THUNDERBEAN THURSDAY
November 23, 2017 posted by Steve Stanchfield

Updates, Grateful Stuff – and the Familiar Thanksgiving Toons!

I’m happy to be back home after five days in LA this last week-adn jumped right into 3 days teaching without a break. I hit the wall today from exhaustion, but, happily, the catching up is at least going decently. It was nice to see old friends while I was out, visit the CTN Animation Expo, and visit many of my former students working at various animation studios. I saw lots of really cool stuff over the course of the handful of days there, but am very glad to be back to catch up on the many pressing things here!

A Thunderbean Update: It’s been a year of lots of productions starting and not quite as many as I’d like getting finished — but happily, progress is continuing. Two of the ‘Special’ sets are finished and dubbing (“All Scrappy..” as well as “The Little King”) as well as two of the ‘Snappy Video’ sets.

Cartoons to the Rescue is well in progress and we hope to dub this next week. We’re hoping to get several sets to replication, and the holiday sales have started to make that more possible. The Blu-rays that are all ready to be pressed are Fleischer Rarities, Mid Century Modern 1 and Mid Century Modern 2.

To help get at least one of these out the door sooner than later, we’re continuing the tradition of doing a little set each year called Thunderbean Thursday. The 2017 version is a Blu-ray (BDR) that has all sorts of fun shorts on it, including some Holiday and Christmas films not on the Yuletide Flickers set. It’s available only for a week on the Thunderbean Facebook page here. I’m just finishing this project and am hoping to send them the week after that.

“Thunderbean Thursday 2017” is a Blu-ray (BDR) collection of rare commercials, Christmas shorts, cartoons , short films and oddities. A great ‘Party Tape’ that isn’t a tape! Some of the films on the set will appear on future Thunderbean projects- and many will not! It’s $14.95 plus $3 postage in the US, $12 postage elsewhere. IT’s available for one week only- and we hope to send it in about a week. Order directly through paypal. Send to: steves-at-thunderbeananimation.com. Be sure include your address and ‘Thunderbean Thursday 2017‘ in the paypal note. All sales will help with replication of Thunderbean titles. Thanks to everyone for supporting these projects!


For any cartoon fans in Southeast Michigan or near, the annual Redford Classic Cartoon Festival is this weekend, at the Redford Theatre in Redford, Michigan (that’s a lotta Redfords!). John Monahan and I put the show together, and I think it’s a really fun one this year as always. We’re showing both vintage 35mm prints as well as some newy scanned digital material, including some of the recent scans we’ve been doing on the Iwerks shorts. Highlights for me include UPA’s ‘Ragtime Bear’ and Columbia’s “Paint Box Symphony’ as well as others in stunningly beautiful IB Technicolor prints. It’s this Saturday, November 25th at 2 and 8pm. If you’re there and read this column, come say hi!


Over these years, working on the Thunderbean sets has been an amazing time for me. I find that I reflect a lot on the direction of the company at this time each year, and think quite a bit about the nature of trying to produce these things, the direction I’d like to take the company and the best strategies to move forward. Most importantly, I think of all the wonderful people I’ve met and have been able to know a little bit. The cartoon community is small but mighty, and the continued success of this small business helps make a good case for other small companies to attempt these sorts of niche releases. I’m still looking for the magic formula to grow the business further, but it’s been a good year of experimentation into some new areas. I’m very much looking forward to this next year and what it may bring.

So, as is the usual custom here, on this Thanksgiving, these are the things I’m grateful for related to classic animation this year:

Above all things, I’m grateful for the patience of the collecting community this past year; as we chug through this little mountain of projects, the community has been the great supporting arm of the business. I appreciate your help on these projects more than I could ever state, and hope to continue to make rare films available as these years continue.

• I’m grateful for the help of the film collectors. You folks, like I am, are a little crazy to collect material that sometimes warps, sometimes shrinks, sometimes loses its color, sometimes starts smelling like vinegar, sometimes gets gooey. And then there’s that flammable thing too. The fact that your willing to lend these volatile strips of notched plastic to me sometimes is nothing short of a miracle, and your generosity has allowed lots of people to see these things that otherwise would not have- people who are sensible enough to not have shelves of these things everywhere.. at least some of them.

• I’m grateful for the archives around the world. You’ve saved these many things for a reason, and that reason is for them to be enjoyed sooner than later. They’ve been hiding long enough for the most part!

• I’m grateful for the friends I’ve made over these years that contribute to these projects. Some of them are the film collectors, others just love film or animation.

ª On my hero list for contributions of material this year are Jerry Beck, Mr. Mark Kausler, Tom Stathes, David Gerstein, Dr. Dennis Atkinson, Chris Buchman, and Serge Bromberg. I very grateful for your friendship and efforts to help make some of these projects move forward.

• I’m grateful for the companies that still care about their material enough to either release it themselves or make it available to other distributors. There is a long way to go, but let’s all hope more of these companies will make more of this material available so we can all be grateful to see it!

• I’m grateful for the creation of YouTube. Even though a ton of the things we’ve scanned and cleaned up have been uploaded there, I’m happy that so many people have had the chance to see these things, and find things they enjoy. Making an enjoyable film was the point of the creators of these films in the first place, and I never considered any of the uploads cutting into sales of this stuff at all.

• I’m grateful that Warner Archive did that Porky Pig 101 set. I hope the success of this set leads to other great projects, making lots of rare things available.

• Lastly, I’m also forever grateful to my Mom, who put up with my room full of films, posters, and books everywhere, and supported whatever I tired to do with any of this. I do hope that, somehow, you’re happy that Thunderbean has made other people happy.

It’s your turn now: what are you grateful for this year?

So – now it’s time to watch a bad reddish copy of Jerky Turkey on Super 8, if possible. This copy will have to do for this year.

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!

12 Comments

  • Amongst other things, I’m thankful that there is such a thing as a “cartoon community” of people like me who are passionate about these old relics. I’m thankful also for the wide availability of classic animation on DVD and Blu-Ray, and that new stuff seems to be coming out (i.e. Porky Pig 101).

    I’m also thankful for you, Steve, and your team at Thunderbean Animation. Without your tireless efforts, we wouldn’t have access to much of this stuff, much less in the stunning quality it’s in. I’ve learned so much about the history of animation, stuff I didn’t even know existed, thanks to the efforts of you and those who have contributed to your efforts.

    Happy Thanksgiving! See you at the Redford Theatre Saturday afternoon!

  • Great and fantastic post, Steve. Hoping to see more sets to come in 2018, i wish you a very Happy Halloween. Martin

  • I’m grateful for the National Film Registry preserving obscure and beloved cartoons (some I suggested ala email), Jerry Beck and his awesome Oscar submission lists, my love of Disney (won’t imagine myself as a hater), MST3K since I helped financing on Kickstarter, Jim Korkis for his love of Disney and excellent research, Maltin for just being Maltin, Criterion for being Criterion, my loving family, my autism, God and the greatest artform/medium/cinema known to Toonheads 🙂

  • Glad you are thankful or the “Porky” DVD, Steve. I still wish a certain helper of your felt the same way and look pass it’s faults involving the “wrapping” (title credits).

    As for me, I’m thankful for everyone and everything on this site and Animation Scoops as well as my family.

  • I’m grateful for the existence of Thunderbean Animation and similar entities, including all the individuals involved in collecting, archiving, restoring and producing the cartoons we all enjoy.

  • Good to see and talk to you when you were here. OK, I’ll bite, what is Columbia’s “Paint Box Symphony”? Never heard of that one before. Happy Thanksgiving, Mark

  • I’ll be thankful if my Screen Songs and Noveltoons discs show up sometime in the next six months.

  • I’m looking forward to the Animation Festival. Are you by any chance going to do a tribute to the late June Foray there?

  • I’m thankful for my good friends like Steve and Jerry. For my family and my health. Gkids so good animation from around the world is getting seen here in the USA; Great superhero films & TV shows, and for this website.

  • Ditto on the heroes and Porky Pig 101!

  • I’m sure that my shower of thanks for Thunderbean is often repeated each year at this time or whenever I see the results of hard work that you folks do and, yes, I am also grateful to collectors, wishing so hard that I was one, who grab celluloid of any kind, just to have that missing piece, because it really does help to restore a classic cartoon. We’ve seen astounding things on the net lately, and that is surely a hopeful light at the end of the tunnel. No, I don’t ever see You Tube as the factor helping to dissolve sales of otherwise good product and fruitful projects, but I do wish that less copies of things already available would appear on You Tube, being the avid collector that I am. There are some available DVD sets that have seen their entire contents neatly available for free on You Tube; nice to sample, but I’d rather see some of the missing pieces, just to show the larger video copyright holders that there are many, many fans out there who respond daily with favorable comments, wishing for a worldwide release on physical media. It always seems like an uphill battle, but there are times when I see results that aim in the proper direction! Steve, you and your dilligent staff are among the guiding lights. I look forward to receiving those DVD’s you mentioned, and have a wonderful Thanksgiving!

  • I’m grateful that an outfit like Thunderbean even exists. The big studios appear to have slammed their vaults shut again after the larger DVD market cratered. But I am also a greedy little pig when it comes to classic animation. I understand how hard it must be to balance ambition with reality. My suggestion for the future would be to focus on promoting projects that are almost ready to go out the door. I think it puts less pressure on you, especially when trying to balance your teaching and Thunderbean life. I only hope the best for you. I will try and be patient, but really, you’re all we’ve got.

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