Cartoons About Cartoons (Part 4)
The 1930’s continued to progress, as animated characters became more and more knowledgeable about their own world.
The 1930’s continued to progress, as animated characters became more and more knowledgeable about their own world.
We conclude the 1930’s, then move on to a new decade, in this week’s survey of hot times in the old toons – tonight.
This is a post solely to show how off-model these can get. I swear this is one of the last ones I’ll share that looks this awful.
Carl Stalling continued to fold songs – both old and new – into the scores of the WB cartoons.
I bet you’ve just been itching for more coverage of the checkered career of the common flea in animated film. Well, you can quit kicking – here it is!
We continue along last-week’s trail, following closely behind the protruding abdomen of a marching ant, as his column descends into the depths of a subterranean tunnel.
The sixth cartoon of the Censored Eleven is Tex Avery’s The Isle of Pingo Pongo. This cartoon is all spot-gags, a parody of then-common travel documentary shorts.
Today’s installment of Radio Round-Up explores the radio career of Arthur Q. Bryan, best known as the voice of Elmer Fudd.
The Animated Hair. In the cartoon “Magical Maestro” (1952), an annoying hair pops up at the bottom of the frame which was common when films were projected. However, this was…