One Second From Every Classic Disney Theatrical Short (1928-1969)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 6 гру 2022
- something a little different this time. I began working on this back in august just as a little pet project, which makes this probably the longest time ive ever spent making a single video. i saw compilations like these that were comprehensive for every major golden age cartoon studio except for this one, so i figured i might as well make it
some notes:
-the chronology of many of the very early shorts is often disputed due to no official release records. the chronology i chose for this video is according to the disney fandom wiki, which often directly sites sources like the Motion Picture Herald and BoxOffice Magazine for most release dates, as opposed to wikipedia which strangely does not
-I included every theatrically released commissioned wartime short from 1941-1943, as well as sponsored shorts such as "Mickey's Surprise Party", "The Volunteer Worker" and "A Feather in his Collar", since the way disney operated with animation from the 40s onward, these all act important to the evolution of the animation over time
-"Minnie's Yoo Hoo", the short played for the original 1930's Mickey Mouse Clubs, is included since it was both theatrically shown and also shows mickey mouse's voice at a very strange point in its evolution
-"How To Ride a Horse" (originally a segment from The Reluctant Dragon) is included bc that is a short fundamental to Goofy's evolution, and it is placed in its correct 1941 position rather than it's anachronous 1950 rerelease position for accuracy
-even though disney's more traditional theatrical shorts ceased after 1956, i chose to go to the end of the 1960's due to the very strange and unique way that disney blended the distinction between "animated short" and "featurette" by this stage in their history. this is why it might seem strange that winnie the pooh appears twice at the end, for instance, as the first two segments of The Many Adventures of Winnie The Pooh were released in 1966 and 1968 and recognized formally as animated short films.
0:00 1920s
0:20 1930s
3:21 1940s
6:00 1950s
7:34 1960s
6:39: "Gay Bowser"!
@@robbiewalker2831Ur very dirty minded
Can you do 1 Second of Every Ralph Bakshi Film, 1 Second of Every Rankin/Bass Special and Film and Every Filmation Show and Movie please?
5:36 what Is that one from
I think my favorite decade for Disney shorts were the 1940s
I think the most fascinating thing about this compilation is how it shows it ALL did start with a mouse...but they quickly forgot about him halfway through the journey. If you guys ever seen the Mickey Mouse documentary on Disney+, they touch on this; the more Mickey became a corporate symbol, the less developed he became, instead his pals Donald, Goofy, Pluto and Chip N Dale getting them. Donald got his feisty, quick to fight nature, Goofy for his sillier and over the top tendencies, Pluto was the go-getter, and Chip and Dale were the pranksters and instigators. By the end of the shorts era, Mickey Mouse was just a background player in his own shorts. Love them or hate them, thank goodness the new Mickey Mouse shorts not only put Mickey in the center stage but gave him SO MUCH personality. Fascinating how Disney animation evolved in the shorts film division.
Mickey did revert his original personality in Mickey Mouse Works and House of Mouse. But, I'm not sure you already knew that since the company did tried it back in the late 90s to early 2000s.
A little like Porky Pig, was used in almost every Looney Tunes shirt until Daffy came along and stole his popularity, as the animators at Termite Terrace kept making more and more wackier and interesting characters, Porky seemed to get sidelined and, much like Mickey, turned into a supporting character for others. Difference is, Porky has more personality than Mickey.
What if they made a new mascot? I can imagine it’s as easy as that, but it would allow them to experiment with Mickey more.
It’s not that they forgot about him. It’s just because he became such a big part of their family-friendly brand, they were too afraid to do anything that might damage it.
The Mickey documentary was real good
6:39 This was perfectly edited. "You gay Bowser". 🤣
U K
Different meaning back then meant happy and can even be used as such today!
And bowser u only say cuz of Mario
“So long, gay bowser”
so long gay bowser
“You know who he is” and “Don’t molest the bears” got me
I love how *UNHINGED* Disney used to be back in the day. I want that Disney back.
You ever watch Mickey Mouse or The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse? Those cartoons are just as unhinged, but in a modern context.
5:15 especially
@@victoriabell9546 I did. I just wish it was the norm again.
Funniest part? Back when these were released, they were seen as incredibly tame.
Not with Bob Iger in charge.
A lot of funny and cute cartoons when suddenly 4:21 "Do you know who he is?"
That part kills me.
You'd be surprised how much animation Disney made specifically for the war effort. It just tends not to pop up on Disney+, for obvious reasons 😅
I don't think it is a question, but more of a statement
"You know who he is."
6:38 - "you gay...BOWSER!" I see what you did there! XDDD
so long gay bowser
Because he is quitting.
Bowser deserves it for trying to get married with Princess Peach.
I Die 🤣
7:14 DON'T MOLEST
The bears
THE LION!
7:17
I know I can ask for the context for all of these but I genuinely wanna know what they were getting at there 😭
@@holeofdarnThe old meaning of the word was "disturb".
"Disney needs to bring back the magic."
The magic:
Still want it back
Yep that's what we talking about
Still better then nowadays "magic"
It takes a compilation like this to remind how wild Disney was during its heyday
4:03 Mickey with gun
Welcome to 1910s to 1950s.
YOYLECAKE
-Bubble
7:16 The switch into the widescreen format.
4:32 Most people probably don't know it, but that's actually Disney's first adaptation of the folktale "Chicken Little", decades before the infamous 2005 version.😉🐤
Doesn’t feature a porcupine in shades 0/10
I didn’t know they did one before 2005. I will admit I quite like the 2005 film, and it’s not as bad as it’s sometimes made out to be.
0:09 - Mickey Mouse.
0:36 - What?
1:00 - Sandy Claws?
1:46 - The World Owes Us-
2:11 - Your House is On- *bam*
2:22 - Roasted Pork.
2:29 - *running up the stairs screaming like a lunatic while swinging a hammer*
2:41 - Your Hat-
3:04 - Give it to Me!
3:07 - WHAT?!
3:12 - Two, THREE!!!
3:19 - *playing the fiddle while angry*
3:33 - Arriel Dynamics.
3:38 - I'LL CLEAN UP YOUR-
4:12 - But He Dropped it!
4:20 - Super Duper-
4:39 - Storm Cloud!
4:49 - A Mouse! A Mou-
5:05 - *phone slam* *explosion*
5:35 - I Can Talk!
5:54 - I'm Gonna Kill You!
6:03 - She-Mail!
6:27 - Hello Handsome.
6:36 - Twist His Arm!
6:38 - I QUIT!!!
6:39 - You Gay-
6:47 - Completely Surrounded.
6:59 - What a Gal.
7:14 - Don't Molest-
7:26 - Only You-
7:28 - Digestion.
7:30 - Your Big Axe!
7:32 - Aw Phooey!
7:39 - Oh Yes!
7:42 - Turn the Page!
7:43 - FORE!!!
6:40: BOWSER!
3:45 - Slow Motion.
6:59 what a gyatt
You meant Sandy Cheeks.
@@FlavioCruCerGrisarithat kills me the most, xD
7:42 i completely forgot that Winnie the Pooh started as a series of shorts before officially becoming the 22nd movie of the Disney animated canon
They combined the first 3 Pooh shorts plus wraparound segments in between the shorts and did an ending afterwards in order to make it into a film.
3:40 I misread that
Same
Yep, we all have..
1:26
The most impressive shot in animation in my opinion.
Because, you got this perspective shot earlier, and then the madlads went "Y'know what'd be interesting? A turn to the left of the hallway that also looks down."
Like, I'd bet they had an entirely different team working on just that shot and getting it to look just right.
Happy 100th Anniversary, Disney!
1923-2023
Not Yet. In October 100 years.
Now 100th Anniversary
this video: *exists*
One Second From Every Classic Looney Tunes Short (1929 - 1969): Finally, a worthy opponent. Our battle will be legendary!
Warner Bros🛡️against Walt Disney📝 >:D
Now we need one second from every Tom and Jerry cartoon --oh wait, there's already one for MGM's whole library. Hmm, one second from every Popeye---there's one for those too. Maybe one second from every Hanna-Barbera cartoon? Yeah, that'd be pretty long if you count the Scooby-Doo cartoons that are still being made today.
One Second of Every DePatie-Freleng Shorts (1964-1980).
@@evertondanilo1227 A NEW CHALLENGER HAS APPROACHED!
Other contenders i can think at the moment are Terrytoons, Paramount Cartoons, and Columbia Cartoons/UPA.
The video is a constant barrage of jokes but the fact Pluto looking at the gumball machine in dead silence made me laugh the hardest is proof that the internet has completely recontextualized classic animation
I remember he eats them all and is chased by bees.
0:43 hyena laughing Mickey: (spider!)
Is meant to be a screen
6:38 "You gay... BOWSER!"🤣
3:13 last sound i was expecting💀
2:14 is so perfectly cut, lol
I haven't seen Disney shorts in let's say 30 years, but even in these tidbits, I can remember moments like I saw them yesterday. Cool post.
Many of these I remember watching long ago! For years I'd half-thought that I'd imagined 5:46.
I watched that one a lot growing up. "Donald's Happy Birthday" 1949 where Donald thinks they're trying to steal money to secretly smoke, haha.
@@JacobSmithEngineer Canary Nursery Rhymes Series 1.
1. Alphabet Song aired on September 7, 1998.
2. Twinkle Twinkle Little Star aired on September 8, 1998.
3. London Bridge Is Falling Down aired on September 9, 1998.
4. Three Blind Mice aired on September 10, 1998.
5. The Eensy Weensy Spider aired on September 11, 1998.
6. Rain Rain Go Away aired on September 14, 1998.
7. Sit Down Your Rocking The Boat aired on September 15, 1998.
8. I Have Two Hands aired on September 16, 1998.
9. Good Morning To You aired on September 17, 1998.
10. Getting To Know You aired on September 18, 1998
11. Oh More We Get Together aired on September 21, 1998.
12. Hello How Do You Do aired on September 28, 1998.
13. Old MacDonald Had A Farm aired on October 5, 1998.
14. On Top Of Spaghetti aired on October 12, 1998.
15. Little Sunny Water aired on October 19, 1998.
16. Did You Ever See A Lassie aired on October 26, 1998.
17. Ring A Ring A Roses aired on November 2, 1998.
18. Reach For The Sky aired on November 9, 1998.
19. How Much Is That Doggie In The Window aired on January 11, 1999.
20. Humpty Dumpty Sat On The Wall aired on January 18, 1999.
21. Jack And Jill aired on January 25, 1999.
22. One Two Buckle My Shoe aired on February 1, 1999.
23. Pat A Cake aired on February 8, 1999.
24. Bingo aired on February 16, 1999.
25. Wind Wind Sugar Baby aired on February 17, 1999.
26. Lucy Locket aired on February 18, 1999.
27. Baa Baa Black Sheep/I Had A Little Nut Tree aired on February 19, 1999.
28. Ding Dong Bell aired on February 22, 1999.
Never imagined Mickey Mouse holding a gun 4:03
He does it a few times in his detective comics
Thats symphony hour
6:54-6:55 Mickey Mouse left the chat for good (For the next 30 Years)
6:39 the funniest part and most replayed "You gay Bowser"
This really shows how long it took for the entire classic cast to be introduced... And how much content was made before technicolor made its way into the picture. Fun to see how many of the shorts I recognize.
All I heard was "I quit, you gay Bowser"
When I was a child, some critics used to stereotype all cartoons, and say that cartoons promote violence.
Suddenly, I remember why they said that. I mean, I still don't agree with them, but now I remember why they felt that way.
You managed to make this every bit as funny as the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies one! AWESOME job.
😍
4:18 Goofy does the Perfect Cast while his fishing in Camp but before Disney Toon was working on “A Goofy Movie” backed in 1995 it was released in Theaters
5:19 THE THREE CABALLEROSSS
I was EXPLICITLY waiting for the goofy basketball short and wasn't disappointed
To Hannah
@@Thatcartoonguy224To West
@@LuckyPunkProdto hanna
Here it is bud 5:13
@@Thatcartoonguy224 To West
3:52 The first time we heard Goofy’s iconic scream.
7:13 "Don't molest the LION!!"🤣🦁
It's hard to believe that this is the same Animation Company who made Frozen, Bolt and made these weird shorts. It's fricking mind blowing. From the 1920s to the 2020s. Jeez. A 100 years makes a humongous difference.
I know everybody prefer Warner and MGM shorts. But I always have thinking that the Disney shorts has been one of the most overrated things in the world. All the 1930's shorts are a truly MARTERPIECES.
I am young but grew up watching compilations of old Disney cartoons from DVDs, so I am incredibly nostalgic for many of these. I used to think they were amazing. Over time, I also watched Warner and MGM shorts, which made me aware of why they are classics. I still think that the Warner and MGM shorts are more timeless due to some of the jokes, but I still think that the Disney shorts were amazing. Imo, some of the best ones of their time
Cause Warner Brothers and MGM had actually funny cartoons
There's no doubt that in terms of technology Disney and Fleischer Studios were on top of their games but in terms of laughs Warner Bros and MGM were the leading Studios in that department.
@@stephenholloway6893 to be fair Tex Avery well at Warner invented squash and stretch animation
Overrated*
0:14 this short is seen in 101 dalmatians when Jasper and Horace are watching tv
I Know i did to see This while watching The Movie
Guns, violence, and things I can't type without my comment being hidden by youtube's automated system. This was an era when Disney had real balls.
3:45:
I have no idea what Goofy is doing but it looks hilarious.
*S L O W M O T I O N*
@@face-orange-biting-nails I guess so.
Bro said: 𝙝𝙚 𝙬𝙖𝙨 𝙖 𝙛𝙖𝙞𝙧𝙮
4:25 Nevermay!
I'm just glad you didn't pick the low-hanging fruit and play THAT moment from "Wide Open Spaces" at 5:23
2:22 - Roasted Pork
2:47 - Boy, i wanna fight…
3:33 - Aerial Dynamic
3:45 - Slow Motion
2:11 "Your House is on-" *BBB-*
Fun fact: The Art of Skiing was the debut of the Goofy scream
I was so hoping to hear Donald's "YoU lITtLe BiTcH!" In this compilation
And Goofy/George saying “Weed!” in No Smoking.
Waiting patiently for "Super Duper Super Men" to show up- there it is!
Oscar winning shorts🏆
1:14
1:31
2:00
2:15
2:30
2:45
3:04
3:13
3:50
4:20
7:03
7:44
7:45
These clips out of context are funnier than the shorts themselves lol
It really is interesting seeing a fast time passage of how animation and the technology improved over time.
2:11 cracks me up xD YOUR HOUSE IS ON-
*bonk*
Not one, not two, but three Goofy hollers made the cut. Nicely done 😁
The classic Disney shorts were a fundamental part of a 1-hour block of Disney animation called “Disneysjov” (lit. “Disney fun,” but more so evokes “a good time with Disney (animation)”), which ran from 1992 to 2022 on the Danish public broadcaster DR1, which literally every Danish household that has an Internet connection can watch, so these shorts were a part of the childhoods of two or three generations of kids here. DR1 doesn’t air commercials, so the shorts would fill in the space between the 20-minute episodes of the main features - the Disney TV shows. Disneysjov in general made Disney media ubiquitous for most children, even those whose parents couldn’t afford Disney Channel - it had one of the absolute best timeslots you could get: Fridays at 7 PM; it was a bit of a cornerstone in DR1’s children’s programming; and even outside of Disneysjov, DR1 would air other Disney TV shows. I’d argue, however, that the shorts may have stayed with people more than the shows themselves, as they’d switch out pretty regularly. I made a bit of a game out of trying to see how many I recognized ^_^
Can’t believe West and Hannah are still pointlessly passing the ball along all these years later
*2:29* you get back here! You little
When you think about it, Goofy had a _weird_ 1950's. Definitely a far cry from the sweet idiot we know now.
1:52 A MOUSE
HOHOHOHOOHOHOHOH
1:53
Contd.
123. The Tortoise and the Hare (Silly Symphonies) January 5, 1935
124. Mickey's Man Friday (Mickey Mouse) January 19, 1935
125. The Band Concert (Mickey Mouse) February 23, 1935 (First wide-release Mickey cartoon in color)
126. Mickey's Service Station (Mickey Mouse) March 16, 1935
127. The Golden Touch (Silly Symphonies) March 22, 1935
128. Mickey's Kangaroo (Mickey Mouse) April 13, 1935 (Final Disney short in black-and-white)
129. The Robber Kitten (Silly Symphonies) April 20, 1935
130. Water Babies (Silly Symphonies) May 11, 1935
131. The Cookie Carnival (Silly Symphonies) May 25, 1935
132. Who Killed Cock Robin? (Silly Symphonies) June 29, 1935
133. Mickey's Garden (Mickey Mouse) July 13, 1935
134. Mickey's Fire Brigade (Mickey, Donald, and Goofy) August 3, 1935
135. Pluto's Judgement Day (Mickey Mouse) August 31, 1935
136. On Ice (Mickey Mouse) September 28, 1935
137. Music Land (Silly Symphonies) October 5, 1935
138. Three Orphan Kittens (Silly Symphonies) October 26, 1935
139. Cock o' the Walk (Silly Symphonies) November 30, 1935
140. Broken Toys (Silly Symphonies) December 14, 1935
Contd.
21. Summer (Silly Symphonies) Rel. January 16, 1930
22. Minnie's Yoo-Hoo (Mickey Mouse) Rel. February 5, 1930
23. Autumn (Silly Symphonies) Comp. February 15, 1930 (Release date unknown)
24. Cannibal Capers (Silly Symphonies) Rel. March 13, 1930
25. Fiddling Around (Mickey Mouse) Rel. March 21, 1930
26. The Barnyard Concert (Mickey Mouse) Rel. April 5, 1930
27. Night (Silly Symphonies) Rel. April 28, 1930
28. Frolicking Fish (Silly Symphonies) Rel. May 8, 1930
29. The Cactus Kid (Mickey Mouse) Rel. May 15, 1930
30. Arctic Antics (Silly Symphonies) Rel. June 5, 1930
31. The Fire Fighters (Mickey Mouse) Rel. June 25, 1930
32. The Shindig (Mickey Mouse) Rel. July 29, 1930
33. Midnight in a Toy Shop (Silly Symphonies) Rel. August 16, 1930
34. The Chain Gang (Mickey Mouse) Rel. September 5, 1930
35. Monkey Melodies (Silly Symphonies) Rel. September 26, 1930
36. The Gorilla Mystery (Mickey Mouse) Rel. October 10, 1930
37. The Picnic (Mickey Mouse) Rel. October 23, 1930 (Debut of Pluto)
38. Winter (Silly Symphonies) Rel. October 30, 1930
39. Pioneer Days (Mickey Mouse) Rel. December 5, 1930
40. Playful Pan (Silly Symphonies) Rel. December 27, 1930
Canary Nursery Rhymes Series 2.
1. Happy Birthday aired on March 22, 1999
2. Aud Lang Syne aired on March 29, 1999.
3. For He's A Jolly Good Fellow aired on April 5, 1999.
4. Mama aired on April 12, 1999
5. Dear Mr. Jesus aired on April 19, 1999.
6. Happy Talk aired on April 26, 1999
7. Music Box aired on May 4, 1999.
8. Brahm's Lullaby aired on May 5, 1999.
9. Que Sera Sera aired on May 6, 1999.
10. Top Of The World aired on May 7, 1999.
11. Somewhere Over The Rainbow aired on May 10, 1999.
12. Catch A Falling Star aired on July 12, 1999.
13. He's Got The Whole World aired on July 19, 1999.
14. It's A Small World aired on July 26, 1999.
15. Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious aired on August 2, 1999.
16. Climb Every Mountain aired on August 9, 1999.
17. Round The Village aired on August 16, 1999.
18. Five Hundred Miles aired on August 23, 1999.
19. Red River Valley aired on September 27, 1999.
20. Planting Rice aired on October 4, 1999.
21. Lazy Mary aired on October 11, 1999.
22. Billy Boy aired on October 18, 1999.
23. Dinga Dinga Doodle aired on October 25, 1999.
24. Once I Saw A Bird aired on November 15, 1999.
25. One Little Red Bird aired on November 16, 1999.
26. Ladybird Ladybird aired on November 18, 1999.
27. Rock A Bye Baby aired on November 19, 1999.
28. Horsey Horsey aired on November 22, 1999.
Now I wanna see all these shorts especially the goofy ones
And mostly ones with a very interesting soundtrack
You can always go hunting for the Walt Disney Treasures DVDs. They're long out of print, so eBay is your best bet. Just be ready to pay through the nose for them 😅
4:44 me when i get a whiff of that za
6:15 What is that abomination?!😱🫎
I think it's a moose stuck in a log.
Walt Disney used more bombs than Michael Bay did.
Every second from the Disney sound era. You're excluding Alice comedies and Oswald
Plus some of the Alice and Oswald shorts are lost sadly.
Also the Laugh o Grams, and anything post-1969.
Fact: Something in here unlocked a childhood memory.
Starts to get very chaotic once it goes to color
It’s surprising how many of these I recognise.
1:37 _*Proceed to start a damn fire_
*" O O O O O H - "*
Warner Brothers Animation churned out almost 1,000 shorts over the course of their classic era.
Walt Disney and his company produced 465 shorts over roughly the same time period, though you have to take into account they also did nineteen full-length animated feature films, a couple dozen short educational film series like I'm No Fool, a whopping 75 live action films (quite a few of which had animated elements/segments like Marry Poppins, Song of the South, and So Dear to My Heart), and Walt's anthology TV series Disneyland/The Wonderful World of Disney.
1:14 The first ever Disney short to be made in color
And the first ever short to be in color
3 strip Technicolor. They were color shorts albeit in 2 strip Technicolor or Cinecolor before Disney made theirs.
Ah.
I would've rioted if you didn't use the clip at 5:13
So much chaos in those old cartoons
(6:45) Pta que ofertón
6:39 👁👄👁
This video really shows a summary of this whole era, it's interesting! 👍
6:14 transition goes HARD 🔥
5:43 Mickey Mouse is completely Naked & he's wearing gloves.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
7:14 Perfectly edited "Don't molest the lion"
These scenes are legendary
I love the old animal texture
Who knew Disney could be so chaotic in their golden years? I love these kinds of videos!🤣
Nearly had a heart attack with a few of those!
On another note, it delights me that I recognize so many of these.
Watching this video made me realize how big a part the dog Pluto has been of the Disney's theatrical shorts.
1. Steamboat Willie (1928) - Mickey Mouse whistles and steers a steamboat.
2. The Skeleton Dance (1929) - A group of skeletons dance in a graveyard.
3. The Wise Little Hen (1934) - The little hen refuses to share her corn with lazy Donald Duck and Peter Pig.
4. The Tortoise and the Hare (1935) - The tortoise and the hare race, with the tortoise winning.
5. The Old Mill (1937) - Various animals seek shelter in an old windmill during a storm.
6. Lonesome Ghosts (1937) - Mickey, Donald, and Goofy investigate a haunted house.
7. The Ugly Duckling (1939) - A duckling is bullied until it grows into a beautiful swan.
8. The Little Whirlwind (1941) - Mickey tries to fix a wind-up toy that causes chaos.
9. The Nifty Nineties (1941) - Mickey and Minnie reminisce about the 1890s.
10. Pluto and the Armadillo (1943) - Pluto tries to catch a mischievous armadillo.
11. Donald's Crime (1945) - Donald struggles with guilt after stealing a pear.
12. Tea for Two Hundred (1948) - Chip and Dale disrupt Donald's picnic.
13. The Wind in the Willows (1949) - Mr. Toad gets into trouble with his obsession for motorcars.
14. Lambert the Sheepish Lion (1952) - A lion cub raised by sheep learns to be brave.
15. Toot, Whistle, Plunk, and Boom (1953) - A musical journey through the history of musical instruments.
16. Pigs Is Pigs (1954) - A hungry piglet causes chaos while trying to get food.
17. The Little House (1952) - A little house gets overshadowed by a growing city.
18. Paul Bunyan (1958) - The story of legendary lumberjack Paul Bunyan and his blue ox, Babe.
19. Goliath II (1960) - A small elephant overcomes his size to save the day.
20. A Symposium on Popular Songs (1962) - Animated musical instruments perform a satirical song.
21. The Sword in the Stone (1963) - Arthur pulls the sword from the stone and becomes king.
22. Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966) - Pooh tries to get honey from a beehive.
23. The Jungle Book (1967) - Mowgli meets Baloo and Bagheera in the jungle.
24. The Aristocats (1970) - Duchess and her kittens try to find their way back home.
Impressive to spot so many of the cartoons that I haven't watched in decades. I am really not sure anymore if they just broadcasted them randomly in compilations on TV back then (because somehow I must have been watching them...and I don't think they were on VHS) but it's been in forever. Wonder if they actually have all these on Disney+...though I doubt it....Would be fun to go down memory lane and be able to watch them somewhere again.
This is the most chaotic thing I’ve seen all week
3:32 Catfish Catshark Catbird
5:19 that one kid at the mcdonald's playplace:
3:39 put your insert "come" jokes here
Look at Pluto's face, he already understands jokes😅
6:38 "You gain Bowser"
Thanks, I'm gonna go watch all of these now. ;)
Contd.
41. The Birthday Party (Mickey Mouse) Rel. January 7, 1931
42. Birds of a Feather (Silly Symphonies) Rel. February 10, 1931
43. Traffic Troubles (Mickey Mouse) Rel. March 17, 1931
44. The Castaway (Mickey Mouse) Rel. April 6, 1931
45. Mother Goose Melodies (Silly Symphonies) Rel. April 16, 1931
46. The Moose Hunt (Mickey Mouse) Rel. May 3, 1931
47. The China Plate (Silly Symphonies) Rel. May 25, 1931
48. The Delivery Boy (Mickey Mouse) Rel. June 13, 1931
49. The Busy Beavers (Silly Symphonies) Rel. June 30, 1931
50. Mickey Steps Out (Mickey Mouse) Rel. July 7, 1931
51. The Cat's Out (Silly Symphonies) Rel. July 28, 1931
52. Blue Rhythm (Mickey Mouse) Rel. August 18, 1931
53. Egyptian Melodies (Silly Symphonies) Rel. August 27, 1931
54. Fishin' Around (Mickey Mouse) Rel. September 25, 1931
55. The Clock Store (Silly Symphonies) Rel. September 30, 1931
56. The Barnyard Broadcast (Mickey Mouse) Rel. October 10, 1931
57. The Spider and the Fly (Silly Symphonies) Rel. October 23, 1931
58. The Beach Party (Mickey Mouse) Rel. November 5, 1931
59. The Fox Hunt (Silly Symphonies) Comp. November 10, 1931 (Release date unknown)
60. Mickey Cuts Up (Mickey Mouse) Comp. November 30, 1931
61. Mickey's Orphans (Mickey Mouse) December 9, 1931
62. The Ugly Duckling (Silly Symphonies) December 17, 1931
Every day of my life is a crazy dream
That's what I'd call it
6:39 You gay Bowser!
Ah yes, my favorite era of Walt Disney
Disney Fact: There are two Mickey Mouse Orphans Benefit 1:54 (1934) and 3:48 (1941).
Why they make two.
Lend a Paw(1941) is also just Mickey's Pal Pluto(1933) and Mickey's Elephant (1937) in one cartoon
Mickey’s Elephant is an 1936 film, and okay.
Think the remake was actually for some larger project that got canceled. They were about to start work on another before they pulled the plug in 1941 (guess the reason).
They wanted to remake the short with the updated designs.
Disney is the Ultimate Best!! Love it!