get a DOG robot. Both robots cause chaos. 




Africa Squeaks (Flip the Frog), Aesop’s Fables cartoon, and music clips



Fontaine Fox:toonerville trolley
Mickey's Football Manglers 1932


Football game between Mickey’s Manglers (small, white, nondescript animals, maybe dogs) and Alley Cats (big, black, mean cats).

Velveteen Rabbit

Pigopolis



Mickey's Tough Luck


Barney Google and Spark Plug
Barnie Google adventures at the races with his horse, Spark Plug.

Falling Hare Clampett - gremlins 1943
That rascally wabbit finally gets what's coming to him when he goes from tormenter to tormented by a tiny little


Long Haired Hare

Cartoon Shorts 2 Reels
2 Reels

Reel A: 1.) Abbot & Costello in “No Indians Please!”
Abbot and Costello go to a small western town and get into some trouble with the local Native Americans.   A car chase ensues as the Indians chase on horses.  Hilarious antics and goofy scenarios during the chase.

2.) Official Films presents An Adventure in Animation, “Wiloughby’s Magic Hat” 1948
Animated short about a magic hat made from Sampson’s hair.  The magic hat goes through history and winds up on the head of Willoughby, a small, goofy man.  He realizes that the hat makes him strong and then uses it to save a blonde who is tied to a railroad bridge by an evil robot.

3.) A Paul Terry Toon, ‘Kiko the Kangaroo’ in “Cleaned Out!” 1937
A Kangaroo cleans the floor and is followed by a dirty-footed ostrich. The ostrich gets into all kinds of trouble and makes a big mess out of the little house.  Kikko tries to track him down and stop him and makes a big mess in the process.

Reel B: 1.) Official Films- Jungle Jinks Cartoon- “Candy Town” 1947
Two little cats paddle in a  pond at night and climb up a magical staircase into the mouth of the moon.  Inside, there is a magical fairy who takes them to Candy Town, where they play and eat candy.
Candy creatures show them around and chase them.
They eat too much candy and get sick then are chased by an angry bottle of castor oil and a spoon.  They fall off the moon, through some stars and end up back in their boat, paddling as the moon sings to them.

2.) Hollywood Film Enterprises Presents Walt Disney Cartoon- “Mickey and Simon Legree” 1933
Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse and friends put on a play with all kinds of props and music and costumes. The crowd loves it and goes wild.

3.) “All American Mickey” 1933
Mickey Mouse is a football star and plays the game against a team of cats.   Mickey wins by being clever and getting help from Goofy.

4.) “Movie Star Mickey” 1933 aka Mickey’s Gala Premiere
Mickey Mouse is a famous movie star and attends a showing of his film with a bunch of animated 30s era ‘real’ movie stars including Charlie Chaplin, Abbot and Costello, Frankenstein, Marx brothers, Greta Garbo, etc.  It turns out that it’s all just a dream when Mickey wakes up to Pluto’s licking his face.




Casey at Bat 1952

Complete Cartoons
1) "Mickey Plays Santa Claus"
Walt Disney Cartoon. BOW, est. 1930s. Mickey and Mini stay at home with kids while blizzard rages outside. Early version of Goofy.

2) "Mickey's Nightmare" 
BOW, est. 1930s.  Mickey dreams of marrying Mini, to find later that she has too many kids. Early Goofy.

3) "Foolish Fables" 
Castle Films BOW, 1940. Little puppy dog dreams of visiting famous tales and fables: American Indian book and POW Wow dancers, Uncle Tom's Cabin book w/minstrel and "pickaninny". Jack the Giant Killer, The Cat and the Fiddle, etc.  All characters interrelate.

4) "Sinned the Sailor"
Castle Films BOW, 1936. The many adventures on the High Seas.

5) "Merry Melodies in Technicolor" Pigs in a Polka Freleng
Warner Brothers Presents. BOW print, est. 1950s ?. The tale of the Three Little Pigs from the point of view of the Wolf. The pigs are after the wolf.

6) "Woody the Woodpecker in The Invisible Woody"
Castle Films BOW, 1956.  A Walter Leant 'carotene'.   Printed on Eastman 1968 stock. Woody goes to grocery store, gets ripped off by the store's vulture clerk, gets invisible ink fluid spilt on him, gets revenge.                                                              

7) "Tom Thumb"
Castle Films. BOW, printed on Kodak, 1936 or 1956?   Little torn Thumb innocently gets shoved around by big cruel world.

8) “Little Bantam Weight”
Golden Spur Tournament Poster.  Boxing birds. Shadow boxing.  Cartoon poster: July 4 calendar. Bantam cocks in boxing ring.  Inter title - He’s Hot. The Last Hope.  Big bantam cock (rooster) v little chick. Little chick losing. Little chick falls in ring and bottle of tonic pours in mouth and he is supercharged whirlwind and beats big bird. Inter titles - Waco and The Champ. Little chicken wears crown. 

9)  “Putty the Pup”
Little dog plays with toy dog outdoors. Dog catcher shows up, dog runs away.  Dog walks past dog catcher with license plates on neck and butt.  Little dog annoys bulldog.  Bulldog throws little dog out. Dogs chasing after each other.  Dogs being chased by dog catcher.  
Dogs in a suit, looking like a man, beating up the dog catcher, and chasing the dog catcher away.  All of the dogs are set free.  Little dog and Big Bulldog become friends.

10)  “Boy Meets Dog”
Boy frustrated kicks a stone.  A little dog chases after him and bumps into him. He goes home with the dog.  He washes dog.  Father gets mad and chases the dog out.  Father scolds boy.  Father trips and falls down a flight of stairs.  Elves take father away and put him on trial.  Courtroom of the elves. The defense side is playing cards. The boy is the judge. The jury is singing.  Father is sentenced to the “youth machine.” Father is turned into a baby. Father becomes nice and lets the boy have a dog.




1.) Old Mother Hubbard 1943
Old Mother Hubbard and her dog do the king’s laundry but when the dog wants a bone, there is none.
The dog sets out with the laundry and gets caught by the dog catcher.
He escapes and ends up in the king’s dinner, with his head stuck in a turkey. The turkey is eaten and the bones walk away, angry. The turkey carcass throws a pan at the dog and he turns into a black man, who sings a song for the king.  The king goes to Mother Hubbard’s house and they have a big laundry operation with all the dogs and sing and are happy.

2.) Don Quixote 1943
Don Quixote is a crazy man in a padded cell.  When he reads some fairy tale books, he escapes, having it in his head that he’s a great knight.  He goes out on an adventure and hallucinates a variety of foes, from a windmill as a giant to a steam shovel as a dragon.  Eventually he tries to rescue a beautiful princess but she turns out to be a manly old woman.  He runs back to the mental hospital and burns all the books.

3.) Sinbad the Sailor 1937
Sinbad is sailing on the sea and spots a pirate ship.  The pirates try to get him and eventually succeed after a big battle on the ships.  Sinbad gets thrown overboard but is saved by his parrot.  They wind up on an island where the pirates are burying their treasure.  He tries to foil their plan but is caught and winds up strapped to a huge bird, who steals the treasure chest.  Sinbad’s parrot saves him again and makes the bird drop him and the treasure onto their boat, where they revel in it.

4.) Gold Rush Mickey (1933 film) 1948 print
Mickey is a pianist in a bar when a mean, big dog comes in and trashes the place. The dog kidnaps Minnie and Mickey goes on the chase with Pluto.  They find the dog’s cabin and there is a big fight, ending when Pluto makes a snowball smash the cabin and Mickey, Minnie, and Pluto wind up on top of the pile of logs.

5.) Puss ‘N Boots 1946
Story of Puss ‘n Boots.  A young man play his bagpipes while a group of kittens play tic tac toe.  The kittens fall into water and the boy saves them with his pipes.  The father cat, puss ‘n boots asks how he can repay the boy.  The boy wishes to save a princess from marrying a big, mean ogre.  The boy winds up trapped in a cage with the princess, after they’re turned into little birds.  But, the four cats save him from the ogre and turn the ogre into a rat and the birds back into people.  They kiss and are happy.

6.) Simple Simon 1945
Simple Simon gets kicked out of his room, then gets in trouble with a baker, whose pies he eats without paying.  They have a big chase and eventually, Simon gets away with a sack of gold and the baker is chased off by a lion.




Beanstalk Bunny
Daffy Duck as cranky Jack in Beanstalk, meets Bugs asleep in bed on way up beanstalk, and the giant is Elmer Fudd. Bunny as Jack Benny. bunny and duck are tiny, get captured and run from giant Elmer. hide in snuff box, run on E’s face, hide inside his head, jump out of his cigarette,trip giant Elmer. bugs finds giant carrots and is happy, Daffy becomes the hands on Elmer’s pocketwatch.

Reluctant Dragon 1941
Adapted from the book by Kenneth Grahame, this animated comedy is about villagers who believe all dragons are pests so they enlist the help of Sir Giles to dispose of one.  But this dragon would rather read poetry than fight.  Fight is staged in which the knight “wins” and the dragon becomes accepted as a pet. Originally part of a feature-length film released during the Disney animators’ strike of 1941.




Family Circus 1951 B+W
Five-year-old Patsy has competition for her father's attention from the family's new baby daughter. Her attempts to win her father's praise receive instead a rebuke. The father slips on a roller-skate, knocking himself unconscious. In a dream sequence, he realizes he has been ignoring his oldest child. He awakens and takers her in his arms, but Baby, now the jealous one, kicks up a fuss.

Meet King Joe 1949
Cartoon of King ‘Joe American’ learning the meaning of hard work across the globe. He runs out of his house, rushes to the store, rushes home again. Sits in a plush chair puts his hands on his hips, other cartoon stereotyped ethnic types appear behind him. A time machine appears, Joe turns the handle and see his grandfather in the screen. Back in the present day, Joe  works on a assembly line, talking back to the camera constantly. A man crosses the street just barely missing  a falling safe . A globe spins, a Chinese man carries a heavy load and his pay  is compared to an American railroad worker. Two guys on a street corner grimace at each other a man and his motor bike explode. A rear window perspective of a scientist concocting a special serum. A neon burlesque sign. A man asleep in his recliner is watched by his son, the phone rings, he answers it angrily. He attacks his refrigerator. Joe in a model shop. Joe sitting atop a huge metal machine of industry. 








3 Classic Mickey Mouse Cartoons.

“Mickey Saves the Airmail” 1933, 
"Gold Rush Mickey" 1932,
"Mickey and The Giant" 1933
Pup's Picnic 1936
Two little puppies, one black, one brown, are underfoot as a woman is laying out a picnic. The black one noses around a stack of sandwiches and a roast turkey, and gets scolded; his brother gets praised, but that's only because he's sneakier. They pull away, and a fox hunt passes by. Panicked by the horses, they outrun everyone, even the fox. The fox hides, and they spot him before the others. One old bloodhound does a Tarzan stunt and leaps to the head of the pack. Lots of other fox hunt sequences follow. Ultimately, the puppies get back to the car just as everyone is leaving; the fox hitches a ride on the back of the car.

Directed by Rudolf Ising.

Porky Boom Boom 1936 Jack King
A very early Porky Pig is a World War I doughboy.  Animals sing "You're in the Army Now" to a frightened Porky who wishes he were back home on the farm.  Porky and another soldier rescue General Hardtack from the enemy and fly him through enemy lines








1. 3 Bruins on a spree (Only non-cartoon on reel)
In this black and white adventure, three mischievous brother bears (portrayed by real bears) keep getting in trouble. First they play around on a ski lift and a little cowboy rescues them. Then they break into a log cabin and wreck havic.

2. Little Lulu Visits the Zoo
In this black and white cartoon, Lulu takes a tour through the zoo licking her lollipop. First she terrorizes the animals by tempting them with food, then she turns on her tour guide.
Includes giraffes, elephants, hippos, lions and monkeys.

3. Oswald Rabbit in Beach Combers
Black and white cartoon geese/ swan/ ducks and a rabbit and dog come to the beach for some fun times. 6 baby ducks decide they want to steal the rabbit’s picnic basket, but first they have to outsmart the dog. Ultimately, the baby ducks take the picnic basket and set sail on the sea. A big octopus snatches them up and pulls them under. The much abused dog comes to the rescue, but ends up looking like a buffoon.

4. Woody Woodpecker in “Piano Tooner.”
Woody Woodpecker plays the piano at a gunpoint of a mobster. The policeman busts in and Woody dreams of being the hero and ratting the mobster out. Woody doesn’t turn him in, instead he travels around with the mobster continuing to play the piano in unlikely places- the back of a truck and on a train.




The Bull Fight 1947
Reducing Creme 1934
Baby Bottleneck 1946
Boobs in the Woods 1948
The Wearing of the Grin 1951
The Air Express 1937
Terry toons Wise Quacks 1953
The Sour Puss
Tom and Cherie
Puss n Toots
Riff Raffy Daffy
Puddy the Pup - Down in the Deep 1936
Ge Whiz-z-z-z 1955
An Egg Scramble
Roughly Squeaking
Hound Hunters
Sandy Claw 1955
Leghorn Swoggled
Ham in a Role - 1949 Goofy Gophers
Stupid Cupid 1944
Porky Chops
The Wabbit who came to Supper freleng 1942
Mouse in Manhattan
My Little Duckaroo - chuck jones
Mad Maestro
Dog Collared
The Cuckoo Clock that wouldn't cuckoo 1958
Mackerel Moocher 1962
Duel Personality 1966
Bad Ol Putty Tat
Beach Combers 1936
Room and Bird
Cat's Paw 1958
Chow Hound 1950
Eggcited Rooster 1951
Awful Orphan 1947
Sheepish Wolf 1957
Pasture filled with sheep, sheepdog watching on a hill. Bad wolf hides in the woods watching sheep, sees them as lamb stew and chops. Wolf dresses as a sheep and approaches the flock. Tempts baby lamb with a carrot, chases it with two slices of bread. When wolf opens sandwich, sees sheepdog’s head. Sheepdog lectures him, kicks him into the flock. Black sheep notices wolf and runs up to sheepdog and warns him. Sheepdog yells, sheep get scared and run panicked. Sheepdog chases wolf, wolf dresses like old lady, sheepdog dresses like Little Red Riding Hood. Chase ensues. Sheep watch as sheepdog exposes wolf. Entire flock turns out to be wolves in sheep clothing, remove their masks.

It's Hummer Time 1949 mckimson
Hummingbird flies through garden, angry bee yells at him to keep out of his flower. Signs point to birdbath, which is a cat holding a bowl of water. Bird sprays cat in face, chase. Cat lands on dog, dog drags cat through hole in fence.



Cat holds gramophone bell like it’s a flower, bird puts TNT it it, bell explodes on cat.



Bird hums in dog’s ear, cat slams net down on dog’s head. Dog drags cat to a “birthday party,” gives him a cake filled with TNT candles. Cake explodes on cat.



Cat strings a flower onto a balloon, bird paints a cat face on it. Balloon floats in front of dog, dog pops balloon. Cat feels tug on string, pulls dog over fence. Dog puts cat on roof, pulls him down the rain pipe.



Cat sees bird near bone bowl, pounces. Dog emerges from house, trips cat, puts cat in a cement mixer, pops out looking like “The Thinker” statue.



Cat pours sneeze powder in dog’s mouth, looks for bird inside. Dog pulls cat through an obstacle course of painful terrain. Bird ties dog to cat, so they both experience it. Both run through the cement mixer, come out looking like a statue. Bird turns them into a birdbath, swims in the pool.


















Malibu Beach Party B+W 1940


 Jack Benny and Mary Livingston (Benny) are caricatured, along with Bob Hope, Bette Davis, Andy Devine, Kay Kaiser, Clark Gable, George Raft, Baby Snooks, James Cagney, Rochester, Phil Harris, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Mickey Rooney, Cary Grant, and many more.  This is supposed to be a party at Jack Benny's home.

Red Hot Riding Hood (Color, 1943)
Tex Avery; MGM; 1943 This sensual adaptation story liberates its characters from their Di$ney-style forest and slaps them in the middle of swanky Manhattan. Grandma's a nymphomaniac swinger, and her rustic cottage home a hip penthouse pad. Little Red has become a red-hot singer-stripper; the Wolf is a model of lupine lechery; and the forest is supplanted by a big-city nightclub as the enchanted place of forbidden sexuality. The Wolf tries to pull the old Red Riding Hood gag in order to meet up with Little Red, but Grandma has other ideas.





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Of Thee I Sting (Fritz Freleng, 1946 Color)
Mosquitoes go through an intense and very specific boot camp in this entertaining documentary send up of war effort newsreels of the day. Looney Toons fans will thrill to Robert C. Bruce’s jaunty March of Time style narration.




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The Super Snooper (Robert McKimson, 1952, Color)



Hard-Boiled Raymond Chandler Style Toon Action! Private Eye Daffy Duck turns up at the scene of the crime, only to have his every wacky effort to gather clues thwarted by a copper-haired femme fatale. Could this temptress be the guilty party?




Venus and the Cat (Paul Terry, 1921, B+W)

You know how it is, the Goddess of Love floats in her hatchback cloud, just seeing where she can help mere mortals out.  She has strange solution for the domestic squabbles of a crusty farmer and his mischief-making cat: she makes the cat his wife! From American Aesop's Fables Studio.



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Hollywood Steps Out (Color, 1934)



This bizarre Merrie Melodies cartoon features caricatures of a who's who of Hollywood big wigs all stopping to ogle an avatar of Blonde Burlesque megastar Sally Rand doing her famous Bubble Dance.






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Bacall To Arms (Color, 1946)
Directed by an un-credited Bob Clampett, this Merrie Melodies release features some great Hollywood star caricature- and a nasty final blackface gag (which hit the cutting room floor in modern times).

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Krazy Kat in Krazy Spooks (B+W, 1933)



Krazy Kat jumps back to the screen from the comic strip, (looking a lot like one Mr. M. Mouse) to battle ghosts, skeletons and gorillas in this silly short. Krazy Kat and his sweetheart (with a curiously tiny puppy in tow), head into a haunted house and squeal at everything!  The puppy tangles with a skeleton to adorable and hilarious effect, but when the danger becomes real, will they be able to fight off a Poe-esque twist?



Blame it on the Samba (Color, 1948) 
An unforgettable and mesmerizing Technicolor film mix of live action and animation featuring Ethel Smith, the Dinning Sisters and a dizzying array of animated characters. Produced by Walt D*sney.





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Buddy’s Theatre (B+W, 1935)





The forgotten star of Warner Bros. cartoons! Buddy starred in cartoons from 1933 till 1935. This time out, Buddy is the one-man staff of the local movie house. The news reel spoofs will delight fans of both 30’s movies and general kookiness. When his darling Cookie, Warner’s answer to Betty Boop, gets in a spot of trouble, Buddy makes the leap into the silver screen.






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The Bee and the Butterfly (B+W, 1932)
This is one ill-fated, but beautiful love affair.  A grouchy bee meets and falls for a beautiful lady butterfly (one who bears striking resemblance to Betty Boop), but an evil spider's not planning on sending them a china set from Pottery Barn for the wedding, he's too interested in eating the entire wedding-party. One of Paul Terry's Terrytoons.








If It’s ACME, It’s Gotta Be Good!



Hopalong Casualty  (Chuck Jones, Color, 1960)



1960 and Wile E. Coyote is still after Road Runner! The gags are a delightful mix of the same old failed methods and a few fresh, promising mail-order schemes, even 11 years into this wildly popular series. Earthquake pills and a festively monstrous gift-wrapping are among the Acme Corporation’s offerings in this “faultless” toon. 



D'oh!
Dough for the Do-Do (Robert Clampett, Color, 1949)
The gang remade 1938’s Porky in Wackyland, this time in full color to make those Dali references really pop! Everyone’s favorite pig travels to the “Dark Continent” to snag a rare (and nutso!) bird to claim a 4 sextillion dollar reward! Will the melty watches, 3-head Moe, Larry and Curly Monster and the other exotic creatures get in his way?




Coal Black and the Sebben Dwarves (Robert Clampett, Color, 1943)
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Jive Bombing
Yes, it’s one of the “Censored Eleven”, the cartoons Warner Brothers withheld from distribution. It’s not hard to see why: it’s a blackface send up on Disney’s Snow White with a racy and racist tone. Said to be inspired by African-American actress Ruby Dandridge’s suggestion to Bob Clampett that he make a musical cartoon with an all black cast, it has a strangely patriotic twist to it. Not only are the “sebben dwarves” GIs, our fairy tale heroine is actively helping with the war effort and the evil queen is a that most-reviled of homefront baddies, a black marketeer! It also provides another example of carefully compartmentalized racism, making clear who the real enemy is, sort of. No word on what Dandridge (actress Dorothy’s mom!), who provides the voice of the flamboyant villainess, thought of the final product.




1) Tree for Two (1952) freleng
2) Scentimental Reasons (1949) chuck jones
3) Cracked Ice (1937) Frank tashlin




1) Spike & Chester (two dogs) decide to bully a cat.  Unfortunate Sylvester is their choice, but he receives help from a recently escaped panther.  Gangster-style characters in a back alley setting.
2) Kitty gets paint on her back and the amorous Pepe LePew mistakes her for a skunk.  A chase ensues.  Cartoon ends with a reversal of affections.
3) W.C. Squeals,  a pig that looks and talks like W.C. Fields, tries to break into the Red Cross dog’s alcohol supply at a frozen pond.   A drunken fish with a magnet on its belly makes the pig to win an ice skating contest through magnetic force (because he is wearing metal skates).

1. Book Review (1947) A library of books comes to life.  A wolf tries to attack a girl and is put on trial.  Story told through book titles and the characters on the covers coming to life.  The wolf eventually burns in Dante’s Inferno. bob clampett

2. The Great Piggy Bank Robbery (1946) While reading his favorite comic book, Daffy Duck knocks himself unconscious and dreams that he’s “Duck Twacy, Famous Detective.”  Porky the Pig has a cameo, and Daffy has to deal with numerous evil villains.  Follows footprints, climbs walls and ceilings, peels off a footprint to look under it.  clampett

3. Of Thee I Sting (1946) Movietone-style spoof narration is used in this tale of one man’s desperate stand against all odds.  An army of mosquitoes go to training camp to learn advanced attack techniques.  They plan an assault on a guy on his porch reading the paper.  Drills, classes, obstacle courses, and preparing for battle are shown, all to get the one guy, who is armed with a fly swatter and DDT. freleng

Merrie Melodies: The Squawkin’ Hawk 1942 chuck jones
Henery Hawk (who is called "Junior" in this cartoon) wants a chicken for dinner, saying that he is a chicken hawk. His mother refuses to give him chicken, insisting he eat a worm, or he will get no supper. Henery refuses, much to the worm's relief. Henery's mum put him to bed and tell him to "straight to sleep". Henery sneaks out his house at bedtime, then goes to the chickenhouse and soon finds a rooster and his hen, Hazel, who has a panic reaction at the sound of the words "chicken hawk". The rooster chases him until his mother spots him who sent him home. He is again told to eat a worm and again refuses and says "I want chicken", at which point the worm gives him a big kiss on the cheek.

Merrie Melodies: Stage Door Cartoon, with Bugs Bunny 1944 Fritz Freleng
Elmer Fudd tries to trick Bugs Bunny with a carrot on a fishing pole. While fleeing from Fudd, Bugs runs in a stage door.  Fudd is temporarily distracted by dancing girls, but Bugs continues to run into the barrel of Fudd's gun.  Bugs is forced to continue to perform by dancing, and eventually drags Fudd into the act. Fudd gets trapped in a piano for a bit, then dresses up and acts silly on stage. Bugs imitates Jimmy Durante at the end. Pretending to be a law man, Bugs makes Fudd watch a Bugs Bunny cartoon on the screen...and it turns out to be the very one we, the audience, are watching. Fudd rips off the law man’s clothes, expecting Bugs, but Bugs is dressed as the conductor and the law man, angry, drags Fudd away.

Merrie Melodies: Rabbit Punch 1947 - chuck jones
A huge champion boxer is beating the hell out of a small, skinny challenger. From up on a hill, Bugs Bunny shouts to the brute to pick on someone his own size (or something to that effect), and so the champ decides to throw Bugs into the ring. Bugs’ swagger is left wanting as the big guy keeps sending him across the ring with one punch, so Bugs starts tricking him in order to land his own blows. He plays dead, he grabs the microphone from the announcer and plays up his own boxing prowess, making the champ think he’s getting hit. Bugs pretends to break the champ’s leg, then examines the fake injury while dressed up as a doctor. The boxer tries to trick Bugs by coating his feet in grease, but that just makes Bugs more agile. Bugs continues to trick the huge man, with bombs and slingshots, and when the champ ties Bugs to tracks and tries to run him over with a train, the film breaks and Bugs comes out apologizing that the cartoon can’t be finished. He then pulls out a pair of scissors and winks at the audience.

Merrie Melodies: Thumb Fun 1950 McKimson

Although it's winter, Daffy Duck doesn't want to go south. He ends up deciding to do so, however, and hitches a ride with Porky Pig. He is a constant nuisance to Porky, getting him in trouble with other drivers and causing him to speed. Porky gets in trouble with the law because of Daffy. Porky gets fed up and ditches Daffy, but not before giving him an Acme Hitch-Hiker Thumb. Daffy ends up using it in the freezing snow.

Merrie Melodies: Much Ado About Nutting 1952 chuck jones
A squirrel in the New York City doesn't know what to do when confronted by the seemingly insurmountable task of getting a coconut into his home, much less crack it. He starts looking at peanuts, then walnuts, then brazil nuts, but when he sees the coconuts, he is determined to take one home and eat it somehow. He even tries climbing up the Empire State building and throwing it off to break it open. Sad from his failure, he returns the coconut to the stand, only to have it fall down and crack. When he opens the broken shell, it reveals a second shell, and as the squirrel faints from exhaustion, the coconut winks at us.

Merrie Melodies: Beep, Beep 1951 chuck jones
The Road Runner (acceleratus inaredibilis) still eludes Wile E., stuck in the road with his knife and fork in the pavement.  He concocts several failed schemes to catch the Road Runner, involving an anvil, TNT, a dark mine shaft, a rocket, and rocket roller skates. His final trick on railroad tracks also goes wrong.

Merrie Melodies: Sheep Ahoy 1953 chuck jones
Ralph Wolf tries to prey on the sheep while Sam Sheepdog comes onto his shift to guard the sheep. Sam continues to capture and clobber Ralph despite Ralph’s clever attempts to sneak past him, such as hiding under rocks and in smoke and trying to knock Sam with boulders. Eventually, the time clock sounds and Sam and Ralph are relieved by Fred Sheepdog and George Wolf, who pick up exactly where they left off.

Merrie Melodies: The Heckling Hare 1941 tex avery
A dumb dog is sniffing around in the forest and stumbles upon Bugs’ hole. He starts digging and soon Bugs is toying with him. He hits the dog with a bat, escapes in the water, and hides on his back. He then hides in a tree and gives the dog a tomato to squeeze. The dog, thinking he killed Bugs, holds a funeral. When Bugs pops up during the funeral, the dog becomes angry and accidentally falls off a cliff. Bugs then accidentally falls from the cliff, and the two scream together and hold one another. As they are about to hit the ground, they screech to a halt and lightly land on their feet. Bugs then criticizes the audience.

Merrie Melodies: The Pest That Came to Dinner 1947 arthur davis
Pierre the Termite eats all of Porky's furniture, and Porky decides to fight back. He calls for help and a dog exterminator, whose motto is "I'm here to help you," nearly helps Porky out of this world when Pierre reverses the poison on him. They try to vacuum up Pierre and catch him in other ways, but all that ends up being accomplished is they destroy more of Porky’s house. Porky, furious at the exterminator, takes Pierre to his office and they both eat up all his furniture. Porky and Pierre open up a fine furniture shop. Termite sings "By a Waterfall" from Footlight Parade"

Merrie Melodies: Mouse Mazurka 1948 freleng
In a snowy village in eastern Europe (Poland or Russia or the like), a mouse decides to help himself to some of the food on the dining table. Sylvester spoils his plans, however, and chases him into the hole. The mouse is very worried and Sylvester tries to lure him out with cheese. A failed plan with hand puppets makes Sylvester end up chasing the mouse to a cabinet where he accidentally drinks nitro glycerine, thinking it is water. Sylvester then tries to prevent the mouse from exploding as the mouse thinks that he is tricking Sylvester, when really he is in danger. As the mouse continues to taunt Sylvester, he suddenly explodes, and his angel is seen confused. Sylvester then drinks nitro glycerine and makes himself explode, so he can continue to chase the mouse.

Merrie Melodies: The Lion’s Busy 1948 freleng
Leo the Lion's 10th birthday celebration is taking place, and Beaky Buzzard gives him a present: a book about lions, saying that they rarely live past age 10. The lion tries to act youthful, but Beaky causes him to slip off a cliff and then tries to put his tail in a sandwich. Leo continues to protest as all the while Beaky continues to put him in dangerous situations and try to eat him. Leo finally takes a rocket to the moon to get away from him, but Beaky is there too. They wait each other out for months and then years on the moon, and even as old men they are still at odds.

Merrie Melodies: Stork Naked 1954 freleng
The stork delivers a baby to some happy families, who then celebrate with him and get him drunk. Daffy's wife is expecting the stork to bring her a baby, but Daffy doesn't want it.  The stork drunkenly arrives to find an irate Daffy trying to prevent him from delivering the egg in all imaginable ways.  When the stork finally does manage to get the breaking egg into the house and flee, Daffy discovers it's the stork's own look-alike fledgeling, cap and all. Daffy, with a devilish smile, flies away with the baby to give the stork a taste of his own medicine.

Merrie Melodies: Flowers for Madam 1936 freleng
Flower garden where the flowers are dancing and singing. It is announced that there will be a flower pageant, open to all contestants. Fade to the pageant being announced by a honey bee. The pageant begins with a parade being led by a grass hopper followed by turtles begins ridden by more garden bugs, and a line of beetles playing trumpet flowers like horns. There are floats pulled by worms and snails. Flowers dance on the floats, and the crowd of flower spectators applauds and cheers.  A cactus decides to join in by planting super growing flower seeds which sprout and bloom in a matter of seconds, trellising over his windup truck to create a instant flower float. The judges are not impressed, Adding to the cactus’ chagrin, this truck explodes in a fury of gears and springs, and everyone laughs. In an unrelated story arch, someone has left a box of matches and magnifying glass unattended in the sun. The focused light ignites a match starting a fire which spreads to the pageant. The cactus comes to the rescue by employing the use of  a garden hose attached to a sprinkler, but the flames turn it off. In a second attempt to squelch the flames, the cactus uses watermelons. This works, and the flames take off running the opposite direction. One last flame escapes and is hiding when a grasshopper sees it, and spit, killing it on contact. 

Merrie Melodies: Strife with Father 1948 mckimson
Beaky Buzzard is left as an egg on the English sparrows' doorstep by a shady figure in the night.  They raise him, but have a tough time since they don't know what he is. The father does not like him very much, but the mother does. The father tries to teach Beaky to fly but he is shy, so then the father takes him to a hen house to try and get a chicken. His lessons in hunting don’t go so well, and the father is pummeled by a rooster and threatened unknowingly with a grenade by Beaky.

Merrie Melodies: The Bee-Deviled Bruin 1948 chuck jones
The Bear family tries to enjoy breakfast, but Junyer has an accident and spills all the honey. Pa, angry at his son, decides  to take him to a beehive in an attempt to refill the honey jar. They have trouble (mainly because of Junyer) getting up to the beehive at first, and even get actual bees stuck in the jar rather than honey. After repeated attempts and failures, at the expense of Pa’s sanity, they finally give up and Pa tries to put something else on his toast. When the pantry is opened, endless rows of honey jars are revealed, and Pa loses it.

Merrie Melodies: The Hypo-Chondri-Cat 1950
`chuck `jones
Herbie and Bertie have a good time at the expense of Claude the Cat who suffering from a phobia that makes him think he is always sick. Convincing Claude that all of his maladies can be cured, they eventually get rid of him, and take over his home and supply of cheese.

Merrie Melodies: A Hound For Trouble
chuck jones 1951
Charlie dog, who is always looking for a master, tries to find one in Italy. In a restaurant where he tries to help with the customers.  The owner gets rid of him by telling him to right the leaning tower of Pisa.

Merrie Melodies: Kiddin' the Kitten 1952 mckimpson
A lazy, fat cat named Dodsworth is ordered by his mistress to catch mice that have invaded their home. Dodsworth doesn't want to condescend to personal physical effort to catch the mice; so, he dons a professor's hat and dupes a kitten into doing the job for him, on the pretext that he's a teacher who is giving the kitten a valuable learning experience.

Merrie Melodies: Wackiki Wabbit 1943 Chuck Jones
Two goofy island castaways are dreaming about food when Bugs Bunny washes up on the island. They are intent on eating Bugs but he manages to outsmart them again and again.

Merrie Melodies: Wild Wife 1954 mckimpson
A stereotypical suburban wife from the 1950s describes her day (cooking breakfast, cleaning house with a vacuum, waiting in line at the bank, donating blood, shopping at the department store, buying groceries, beauty salon, feeding the parking meter) to her unsympathetic husband, then beans him with a new rolling pin.

The Rattled Rooster 1948 arthur davis
A rooster is unable to get worms; the other chickens either get there first or trick him out of the worms. But there's one worm nobody else competes for, because it's a trickster. It uses the garden hose, a balloon, toothpaste, and a high-voltage line to fool the chicken. It gets the chicken stuck in a pipe, then launches it with a hotfoot. The rooster doesn't believe it, so the worm launches him again. The worm then attaches a baby rattle to his tail and fools the chicken, but a real rattler mistakes the worm for her child. The worm and rooster team up to get the rattler stuck in a fence, using a couple of golf balls, then shake hands and walk away. The light finally dawns on the rooster, and he comes back after the worm who traps him in the fence, right next to the snake.

Merrie Melodies: Feather Dusted 1954 mckimpson
The character of Foghorn Leghorn is based on Fred Allen's "Senator Claghorn," an inhabitant of his "Allen's Alley" played by Allen's announcer.
The widow hen (Prissie) and her bookworm son get the best of the over-outgoing Leghorn when he tries to teach the boy games.
Rooster character tries to make the “panty waist or bookworm character( a chick with glasses).  into a man by having him play sports games like croquette , cops and robbers,  Indians,  pirates, diving. The chick character with the glasses and pencil out smarts the know it all rooster until the granny scolds them both. 

Merrie Melodies:Zipping Along 1952 `chuck jones
The Road-Runner (as "Velocitus tremenjus") beats a speeding train and the Coyote ("Road-runnerus digestus"), running him down several times.  The Coyote's scheme to hypnotize the Road-Runner is foiled by a mirror.
Merrie Melodies:Bell Hoppy 1954 Mckimpson
The Brotherhood of Alley Cats throws Sylvester out until ippety Hopper shows up and they need Sylvester to bell him so they can gang up on him.   There is a take off on the Marx Brothers's mirror routine. Setting: the city with lots of garbage and garbage cans. Sylvester the cat desperate to become a member of the club must put a bell around the neck of a baby kangaroo that has escaped from the zoo. The cats think he is a giant mouse.

Looney Tunes: All Fowled Up 1954 mckimson
The war between Foghorn Leghorn and the barnyard dog continues,  as they take turns attacking each other as they nap. Henery Hawk continues to try and eat Foghorn and his chickens, even though he is too small to be a threat. The dog helps little Henery in his attempts as a further means of annoying Foghorn. The rooster ends up getting accidentally covered in cement, and little Henery carts him away, much to the dog’s delight.

Looney Tunes: Of Rice and Hen 1952 mckimson
Prissy decides to jump off the barn because she can't "get a man" and have chicks.  Foghorn catches her, and she falls in love with him.  He goes about his business of harrassing the barnyard dog, who decides to help Prissie "land" Foghorn as a husband since he knows it will annoy Foghorn.  They do it by making Foghorn jealous - the dog dresses as a rooster and pretends to court Prissy, and when Foghorn goes over to fight him, the other hens marvel. Foghorn ends up marrying Prissy, and he seems to regret it instantly.

Looney Tunes: Weasel Stop 1955 mckimson
There is a large farm in the middle of nowhere with large hills and telephone polls spread over the landscape.  A weasel  is climbing up the telephone polls and is looking down for chickens on the farm.  A weasel catching dog is on patrol but doing a horrible job.  Foghorn Leghorn runs into the weasel catching dog and rings the weasel alarm to get the dog moving.  It makes the dog run wild.  But when he sees there is no weasel, he goes back to his post.  When Foghorn walks away the weasel springs up out of the ground and snatches Foghorn.  Foghorn screams and yells but the dog doesn’t believe his yells.  Foghorn clings to a tree and gets away from the weasel.  The weasel tries to get Foghorn again, but can’t do.  He instead starts chasing a small brown chicken.  Foghorn ties the weasel to a balloon with a stick of dynamite.  He gets close to the chicken house but the dog takes a paper airplane and pops the balloon, when he lands he lights the stick of dynamite for the weasel.  The dog then catches Foghorn and the weasel planning another surprise attack.  But the weasel and Foghorn get picked up by a farming assembly line and get there feathers and fur shaved away.  They both end up bald and wearing their underwear.  

Looney Tunes: War and Pieces 1963 
The Coyote and Roadrunner and chasing each other down a highway in the middle of the desert.  The Coyote throws a bomb at the Roadrunner but he zips faster than it and avoids it.  It in turn hits a cactus and bounces straight off into the Coyote’s face.  He gets burnt to a crisp and turns all black.  The Coyote then tries to shoot himself with a bow and arrow but it backfires and rips his fur off.  The accident also causes the cliff he is on to breakaway and fall straight down into the desert sun.  The Coyote then sets up laser trap that collapses two bricks when touched.  The Roadrunner touches the laser but it collapses on the Coyote.  This makes him paper thin and he simply floats away in the air.  The Coyote then gets his hands on invisible paint and paints himself.  But the Roadrunner zips past him and causes the Coyote to get hit by a car.  He then is pushed by  the car off a cliff into the ocean.  The Coyote makes a contraption that looks like a viewfinder but is actually a shotgun.  The roadrunner gets very interested n the viewfinder and makes the Coyote interested as well.  The Coyote ends up shooting himself instead because he looked for too long.  The Coyote then strikes himself with lighting because he hooks his hook on a cloud.  The cloud rips open and bursts full of lightning.  The Coyote then takes a rocket straight for the Roadrunner, but misses.  When he misses he goes through the Earth’s crust and core and ends up coming out in China.  Once in China, an Asian Roadrunner bows to him.  The coyote chases him but bangs his head against a gong.  He falls back through the Earth and falls off another cliff.

Looney Tunes: Buddy’s Theatre 1935  
Buddy was a Looney Tunes character who replaced Bosko as a hero.  In this burlesque of a neighborhood movie house, Buddy does everything from take tickets to jump into the film and vanquish a gorilla.  Buddy has an asbestos curtain, a candle for light in the projector, and shows a "Passe Newsreel," 15-cent features and "rejected short subjects" (a spoof of the usual phrase "selected short subjects") with his "Vitamin Phoney" (Vitaphone) film.

Looney Tunes: Too Hop to Handle 1960 mckimson
Hippety Hopper hops around town, messing things up for people here and there. Meanwhile, Sylvester tries to teach his son how to catch mice. The young cat tries out the Pied Piper trick, and Hippety bounces into frame. The cats are convinced Hippety is a large mouse, and Sylvester tries to teach his son how to catch him.  Eventually he attracts some dogs instead with the pipe, while Hippety is taken back to the zoo in a van.

Looney Tunes: The Super Snooper 1952 mckimson

Which is Witch 1949 - freleng
The witch doctor needs a rabbit for his brew.  Bugs Bunny happens along, and doesn't intend to be part of the pot, but almost becomes part of an alligator instead.

Looney Tunes: Mice Follies 1960 mckimson
Mice dressed and sounding like Jackie Gleason and Art Carney in "The Honeymooners" try to get home at 2 in the morning after a Racoon Lodge meeting. They keep mistaking a cat’s mouth for their darkened apartment.

Keywords: mice, Jack Gleason, Art Carney, The Honeymooners, cats

Looney Tunes: A Peck O’ Trouble  1953 mckimson
Dodsworth has trouble getting a woodpecker for breakfast, so he offers to "teach" the kitten how to catch birds.

Looney Tunes: Lumber Jerks 1955 freleng

Looney Tunes: Ali-Baba Bound 1940 warped clampett
Set in the Sahara Desert, this features takeoffs on Hollywood landmarks, stars, and current songs in the beginning.  Porky finds out that Ali-Baba and his Dirty Sleeves plan to attack the fort; it's up to him to go warn the fort. He gets there to discover everyone has left for the Legion convention in Boston. Porky and his rented camel fend off the attackers themselves for a while, but when the situation gets dire, the young camel summons its mother. Momma takes care of the attacker that's menacing them. The secret weapon, who has been sitting on the bench with an artillery shell strapped to his head, now comes in, but runs right through the fort and into Ali-Baba.  One Arab, on being repulsed, carries a picket sign that the fort is unfair to Arabs.

Looney Tunes: Meet John Doughboy 1941 clampett
"America's Defense Effort" is caricatured.  "Ciitzen Sugar Kane" is quoted in a newspaper story.  The draft, the mess hall, armaments, machine gun nests (which exhibit clucking), etc.  Jack Benny and Rochester are a secret weapon in the Maxwell.  Headline:  "Can America Be Invaded?"  (The Statue of Liberty uses insect spray to get rid of bombers.)

Keywords: World War Two, Second World War, World War II, defense, "Citizen Kane," William Randolph Hearst, machine guns, Jack Benny, Rochester, Maxwell (Benny's car), Flying Fortresses, U. S. Navy, Statue of Liberty, bombers, war preparations, war, defenses, armaments, mess halls, newspapers. Clampett.

Looney Tunes: The Tree’s Knees 1931 Freleng
Bosko(?) goes into the woods to cut down a tree, but is dissuaded by a squirrel and some seedlings.  He encounters various woodland dancers and musical instruments as he goes through the forest. Bosko plays the harmonica to a tree. He chases a squirrel. A bird sings to its nest while the tree rocks the nest with baby birds. Bosko gets spit on by the bird. He chases a butterfly and plays tree trunks as if they were a harp. Tree plays itself like a violin. A  willow tree weeps. Pussy willows meow. Mickey Mouse see saws and saves a mouse in a pond. 

Looney Tunes: Porky’s Naughty Nephew 1938 Clampett
Looney tune characters go through bath house in clothes and come out in Bathing suits. Characters at the beach: under an umbrella, in the beach shower, the Porky pig hit by the his nephew, Pinky with a shovel, pretending to drown, starfish get caught on Porky’s mouth, Porky gets sand dumped on him. A swimming race: characters on all kinds of vehicles in the water.
At the beach, Porky's nephew misbehaves and Porky blames it on others since he can't see his nephew doing it.  During a swim race the jockey and horse might represent a popular personality.  Eddie Cantor gets excited on seeing a float, hugs it, saying "At last, a buoy!" (referring to the fact that all his children were girls).

Looney Tunes: Porky's Five and Ten 1938 clampett
Porky decides to open a variety store ("Five and Ten") on a tropical island, and loads his goods in a sail boat.  Fish cut a hole in the bottom and use the goods to imitate human life.   They imitate movie stars as well, including Laurel and Hardy, Greta Garbo, Mae West at their "Hollywood Hotel."  A great waterspout finally restores Porky's goods to his ship.

Looney Tunes: Viva Buddy 1934 bw Jack King
There are caricatures of the four Marx Brothers in this tale of a small Mexican town terrorized by bandidos.  Many stereotypes in the treatment: sombreros, drunk sleeping soldiers, Mariachi band, Mexican town, guy with mustache  on horse shooting guns, shooting up the bar, dancer with castanets, parrot, fight for the girl.

Looney Tunes: Goin’ to Heaven on a Mule freleng 1934 bw racist
This is an all-African-American musical. Caricatures: 
mammies picking cotton in the field, man asleep on straw gets stung by bees, man drinking from a jug, singing black angels in a choir, heaven with all black angels, man on a mule, a club with singing, dancing and watermelon, man sees jugs of gin on a tree in heaven and drinks, then he’s thrown to Hades.  Some pick cotton and bring it to a machine which turns out "100% wool suits."  A mule eats from a feedbag while bugs attack a man asleep on straw.  He's tempted by a jug of liquor, and his angel and devil fight.  While they're fighting he drinks the jug, and dreams he goes to heaven on a mule.  Heaven is labeled "Pair-O-Dice," and is pictured as a town where everyone dances to a jazz beat, angels smoke cigars, dice are everywhere and watermelon plentiful, and so on.  Music sounds Gershwin-like.  At last the man is sent to "Hades," which turns out to be his pile of straw.  He takes comfort in his jug.

Looney tunes: Punch Trunk 1952 chuck jones

Looney Tunes : Scrambled Aches 1956 roadrunner

Looney Tunes: Drip-Along Daffy 1950 - chuck jones
Set in the “west”. A take off on westerns and the wild west. Starts with characters shooting each other including the horses and holding up all the wild west stores.
Daffy meets and faces down "Nasty Canasta," the gunslinger, but it's his sidekick Porky who defeats him. Daffy is the sheriff who comes to clean up the town. 

Looney tunes: Bosco the Sheepherder 1933 bw hugh harmon
Bosko is taking care of his flock while he plays a pipe and a lamb frolics.  He makes a bagpipe out of a beehive and hollow branches.  But several members of the flock escape through a break in the fence, and a wolf chases the lamb who is following Bosko.  While Bosko eats his lunch, the wolf pursues his, and runs away with the lamb.  Bosko goes after the wolf, calling his dog.

Looney Tunes: Buddy’s Bearcats 1934 jack king
Musical version of an American baseball game, with a few gimmicks.  Joe E. Brown in caricature is the radio commentator.

Looney Tunes: Pilgrim Porky 1940 bw clampett

Looney Tunes: Buddy Towser freleng 1934
Buddy and his dog get into a lot of trouble trying to keep the fox out of the chicken house. Setting: snowing at night. Chickens launch eggs at fox. Buddy goes after fox with his gun but gets chases by a bear and a snow ball
No dialog, but comic sound effects and music.

Looney Tunes: The Miller’s Daughter 1934 freleng
A little shepherdess figurine is broken and forced to the attic for repair.  Her shepherd goes to her aid, and three "hear-no-evil" etc. monkeys in the attic imitate the Three Stooges.  Soon the whole attic is the site of a musical, with dancing and singing when the shepherdess is repaired.

Looney Tunes: Porky’s Bear Facts 1941 bw freleng
Porky sings and whistles while hand plowing, putting canned goods (jars) into root cellar, "As Ye Sow, So Shall Ye Reap."  Another animal sings, "Working Can Wait, This Is Paradise," and so do his animals--the cow, dog and hens, so none produce or lay up goods for the winter.  By winter they are starving and freezing, and the animal (a weasel?) is ready to eat his dog.  But they pass by Porky's house where he and his dog are eating well, and ask for food.  Porky closes the door on them, but notices his "Love Thy Neighbor" sign, and lets them in.  When spring comes, the neighbors are back on the porch singing the same tune.

Happy Harmonies: Tale of the Vienna Woods 1934
A young deer is seen frolicking in a meadow. It runs toward a castle and stops at a fountain with a statue of a faun. The sunlight transforms the statue into a real faun, who then dances with the deer in the forest. They play and make mischief, and the faun plays his pan flute. They take turns embarrassing each other, until some hunters and their dogs come running through the woods. The two of them hide, and eventually the faun goes back to his fountain to take his post again. But as the deer returns to the forest the dogs are waiting, and the faun must run to the aid of the little deer. But by saving the deer, the faun almost turns back to stone before reaching his fountain (but he makes it in time).

Dog Catcher Mickey 1934 bw
Pluto chases a water bulge through a hose and gets wet.  Mickey can’t turn off hose, they go down to basement where Pluto proceeds to accidentally swallow a flashlight.  After he coughs the flashlight up in the kitchen and gets stuck in a chest of drawers, flies come in through the screen door.  Mickey tries to repair the door unsuccessfully.  Pluto and Mickey then each get stuck on some flypaper.  The cartoon ends with their successful escape out of the flypaper.

Walter Lantz Reel
1) Babyface Batler
2) Crow Crazy
3) Heckle and Jeckle
1) Part of Willie Mouse series
Cute little well-bred Babyface versus some mean, gangster-type mice.  Babyface goes to store and is mugged on his way home, but battles it out with the criminal rodents using fire and flypaper among other tools.  Notable self-referential altercation between Babyface and the “movie theater audience” when Babyface tosses some cheese out into the theater seating, gets yelled at through the screen.
2) Andy Panda fights a devious crow who insists on eating his corn.  Panda puts rifle to crow's head, crow breaks gun in two.  Crow breaks a huge egg, covering Andy.  Andy enlists his dog to help him, shows him a picture of a crow.  Crow outsmarts dog too, giving him an exploding cigar, then rows off with a boat full of corn.
3) Ingestion Inn, Heckle and Jeckle's (two magpies) diner.  Birds cooking, singing to big band music.  Various animals eat the food they prepare and have trouble doing so (for example, the beans are literally “Mexican jumping beans”).  2 dog robbers enter, magpie serves them popping cereal which they shoot at.  The thieves leave and there is an interval where the magpies conduct an orchestra of food noises with their customers.  Robbers reenter, there is a World War 2-like battle scene.  Birds use milk bottles, silverware, and dishes as ammunition to beat the dogs.  Heckle and Jeckle sing an ode to their diner.

1) Ace in the Hole (1942)
2) Gulliver Mickey/ Mickey and the Lilliputians (1934)
3) For Whom the Bull Toils/ The Hollywood Matador (1942)
1) Woody Woodpecker is at a military base and wants to fly an airplane.  After reading a textbook he pilots a PU-2.  Large bulldog acts as antagonist.
2) Storyteller-framed cartoon short.  Mickey Mouse tells his little mouse friends the story of how he once landed in a town called Lilliput, and saved the town in a fierce battle against a giant spider.
3) Woody Woodpecker engages in a battle of wits with a bull in the ring.  Ends with a head to head collision and Woody setting up a Bull Burger stand.  Cartoon caricatures of Mexicans in the stands.

2) Andy Panda’s Blacksmith Shop (also known as “Under the Spreading Blacksmith Shop” 1942)
Andy’s dad dresses up as a horse so that his son may learn to shoe one, but a series of mishaps ensue.
3) The Bull Fight (Paul Terry, 1935) cartoon short.  After preparing as best as he can, the bull is defeated by the little matador.
4) Tin Can Tourist (Paul Terry, 1937)
Farmer Al Falfa and his dog take their new modern travel trailer on a vacation.  The trailer is filled with push-button gags and gadgets including a cruising cafeteria and self-turning griddle cakes.  Bees smell the breakfast.  Al Falfa is stung and he fights for his food.

1. Red Hot Riding Hood (1943):  This sensual adaptation of the old fairy story soon liberates its principals from their cute Disney-style forest and slaps them right in the middle of swanky Manhattan. Grandma's a nymphomaniac swinger, and her rustic cottage home a hip penthouse pad. Little Red has become a red-hot singer-stripper; the Wolf is a model of lupine lechery; and the forest is supplanted by a big-city nightclub as the enchanted place of forbidden sexuality. The Wolf tries to pull the old Red Riding Hood gag in order to meet up with Little Red, but Grandma has other ideas. Tex Avery
2. Bug Parade (1941): A spot-gag cartoon based on little-known facts about bugs.  A narrator guides us on a tour of the insect world.  Each creature has a funny gag.  Humorous reference to Bing Crosby and a Del Monte product placement. Tex Avery
3. Rabbit Seasoning (1952):  Daffy Duck tries to match wits with Bugs Bunny as they debate whether it’s rabbit hunting season or duck hunting season.  Elmer Fudd is totally witless in the exchange. Chuck Jones

Daffy Duck in Hollywood 1938 - tex avery

Daffy Duck and Porky Pig: Boston Quackie 1957 mckimson
Boston Quackie is an American agent enjoying some time in Paris with his girlfriend Mary when his boss (played by Porky) comes to him with an assignment. Porky hands Quackie a briefcase that has to be delivered to the American consulate - however, secret agents will try to get the briefcase. Immediately on turning his back, Quackie loses the briefcase to a man wearing a green hat.

Quackie follows the man to the Cloak & Dagger express train, and tries various ways to prove that the man wears a green hat and thus is the man he's after. With some help from Porky and Mary, Quackie eventually prevails, getting the briefcase to the American consulate. However, he's dismayed when the consulate pulls out what appears to be a simple bottle (saying "You mean, all that hassle just so you could have a coffee break?"). The consulate pours some water in the bottle, shakes it, and out pops a beautiful woman in an evening dress - the consulate needed a date for the embassy ball. Quackie then looks at the label for the bottle - "Acme House Instant Girl" ("Directions: Add water and pour" being written in another label on the back side of the pot), and admiringly says, "You know, there just might be a market for this!"

Daffy Duck: Muscle Tussle 1952 mckimson
Daffy Duck takes hi girlfriend to the beach, but finds competition in the form of a muscle-bound duck several times his size. Daffy must win his girlfriend back. He is conned into purchasing a concoction that is “proven” to give him muscles (but is actually 10% tap water and 90% hot mustard). The con-man proceeds to give him some 5000 lbs. weights (made of balloons), and Daffy thinking that he is invincible goes to challenge him, only to lose miserably and make a great fool out of himself. In the end, he brings out the (5000 lbs.) weights and begins to show off, the muscle-duck attempts to do the same but is shot off into the air only to land into the sand at such a force he is left crippled.

My Little Duckaroo 1954 daffy, porky torn leader chuck jones

Daffy Duck and Porky Pig: Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2th Century 1952 chuck jones
Daffy Duck stars as space hero Duck Dodgers, Porky Pig as his assistant, and Marvin the Martian as his opponent. Duck Dodgers must search for a rare element, called Illudium Pohsdex (aka The Shaving Cream Atom), which can be obtained in the mysterious “Planet X.” Duck Dodgers is about to claim Planet X in the name of Earth, when it turns out that Marvin the Martian has also landed on the same planet. Duck Dodgers and the Martian battle it out, using various instruments of mass destruction-- after all of the explosion, there is no planet to claim. Duck Dodgers, Porky Pig and Marvin the Martian are left dangling from what is left  of Planet X.

Daffy Duck in Cracked Quack  1952 freleng
Daffy Duck is flying in a large blizzard and can’t see in front of his own face.  He hits a large snow covered house head first and falls to the ground.  When he gets up he sees this cozy, warm house with a fire blazing.  He invites himself into the house and breaks in through the window.  Once inside the house he encounters a stuffed black duck that looks exactly like himself.  He thinks the duck is alive and gets offended that the duck doesn’t acknowledge him.  Daffy then starts to fight the stuffed duck and rings it by the neck.  He then realizes that the duck is stuffed and throws it into the closet.  Once he throws it in the closet a large white sheep dog comes out of Porky Pig’s office and lies down next to the large fire.  As the sheep dog lies down, Daffy starts to mess with the dog and throws a vase at it.  The dog gets confused and starts barking.  Daffy has to pretend that he is know the stuffed duck to not be noticed by the dog.  But as he tries to remain stiff, a fly ands on his bill forces him to move.  The fly then goes down and starts telling the sheep dog abut what Daffy is doing.  But this makes the sheep dog even more confused and  bark even louder.  Porky Pig comes out of his office and tries o get the dog to settle down by grabbing Daffy and hitting his head on the ground repeatedly.  Daffy still is remaining stiff but now he is seeing stars.  A while later, Daffy starts to roam the house and look for food, but the dog catches Daffy in the kitchen.  Daffy tricks the dog by grabbing a bone and playing fetch with him.  The dog gets tricked to being stuck outside in the snow but eventually makes Porky Pig let him in.  When he gets back in, Daffy replaces the stuffed duck and tricks the dog once again.  The dog starts to chew and ruin the stuffed duck, and when Porky Pig sees this he gets extremely angry at him.  Porky Pig has to replace the duck and he starts stuffing cotton in Daffys mouth.  He gets placed back on the mantle where he is completely filled with cotton.  A group of black ducks flying in a v see the house and notice the fire like Daffy did.  They also invite themselves in and start having a party before Porky even knows what to do with himself. 

Daffy Duck and Porky Pig in Fool Coverage 1951 mckimson
Daffy's injuries during an attempt to show Porky how dangerous his home is convince Porky to sign up for the insurance Daffy is selling.  Daffy thinks he has a foolproof scan until Porky meets all the conditions of payoff.

Porky's Duck Hunt 1937 tex avery
The cartoon begins with the camera panning across several items on a table, including a book entitled "How to Hunt Ducks" and freshly opened boxes which recently contained a shotgun, hunting suit, duck decoys and shells. The camera then pans to Porky in front of a mirror, admiring himself in various poses with his new rifle and hunting suit. Porky points his shotgun at various imaginary aerial targets, then points it at his dog; the dog runs under and into a bureau. Porky tells him the gun is not loaded and pulls the trigger to prove it. However, the shotgun actually is loaded and it fires into the ceiling. The man upstairs, shot in one butt cheek, comes down to punch Porky in the nose.

The scene changes to a lake, pre-dawn. Porky spies a duck, but before he can get off a shot, lots of other previously hidden duck hunters suddenly appear and shoot at it for several seconds. They all miss. The duck hunters say "Aw, shucks!" in unison when they fail to shoot the duck. A cross-eyed duck hunter tries to shoot the same duck (with a gun whose barrels are twisted apart) but instead shoots down two airplanes.

Porky puts out duck decoys. Daffy appears among them and acts like a fake duck. Porky tries to shoot Daffy after donning a decoy on his head and sneaking underwater, but the gun shoots out water instead of bullets. Daffy then flies onto a floating barrel (labeled 'XXX' - a period designation for whiskey[1]). Porky shoots the whiskey-filled barrel but Daffy escapes. Some fish are attracted to the leaking barrel and get drunk. The fish come onshore, commandeer a boat and drunkenly sing 'Moonlight Bay'. Porky Pig observes that something is 'fishy' with those fish.

Porky then hears a quack nearby. When he looks into the grass, Daffy bites his nose. Daffy then takes to the sky; Porky shoots him with a single shot. Ecstatic, Porky instructs his dog ("Go get him, Rin Tin Tin") and the dog swims out, but when he comes back, it's Daffy carrying the dog and throwing him back on the bank. Porky whips out a notepad, leafs through it and notes that this scene 'wasn't in the script' (an early instance of Avery's signature use of "breaking the fourth wall") . Daffy yells out his first words, that he is "just a crazy, darn fool duck", and proceeds to do his signature 'crazy dance' on the lake.

After a humorous scene where Daffy eats an electric eel and turns into a lightning bolt, Porky tries hunting from a rowboat but is taunted by the ducks when he stops for lunch; in his hurry to fire at them he inadvertently sinks the boat, cueing Joe Penner to rise from underneath the water with his signature line "You wanna buy a duck?"

After being alerted by his dog that Daffy is back, Porky makes several attempts to cock the gun and shoot, but the gun fails to fire each time. Daffy comes out of the water, takes the gun and fires it after the first cock. After saying "It's me again," Daffy does another crazy dance.

Daffy takes to the air and is met by Porky shooting his gun rapid-fire and being driven into the ground by the recoil, apparently not hitting anything. Porky tries to use a duck call, but the other duck hunters mistake it for a real duck and shoot at Porky, who ducks for cover. Disgusted, Porky throws the duck call to the ground, but it bounces and his dog accidentally swallows it. The dog gets the hiccups, quacking with every one, drawing constant fire and forcing Porky and the dog to flee from the lake. Porky and the dog trudge home, disappointed with their failure to bag a duck. When Porky gets home, he sees the ducks outside doing a trapeze act in the sky at his window. Porky tries to shoot them with his gun but, thinking the gun empty, throws the shotgun to the floor. The gun fires into the ceiling. The cartoon ends with the man from upstairs, with his other butt cheek shot, coming down to punch Porky in the nose.

Subjects: Duck hunts, ducks, duck calls, fish, banjos, boats, ponds, duck hunters, hunting, dogs.

Is There a Doctor in the Mouse? 1964 
Jerry makes and drinks a magic potion that makes him so fast that he is able to repeatedly steal ad eat Tom’s food without being seen. Tom films Jerry stealing his cake and replays it in slow motion, catching Jerry in the act. When he starts to slow down, Jerry mixes up a new potion, this time making him a giant. 

Tom and Jerry: The Year of the Mouse 1965 
Jerry and a mouse friend feed Jerry down a fish line to play dirty morbid tricks on Tom so Tom doesn't know what happened, and thinks he did them himself and is always left somewhat puzzled and frightened. red

Mouse in Manhattan 1945




Naughty But Mice (1939) chuck jones

Sniffles the mouse, in his first appearance in a Warner Bros. cartoon, goes to a drugstore and gets drunk on a cold remedy, then befriends an electric razor and gets it drunk as well.

caveman inki?



The Queen was in the Parlor 1932


The Sheepish Coyote 1959


Porky Pig in ‘Boom Boom’ 1936 Jack King
Doggone Tired 1949 tex avery

Lumber Jack Rabbit 1953 chuck jones - 3D!!


Muscle Beach Tom 1956 Hanna Barbera
Gone Batty 1953 McKimson
Bobo the Elephant is baseball team mascot for the lean and meek Sweetwater Shnooks, all of whom are rendered unconscious by their opponents, the husky and brutal Greenville Goons. The Shnooks' manager, rather than forfeit the game, decides to bring in Bobo to play every position - and he does rather well!
Bad Day at Cat Rock 1965 Chuck jones, maurice noble
Tom and Jerry are on a building construction site. Things explode, Tom loses his fur for a while, Jerry hides in a glove, Tom falls from a great height, and Tom has great trouble with a rock-and-girder see-saw.

daffy duck in Hollywood 1938 tex avery
Caveman Inki 1949 chuck jones
Fuddy Duddy Buddy 1951 john hubley UPA
Witch Crafty 1955 paul j. smith
Plop goes the Weasel 1952 mckimson
Jerry's Cousin 1951 hanna barbera
Magoo's Canine Mutiny 1956 Pete Burness
Gold Diggers of 49 1935
Sheepish Coyote 1959

Dime to Retire 1955 mckimson
Riff Raffy Daffy 1948 arthur davis
Daffy Duck: Muscle Tussle 1952 mckimson




Counterfeit Cat 1950 tex avery
A Bird in the Bonnet 1958 freleng
Nothing but the Tooth 1957 arthur davis
Porky Pig travels by horse-pulled, covered wagon to California to join in the 1848 Gold Rush and is ambushed by a diminutive, large-nosed, nasal-voiced, ever-so-polite Mohican with glasses, who wants to scalp the west-bound pig. Porky manages to elude the little Indian by ducking at appropriate times, donning a metal helmet, speedily horse-riding and canoeing. The Indian becomes caught in a salmon net and canned in a factory. Porky arrives in California, to find the only gold that he can extract from a mine is the golden tooth belonging to the Indian.
The Mad Maestro 1939 freleng harman (uncredited)
Dog Collared 1949 mckimson
Feline Frame- Up 1953 chuck jones
King Sized Canary 1947 tex avery
Case of the Missing Hare 1942 chuck jones
All Fowled Up 1955 mckimson
Unnatural History 1959 Abe Levitow
Bye bye bluebeard 1948 arthur davis
A Feud there Was 1938 tex avery:The McCoys and the Weavers are two feuding hillbilly clans. Elmer Fudd, Peacemaker, attempts to end the fighting; but violence and zaniness win out.


Eggnapper, Maw and Paw 1961
The Hunting Season 1935
Woody-Operation Sawdust 1953
Guided Muscle 1955 chuck jones
Weasel Stop 1955
War and Pieces 1963
Cracked Quack 1952 freleng
To Beep or not to beep 1963
Buddy's Theater
Flowers for Madam 1936 freleng
A Day at the Zoo (1939) tex avery
Hound for Trouble
Mother's Little Helper 1962
The Beary family, consisting of Charlie, Bessie, Junior and Suzy, together with their pet, Goose, all live in a substantial home. Father is comfortable reclining on a couch, his face buried in a newspaper. Mother Beary is busy vacuuming the room, complaining that she's more of a housemaid than a housewife, and that if she received more help from her husband, she could go to the beauty parlor. Father Beary, stung by her remarks, tells her that she can go, that he'll do the housework. Mother asks Goose Beary to keep a sharp lookout on things. Father Beary starts washing dishes with no soap, using an electric fan to dry them. The watchful Goose runs to the beauty parlor to report what's going on. Mother calls Father and tells him to use soap. Father, after some trouble, finds the soap and starts over again. However, the dishes get mixed up in the garbage disposal, and the ever-watchful Goose again reports to Mother. Father then realizes that there's a leak somewhere. A hassle with the washing machine and too much soap powder, as well as trouble with the vacuum cleaner, follow, and more phone calls from Mother indicate the presence of a stool pigeon. Father and Goose have a noisy quarrel in the midst of which Mother returns with a new hairdo. Just then, the washing machine overflows, and Mother's new hairdo is all washed out. Father is crowned by a broom in Mother's hands, and we see him swimming through the soap suds away from trouble.
Kiddin' the Kitten 1952
Mice Follies 1960
Kiddie League (woody) 1953
Fool Coverage 1951
Buddy's Bearcats 1934
Bosco the Sheepherder

Buddy and Towser 1934 Friz Freleng
Buddy enlists his dog, Towser, to guard his award-winning chickens. A fox penetrates Buddy's property as Towser & Buddy sleep, but the chickens, initially, are able to repel the fox by throwing their eggs at it. In its escape, the fox awakens Towser, who proceeds to bark, awakening his owner, and chase the fox; Towser is joined in the chase by Buddy, who now wields a shotgun (that he is humorously unable to handle.) Eventually, Buddy and Towser run up a snowy hill after the fox, which then crashes into a tree, tumbles backwards, and finds itself trapped in an increasingly large snowball, which soon envelops Towser & Buddy. At the foot of the hill, the snowball breaks apart on impact with a shed, leaving Buddy, Towser, and the fox momentarily dazed; coming to their senses, Buddy and Towser each take a plank of wood and aim to hit the fox, which sits between them; but the fox comes to and scurries away, leaving Buddy to accidentally whack Towser, and vice versa, as the cartoon ends.

Porky's Badtime Story 1937 clampett

Design for Leaving Daffy is selling- no, giving away- a complete line of super-modern household devices. Door-to-door salesman Daffy modernizes houses with all sorts of Rube Goldberg-style mechanical gadgets and robots to do household chores. He shows up at Elmer Fudd’s house and rigs the whole place up with gadgets. As he demonstrates, each one tends to backfire or malfunction, leaving Elmer’s house practically demolished.



ok, Woody Woodpecker shorts



1)  Smoked Hams, United World Films 1952



2)  Who’s Cooking Who-  Walter Lantz Prod, No Date, copyright 





1)  Barber of Seville- Woody Woodpecker



2)  Brat Cat


3)  The Overture to William Tell- Walter Lantz, 1952


1) Brat Cat-  United World Films, 1952
2) Beach Combers-  Walter Lantz, 1952
3) Crazy House- Andy Panda
4)  A Mechanical Cow- Terrytoons
1)  “Grandfather’s Clock” - Official Films -

2)  “Along Came a Duck” - Official Films -

3)  “Little Black Sambo” - Celebrity Films - 
Three Animation shorts: “The Health Farm”, “Pantry Panic” and “Woody Dines Out”
Reel 2-Cartoons
1.Homesteader Droopy - Tex Avery
2. bucky and pepito-The Vexin’ Texan samsing films
3. Donald Duck-Modern Inventions? - robots NMT
4. Woody Woodpecker - Piano Tooner - Lantz
5.The Gullible Canary
6. The adventures of Spunky and Tadpole- western, sheriff boy-art moore
7.Crusader Rabbit - Jerry Fairbanks
8.Peewee and the Fearless Flea - super tiny people
9. Magoo the Billionaire - Clyde Geronimi
1. Kiko the Kangaroo in “On the Scent” Castle Films

2.Love Sick - Walter Lantz Oswald Rabbit

3. Peg Leg Pete the Pirate - 1957 Terrytoons, Paul Terry
1.Robin Hood Rides Again - Brownie Bear Official Films

2,Mighty Mouse Rides Again - Paul Terry Terrytoons 1943

3. He Dood it Again - Mighty Mouse Cartoon 1943
1. Bugs Beetle - Castle Films 1948 Terrytoons

2. Devils of the Deep - 1948 Terrytoons

3. Buck Cheezer - Ising  mouse goes to the moon
1.Solid Ivory - Woody Woodpecker, Walter Lantz

2. Fairweather Friends

3. Goodbye Mr. Moth, Andy Panda
1. “Wreck of the Hesperus” - Terrytoon, Mighty Mouse 1944

2. Mary’s Little Lamb - Castle films, Celebrity Pictures - Ub Iwerks 1935

3. A Little Bird Told Me - Tiny Tot, Official Films
1. Andy Panda in Apple Andy - Castle Films

2. Just ask Jupiter - 1948 Paul Terry Terrytoons

3. Terrytoon, no title - cat and mouse break out of prison
1. Knock Knock - Walter Lantz, Woody Woodpecker

2. Hot Sand - Terrytoons, Paul Terry

3. Sky Pirates - 1941 George Pal Puppetoon stop-motion 
1. Stunts involving acrobatics from heights, jumps into fire, and men in barrels in the ocean. B&W.

2. Castle Films presents a Walter Lantz Cartoon, “Cheese-nappers”. A young mouse runs into a rough rat, and they try to steal cheese from a fridge while household appliances work against them. B&W.

3. Warner Bros presents a Merrie Melodies cartoon, “The Wacky Wabbit” featuring Bugs Bunny. Elmer Fudd walks across the desert and notices that the rabbit he finds has a gold tooth and wants it. But Bugs Bunny outsmarts him. Color.

4. Universal Pictures presents a Walter Lanz cartoon featuring Andy Panda called “The Painter and The Pointer”. Andy Panda tries to get a DOG to stand still so he can paint it. Color.

5. Columbia Pictures presents “Jolly Frolics”, a cartoon featuring Pete Hothead. Pete tries to look after a bird. Color.

6. Field and Stream presents “Steady Now”, a film “Training Bird DOGs to Wing and Shot”. Distributed by Hawley-Lord Inc. Live action with DOGs being trained to hunt. Color, 1949.

“The Adventure Parade” Castle films

“Chimp’s Jamboree” (1945) - a chimp wanders around a beach boardwalk, going on rides and plays on the beach. 

“Goodbye Mr. Moth” (1942) Walter Lantz cartoon

A moth eats all of the clothes made/fixed by a panda bear tailor. Hilarity ensues. 
United World Films, Inc. 

“Solid Ivory” (1947) Castle Films 

A duck wants to play pool but loses one of his balls to the chicken, who has mistaken the pool ball as one of her eggs. They fight to claim the pool ball. 

“Mighty Mouse Meets Jekyll and Hyde Cat” (1944) 

A cat takes a potion and turns into the Mr. Hyde version of itself in order to catch the mice that have taken refuge in its house, only to be saved by Mighty Mouse