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Aladdin And The Wonderful Lamp* (1934) | An animated cartoon by Ub Iwerks. | |
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Alarm* (2012) | Mesai produced this short animated film about a guy who has tough time getting up in the morning. | |
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Ali-Baba Bound* (1940) | 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. | |
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Alice In Wonderland: Alice In Paris* (1966) | Young Alice, having become a celebrity for her adventures in Wonderland, is in her bedroom dreaming about visiting Paris and sharing adventures with story book girl, Madeline. | |
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All's Fair At The Fair* (1938) | We go along with Elmer and Mirandy, a married country-ish couple, as they tour the Fair. | |
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Allure* (2013) | Why did the creature cross the road? A small critter is attracted to a light glowing on the other side of the road. What is the allure? | |
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Along Came A Duck* (1934) | A little boy chasing after a duck encounters a cartoon frog, who tells him the story of how he saved that duck's life. | |
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Amos And Andy: The Lion Tamer (1934) | Andy has to tame a lion in front of a large audience. There are actually two lions here: a real one who's tied on the ground for show and a costumed one worn by a couple of friends. Andy is supposed to tame the costumed one but of course eventually ends with the real one. | |
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Amos N Andy: Rassling Match* (1934) | The first of two Van Beuren cartoons based on the Amos 'n' Andy radio series using that show's stars Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll. In this one, the Kingfish has Andy fighting the wrestling champ for money. | |
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Andy Panda: Knock Knock* (1940) | Andy Panda attempts to find out if he can catch a woodpecker by putting salt on its tail. | |
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Animal Farm* (1954) | George Orwell's classic tale of a revolution among farm animals teaches a lesson on the cost of keeping social order with an uneven power balance. Gordon Heath, Maurice Denham. | |
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Ants In The Plants* (1940) | Welcome to the cartoon ant world where you can go to the restaurANT, traffic signals are fireflies with green and red lights, pancake flour is by ANT Jermimah and kids are taught about our vicious enemy: the anteater. | |
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Bad Luck Blackie* (1949) | A cute and very tormented kitten is bullied by an incomparably evil bulldog, who lives to know better after a black cat crosses his path. | |
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Balloon Land* (1935) | Balloon Land is a 1935 animated short film about balloon people who are being chased by Pincushion Man. | |
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The Barnyard Brat* (1939) | Spunky is a bratty nuisance around the farm, and Hunky is reluctant to punish Spunky until the last straw breaks her back. | |
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Base Brawl* (1948) | All the animals come out to watch in this singalong about an opening day baseball game at the zoo. | |
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Battle Of Lanka* (2005) | Rama, Hanuman and the Monkey army have crossed the sea to Lanka to rescue the captive Sita from the demon king Ravana and his Rakshasas. | |
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Beany And Cecil: Beany's Beany-Cap Copter* (1962) | D.J. tries to exploit Beany's deal with the government. | |
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Beany And Cecil: Phantom Of The Horse Opera* (1961) | Beany and Cecil have to pass through Badman's Land and are spooked by the phantom. | |
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Beany And Cecil: A Trip To The Schmoon* (1959) | Beany and Cecil are off to outer space to the Schmoon. Cecil wanted to meet the Schmoon with Beany. | |
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The Big Bad Wolf | Little Boy Blue and Scarecrow sing and dance, Little Bo Peep and her sheep join in. Black Sheep cries wolf, which causes problems when a real wolf shows up. | |
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Big Heel-Watha* (1944) | To prove he's a true Indian Brave, Big Heel-Watha decides to catch a squirrel - but wouldn't you know it; Screwy Squirrel is the first one he sees. Another BANNED Tex Avery cartoon. | |
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Bimbo The Male Man* (1931) | The adventures of Bimbo as a mailman. | |
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Bimbo Und Der Autodieb | Short silent animation about a car thief and a monkey called 'Bimbo' who finally catch the thief with the help of some policemen. Silent. | |
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Blitz Wolf (1942) | Yet another variation on the Three Little Pigs theme, this time told as WW2 anti-German propaganda (the US had just entered the war), with the wolf as a thinly-disguised Hitler. | |
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Bobby Bumps: Their Master's Voice (1921) | Inspired by R. F. Outcault's Buster Brown comic strip, this series dealt with the trials and tribulations of a small boy growing up. | |
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Bosko The Talkink Kid* (1929) | A cartoonist draws Bosko, who promptly comes to life. | |
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Bosko's Parlor Pranks* (1934) | Bosko babysits Honey's cat while she goes to the store, but the cat only wants ice cream! | |
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Boy Meets Dog* (1938) | The plot concerns a boy who has an old grouch for a daddy, runs off, meets a dog and joins a gang of kids. It was originally made for Ipana Toothpaste. | |
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The Brave Tin Soldier* (1934) | A one-legged tin soldier is cruelly mocked by other toys because of his deformity. The soldier falls in love with a toy ballerina who is desired by the toy king. The king then executes the soldier. WARNING: May not be suitable for young children. | |
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The Brementown Musicians* (1935) | A group of farm animals run away and form an a cappella quartet. | |
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Bring Himself Back Alive* (1940) | A sadistic big game hunter, Hyde Skinner, uses a poor little turtle as a pack mule. | |
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Brother, Can You Spare A Job?* (2004) | This is an original, fully-animated look at the underbelly of our economy juxtaposes a depression-era style with modern-day political rhetoric. | |
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Brownie's Victory Garden* (1934) | Brownie Bear reads a headline saying that a strange menace is attacking and destroying crops. He and his girlfriend, the worm, beans, peas and other objects discover its a opossum and blow him up. | |
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Bunny Mooning* (1937) | Features all sorts of animals converging on the wedding of Jack and Jill Rabbit in the forest one bright sunny day. | |
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Bury The Axis* (1943) | An old stop-mation World War II propaganda cartoon showing Hitler from childhood to adult. WARNING: This is not meant to offend. It is offered only for its historical value. | |
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Calvin And The Colonel: S1E5-Sycamore Lodge* (1961) | S1E5-Sycamore Lodge: The mountain cabin that the Colonel has rented turns out to be flooded. Unable to get a refund, the Colonel rents the cabin to Calvin. | |
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Calvin And The Colonel: S1E15-Sister Sue's Sweetheart* (1962) | S1E15-Sister Sue's Sweetheart: Sister Sue finds a boyfriend and the Colone doesn't like it. | |
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The Cameraman's Revenge* (1912) | Stop-motion animation about infidelity among insects. Silent. | |
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Candy Town* (1933) | Two feline sweethearts sail along Moonlight Bay, the moon invites them up for a visit. They discover the moon is not made of green cheese, as is rumored, but is actually a land of candy, ice cream and cake. | |
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Cap'n Cub (1945) | WWII cartoon were captain cub a cute bear cub builds a lot of airplanes to combat the Japanese. | |
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Car Of Tomorrow* (1951) | A series of demonstrations of futuristic automobiles. | |
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A Car-Tune Portrait (1937) | The cartoon features a lion dressed up as a musical conductor, attempting to keep his orchestra of animal musicians in order as they half-play, half-fight their way through the piece. | |
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Cartoons On Tour* (1915) | A father and daughter each enjoy their printed Grouch Chaser cartoons, which come to life for the audience. Meanwhile, the daughter is secretly planning to elope. | |
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The Case Of The Kangaroo Kid* (1963) | A kangaroo kid is taken from his mother and in comes private eye dog and his sidekick who communicates by playing his guitar. | |
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The Case Of The Screaming Bishop* (1944) | Animated satire has parody versions of Holmes and Watson investigating the theft of a dinosaur skeleton. | |
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Casper: Boo Moon* (1953) | Casper lands on the moon, disappointed to find no man on the moon. He lies down to nap, then tiny moon men emerge from holes. | |
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Casper: Boos And Arrows* (1954) | Casper keeps an Indian boy from hunting animals. | |
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Casper: The Friendly Ghost* (1945) | Casper feels lonely and starts on a quest to make friends. The only problem is that everybody is too scared to be friends with a ghost. This was the very first Casper cartoon ever produced. | |
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Casper: A Haunting We Will Go* (1949) | Casper the Friendly Ghost, sad that he can make no friends since everyone he meets is afraid of him, hatches an abandoned egg and becomes the emerging little duck's best friend and protector. | |
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Casper: Once Upon A Rhyme* (1950) | Casper gets his wish and visits Mother Gooseland but he frightens mostly everyone away and is upset. Then he rescues Red Riding Hood and Mother Goose rewards him. | |
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Casper: Spooking About Africa* (1956) | Casper is in an African jungle. He frightens a zebra at a watering hole. Wheezy the elephant has a terrible sneezing problem; he sneezes all the feathers off a peacock and a group of monkeys out of their perches. | |
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Casper: There's Good Boos Tonight (1948) | Casper makes friends with a little fox. | |
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Chicken A La King* (1937) | A Mae West-like duck draws the sultan of the chickens into a love triangle. | |
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China Town My China Town* (1929) | Two Chinese men on screen, one eating and the other is ironing. The one eating seems to be so dumb as to accidentally swallow a shirt that was just ironed in front of him. That results in an argument between the two as they use their pigtails as swords! | |
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Chinese Lanterns (1935) | Animation about children playing and painting Chinese Lanterns, then a lot of things goes wrong. Silent. | |
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Chipollino (1961) | Characters of a fairy tale are vegetabless and fruit. The main character a boy-onion Chipollino who struggles against oppressions of poor men from outside rich men. Russian. | |
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Cinderella (1922) | The drawings are simple and fluid and really a lot of fun. These cartoons needed almost a thousand drawn pictures for each minute of film. The cartoonists were Ub Iderks and Walt Disney. | |
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Circus Capers* (1930) | A dog ringmaster woos away the mouse bareback rider from the mouse clown. | |
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A Coach For Cinderella* (1936) | We see elves and woodland creatures making a dress and coach for Cinderella out of various woodland materials. A twist: the coach they make then goes though a modernizer and comes out as a 1946 Chevy. | |
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The Cobweb Hotel (1936) | Newly-wed flies go to stay at the Cobweb Hotel which is run by a hungry spider. | |
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The Conceited General (1956) | A successful general returns home from battle to live in luxury. He drinks, stops practicing his skills and leaves his weapons to rust. He is arrogant and self-assured. When the enemy once again attacks he finds himself unable to defend himself or the country. Chinese. | |
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Copy Cat* (1941) | A story of a bunny who gets lost in the forest on Christmas Eve. | |
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Count Screwloose: Jitterbug Follies* (1939) | Count Screwloose and J.R. the Wonder Dog are promoting a $10,000 swing contest. They plan to skip town with the entry fees, but a menacing thug from the Citizens for Fair Play convinces them otherwise. | |
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Crazytown* (1954) | A series of blackout gags show the topsy-turvy world of Crazy Town. | |
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Croon Crazy* (1933) | Cubby the Bear hosts a radio show. When the guests don't show up, Cubby has to impersonate them all! | |
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The Curious Adventures Of Mr. Wonderbird (1952) | Based on a story by Hans Christian Anderson (The Sheperdess and the chimney-Sweep), Mr. Wonderbird (Sir Peter Ustinov) tells the story of two lovers who flee their two dimensional painting and are then hunted by a mean-spirited King. | |
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Dancing On The Moon* (1935) | Honeymooning couples of various animal species take a rocket ship excursion to the moon. | |
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Danger Below* (2012) | An animated science fiction comedy space opera. Is earth being attacked by the Dark Side or is it just a paranoid delusional fantasy? WARNING: May not be suitable for young children. | |
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De Nachtmerrie (1946) | This is a short puppet animation from the Dutch puppet animation 'factory' Dollywood. Raised by Joop Geesink and now part of the Dutch historie of puppet-animation. It is an advertising-clip and translated the name is The Nightmare. | |
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Death Of A Rich Man* (1971) | A story about an extremely wealthy man who cares only for money and not for people. Although warned in a dream to use his wealth to care for people, he takes no heed and ultimately is destroyed by his greed. WARNING: May not be suitable for young children. | |
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Defenders Of Space* (1984) | Phoenix King is a South Korean animated feature film dubbed into English and released in America and Europe as Defenders of Space. | |
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Deputy Dawg: Penguin Panic* (1962) | A little escaped circus penguin heads for the town of Creek Mud, and he's burning up. He creates all kinds of havoc for Deputy Dawg and his friends. | |
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Destination Earth (1956) | In this corporate-sponsored cartoon, Martian dissidents learn that oil and competition are the two things that make America great. | |
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Dick And Larry: Fire! Fire!* (1930s) | Originally a Tom and Jerry cartoon but renamed due to MGM owning those names. Dick and Larry are firefighters having a few problems trying to fight a fire. | |
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Dick Whittington's Cat* (1936) | Dick Whittington's cat has a chance to make good in a faraway land infested with rats. | |
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Ding Dong Daddy* (1942) | A dumb mutt falls in love with the metal statue of a greyhound. | |
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Doggone Tired* (1949) | An energetic dog needs a night's rest if he's going to be ready for rabbit hunting at dawn. A crafty rabbit does everything he can to keep him awake. | |
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Don Quixote* (1934) | An institutionalized man reads classic literature in his padded cell and believes he is a knight like in the books he reads and attacks a guard, then escapes. | |
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The Dover Boys At Pimento University* (1942) | Three fun-loving, morally upright brothers from Pimento University save their fiancée from their fiendish archenemy, Dan Backslide, in this spoof of the Rover Boys. | |
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Dreams Of A Rarebit Fiend (1921) | Unsettling cartoon: charming at first, it grows frightening along the way. Quite modern in style and subject. | |
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Dreams On Ice* (1939) | A lisping moppet floods his bedroom so he and his adorable, rag-eared pet dog can dream of ice skating with all his toys. | |
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The Ducktators (1942) | The Ducktators is a Looney Tunes black and white cartoon that was produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions and was released in 1942 by Warner Bros. Directed by Norman McCabe, the cartoon satirizes various events of World War II. | |
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Duffy In The Mascot (1934) | A strange story about a loving dog puppet who practically goes through Hell to get an orange to a dying girl. | |
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Educated Fish* (1937) | A young fish learns the hard way about skipping school. | |
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Een Verhaal Met Een Baard (A Story With A Beard)* (1948) | This Philips puppet-animation (A Story With A Beard) is a fairy tale about a kingdom and a young prince who is cursed by a witch and gets a beard. Nobody can cut this beard and all men in the kingdom should have a beard. Dutch. | |
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Egg* (2003) | This animated short tells the tale of a young caveman, Bud Buddy, who comes across a small tortoise. Naming it Tortoo, Bud is totally unaware that the evil Dr K also has an eye on his new pet, and of the sinister reasons why. | |
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An Elephant Never Forgets* (1935) | A collection of animals goes to school during which time an ape, sitting behind an elephant, keeps tormenting him but the elephant will get even later. | |
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Elephants Dream* (2006) | Elephants Dream is the story of two strange characters exploring a capricious and seemingly infinite machine. | |
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Ermo Jr.* (1986) | Stop motion animation short film involving Ermo, a puppet who likes to poop in a variety of hats. | |
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Fabletoon: The Black Duck* (1929) | This is an entry in the Aesop's Sound Fables about the sibling duck who was shunned because of his color, and not because of race. WARNING: May contain racial stereotypes. This is being offered only for its historical value. | |
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Fabletoon: A Lad And His Lamp* (1929) | A mouse finds a magic lamp. | |
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The Fabulous Firework Family* (1959) | A young Mexican boy, son of the greatest fireworks maker in all of Mexico, saves the day when his father's fireworks fail to go off as planned at the big festival. | |
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Fantastic Planet* (1973) | On a faraway planet where blue giants rule, oppressed humanoids rebel against their machine-like leaders. English. Barry Bostwick, Jennifer Drake. | |
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Farm Foolery* (1949) | Each of the animals on this farm have a unique personality. Watch them have fun and sing a long to Shine On Harvest Moon. | |
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Feast And Furious* (1952) | Katnip, the hungry Kat, thinks Finny, the little goldfish, would make a good meal but all his strong-arm methods to capture Finny fail. | |
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Finding His Voice* (1929) | Animated figure Talkie gets a visit from his friend Mutie in search for a job. Talkie takes him to the Western Electric sound lab, where a technician explains the process of putting sound on film and reproducing it in the theatre. | |
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Fire Bugs* (1930) | Bimbo has problems trying to put out a building fire. | |
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Fireman Sam: Twist Of Fate* (2005) | Station Officer Steele takes Mandy and Norman caveing but he gets stuck blocking Mandy and Norman's way out. Fireman Sam and Penny's grease gun save the day. | |
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A Fireman's Life (1933) | The boys are firemen and end up battling a huge house blaze with their zaniness. | |
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Flip The Frog: Bulloney* (1933) | Our hero winds up in the bullfighting ring fighting with the big bullfighter over the pretty girl. | |
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Flip the Frog: Coo Coo The Magician* (1933) | Flip The Frog goes head-to-head with a swami-type magician, both trying to top each other. | |
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Flip The Frog: The Cuckoo Murder Case* (1930) | The Cuckoo Bird residing in an old clock in a creepy old mansion is shot dead by an unknown assailant; Flip the Frog is called in to investigate (and finds more than he bargained for). | |
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Flip The Frog: Fiddlesticks (1930) | Flip the Frog was Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's first sound cartoon. It is about a happy-go-lucky, needy frog, named Flip. | |
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Flip The Frog: Flip's Lunch Room* (1933) | Flip is a cook at a restaurant with an old lady waiter and a young woman server. Also, a dog hangs around that causes Flip some trouble. | |
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Flip The Frog: Flying Fists* (1930) | Flip and a turtle train for a boxing match. They have comedic problems with their training equipment. In the match, a parrot acts as the ref. | |
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Flip The Frog: Funny Face* (1932) | Flip is trying to impress a young lady, who does not want our young stalwart, not because he has the charm and personality of a day-old bagel, but because he has the face of a frog. | |
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Flip The Frog: The Goal Rush* (1932) | Flip the Frog plays college football with wacky results. | |
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Flip The Frog: Jail Birds* (1931) | Flip is a prison guard. When one his his convicts escapes, Flip goes after him and the adventure begins! | |
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Flip The Frog: Little Orphan Willie* (1930) | When a mother mouse refuses to accept another baby mouse in her family, the Stork leaves the orphan with Flip The Frog. | |
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Flip the Frog: The Milkman* (1932) | At Flip's Farm, Flip the Frog goes to milk the cows but its not as easy as it sounds. | |
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Flip The Frog: Movie Mad* (1931) | Flip the Frog wants to be a movie actor, but a guard thwarts his attempts to sneak inside a movie studio. | |
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Flip the Frog: The New Car* (1931) | Flip the Frog buys a used car and goes for an outing with his girlfriend. | |
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Flip The Frog: The Office Boy* (1932) | Flip schemes to get himself hired as an office boy at the Screwy Nuts and Bolts factory, especially because of the attractive typist. | |
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Flip The Frog: Puddle Pranks* (1930) | Flip and his girlfriend go on a date in a swimming hole. | |
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Flip The Frog: Ragtime Romeo* (1931) | Flip the Frog serenades his feline sweetheart to the delight of everyone in her building - everyone, that is, except a homely cow, who is trying to get some sleep. | |
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Flip the Frog: Soda Squirt (1933) | Ub Iwerks's Flip the Frog runs a drugstore in his last cartoon. | |
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Flip the Frog: The Soup Song* (1931) | Flip the Frog is a café employee who performs with the band, makes soup and delivers food to patrons. | |
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Flip The Frog: The Village Specialist* (1931) | Village handyman Flip gets called in to deal with a piece of plumbing that won't stop leaking. | |
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Flower Power (1971) | Short funny animation about Flower Power. A General inspects his soldiers and find a flower on a helmet. He gets angry, the flower explodes, the soldiers are happy and dance like they used to do in the Flower Power period. | |
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The Forest | Antonia is a 12 year old girl. She often has daydreams, in which she wonders of in to a magical far away forest, were she hides from the problems of the real world. One day, however, her father takes drastic measures and she has to face a decision. | |
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Freedom River* (1971) | Uplifting modern day parable about mankind getting along together. Narrated by Orson Welles. | |
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The Fresh Vegetable Mystery* (1939) | After a series of vegetable disappearances, a potato policeman goes out to catch the kidnappers. | |
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Fritz Und Fratz (1939) | The Fritz und Fratz cartoons were made by Johann Weichberger from Austria. Silent. | |
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Gabby: All's Well (1941) | Gabby tries to put a diaper on a cranky baby. | |
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Gabby: Fire Cheese* (1941) | Gabby makes good on his pledge to 'be helpful' by assisting the local fire department while they put out a fire. When the chief incapacitates himself by getting Gabby's hat stuck over his head, Gabby takes charge with with disastrous consequences. | |
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Gabby: Gabby Goes Fishing* (1941) | Gabby teaches a young boy how to fish, even though the boy was doing much better without him. | |
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Gabby: It's A Hap-Hap-Happy Day* (1941) | Gabby catches the Mayor of Lilliput getting ready to go camping by himself. Gabby decides to tag along and causes oh so much trouble. | |
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Gabby: King For A Day* (1940) | King Little receives a letter that says, Please be at home to-day. I have orders to shoot you! He promptly makes Gabby king for a day. The little braggart is thrilled until he learns the reason why. | |
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Gabby: Swing Cleaning* (1941) | The king allows Gabby to take over the supervision of the castle's spring cleaning with disastrous results. | |
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Gabby: Two For The Zoo* (1941) | Grumpy insists he knows what a rubberneck kango is, but really has no idea. He has to deliver it from a crate to a rural zoo. He constantly mistakes the baby kangaroo for the mother; the little guy for the big guy. | |
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Gallopin' Gals* (1940) | Time for the big horse race. We drop in on the fillies, who gossip in New York accents. That's followed by a pre-race fashion parade. | |
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Gandy Goose: Gandy's Adventure* (1938) | In Gandy's debut film, he leaves home to make is way in the world. Unfortunately, a wolf tries to lure him into his lair to eat him. | |
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Gerald McBoing Boing* (1951) | The story of a little boy who would only talk in sound effects. With story by Dr. Seuss (and Bill Scott of Rocky and Bullwinkle fame). | |
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Going Places* (1945) | Animated short that tells the story of how progress is achieved through hard work, research, competition, and fair trade. | |
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Gold Rush Gumby* (1955) | Gumby decides to go prospecting in the mountains and takes his pal Pokey along. | |
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Goofy Goat Antics (1933) | A goat is riding along in a car on his way to the Glee Club. | |
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Gopher Broke* (2004) | The tale of a hungry gopher who hatches a clever plan to get a quick snack, but discovers that even the best laid plans can go wrong. | |
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Greedy Humpty Dumpty* (1936) | Greedy Humpty Dumpty's wall of gold is not enough. He wants all the gold in the sun, too. | |
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Gulliver's Travels* (1939) | Gulliver washes ashore on Lilliput and attempts to prevent war between that tiny kingdom and its equally-miniscule rival, Blefiscu, as well as smooth the way for the romance between the Princess and Prince of the opposing lands. | |
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Gumbasia (1955) | Clay objects of all sizes, shapes and colors contort and reshape themselves to a jazz music score. | |
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Gumby: Hidden Valley* (1957) | The adventure is on and Gumby and Pokey find something much better than land in their trek to find the elusive Hidden Valley. | |
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Gumby: Just Train Crazy* (1998) | While Gumby is out for his dental appointment, Denali accidentally smashes his prized model train. | |
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A Gypsy Fiddler* (1933) | A rather wild tale of gypsy-loves-princess. Features the first use of the song Gypsy Life. | |
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A Hair-Raising Tale* (1965) | Tinker invents a hair tonic to regrow hair. | |
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Happy Days* (1936) | Pinhead is ridiculed by the other boys on the way to the fishing hole. | |
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Happy Harmonies: Bottles* (1936) | A dark and stormy night in a drugstore. The druggist mixes a potion and falls asleep. The skull-and-crossbones on the bottle comes to life and drips the potion on the druggist, shrinking him. | |
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Happy Harmonies: The Old Mill Pond* (1936) | The fish and frogs gather at the old mill pond to hear a jazz concert. | |
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Happy Harmonies: Toyland Broadcast* (1934) | Station ABC broadcasts the Toyland Revue, featuring music from baby-doll singers, a roly-poly bandleader, a jack-in-the-box crooner, a wind-up music box and more. | |
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Hart Transplantatie (1971) | Short funny animation about a heart transplant. | |
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The Hasher's Delirium* (1910) | A guy (presumably a drunk) sits off to the right side of the screen as all sorts of drawings keep morphing into other drawings--some of which are obviously meant to poke fun of or provide warnings against various intoxicants. | |
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Hawaiian Birds* (1936) | An aspiring singer bird goes to the big city to be a star, but she is thrown out into the cold by her heartless employer and saved by the true blue country boy she left behind. | |
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Hector's Hectic Life (1948) | A messy family dog is told by its owner that it will be thrown out in the cold, after three puppies show up on the doorstep, complicating the dog's life. The owner, thinking the dog is responsible for the mess, finally discovers the puppies and all ends well. | |
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Hell-Bent For Election (1944) | An animated film sponsored by the United Auto Workers for the 1944 Presidential elections.Roosevelt is a powerful express train, while Dewey is a broken-down steam engine. | |
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The Herring Murder Case (1931) | The Herring Murder Case was probably Bimbo the dog's new transformation because before this cartoon he has many different looks. Betty Boop does not appear although the wife of the murdered herring performs in a Betty Boop Style. | |
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Hold It* (1938) | All the town kitties hold a meeting to come up with a plan to rid themselves of a neighboring dog. The plan is to stay very still. | |
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Hoppity Goes To Town* (1941) | The happy tranquility of Buggsville is shattered when the populace learns that a colossal skyscraper is to be built over their tiny town. | |
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Humbug* (1970) | A powerful criticism of an oppressive Polish political system. Words are meaningless in the film; letters spouting from the mouth of the protagonist, a two-dimensional autocrat are representative of false promises and tired party lines. | |
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Humorous Phases Of Funny Faces (1906) | Humorous Phases of Funny Faces is a silent cartoon by J. Stuart Blackton in the year 1906. It features a cartoonist drawing faces on a chalkboard, and the faces coming to life. | |
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Humpty Dumpty* (1935) | An animated cartoon by Ub Iwerks. | |
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Hunky And Spunky: Always Kickin'* (1939) | Hunky is teaching her son Spunky how to kick properly and he befriends a family of birds who are building a nest and helps save one from a vulture. | |
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Hunky And Spunky: Snubbed By A Snob* (1940) | A young horse says hi to little donkey Spunky. But the horse's mother pulls him away, saying we don't associate with that kind. | |
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Hunky And Spunky: Vitamin Hay* (1941) | It's time for lunch, and Spunky (the baby donkey) is expected to feed on healthy (and awful-tasting) Vitamin Hay. He resists, and wanders out of the barn to look for more interesting things to eat. | |
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Hunky And Spunky: You Can't Shoe A Horse Fly* (1940) | Hunky and Spunky are settling in for a nap, but a horse fly sees them and sees dinner. After battling the fly for a while, the youngster enlists mom's help. But the fly is merely stunned, and rallies a new attack, this time with friends. | |
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The Hunt* (2001) | Nominee for Best Direction Imagina 2002. Computer animated space fantasy. WARNING: May not be suitable for young children. | |
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Hysterical History (1953) | An amusing look at American history, starting with Columbus' discovery of America, and touching on the formation of the original thirteen states, the Gold Rush, and several other important events. | |
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I'd Climb The Highest Mountain* (1931) | After some slapstick mountain climbing, the title song is sung with the Bouncing Ball, then spoofed with humorous images. | |
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In My Merry Oldsmobile* (1931) | A lady is rescued from a villain by a heroic young man, who then takes her for a spin in his Oldsmobile. | |
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In The Good Old Summer Time* (1930) | Simple variations of people heading off to a May Day celebration, carrying a Maypole and a hippopotamus to serve as the Queen of the May. After that, the audience sings the verse on its own and a voice-over leads the chorus. | |
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In The Shade Of The Old Apple Tree* (1929) | A Screen Songs cartoon. | |
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The Inkwell Imps: Koko's Haunted House* (1928) | Max and another cartoonist next to him at the drawing board with the other artist stealing Max's inkwell. That inkwell becomes a haunted house that Ko-Ko and his dog Fitz go into. They encounter several ghosts and skeletons inside. | |
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Inside Magoo (1960) | The nearsighted Mr. Magoo here experiences the seven danger signals of cancer and sees his doctor, even though as a Sagittarius, he feels he is not susceptible. | |
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Jack And The Beanstalk* (1933) | Jack sells the family cow for magic beans which grow a vine into the sky. | |
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Japanese Animation: Evil Mouse* (1936) | Japanese cartoon takes place on an island where an evil mouse attacks. | |
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Judge Rummy: A Fitting Gift* (1920) | Rummy and friend buy a girdle for his wife. | |
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A Kick In Time* (1940) | Spunky is kidnapped and sold at an auction to a cruel Italian peddler. It's up to Hunky to save him. | |
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The Kids In The Shoe* (1935) | The story about a group of children who live inside a giant shoe with an elderly woman who takes care of them. | |
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Kitty Caddy* (1947) | It's the dogs vs. the cats in a golf match. But halfway through the match, animated Bob Hope-like and Bing Crosby-like characters join the competition. | |
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Ko-Ko: Fadeaway* (1926) | Max produces a container of Fade-out Powder and uses it to torture the little clown. | |
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Koko's Earth Control* (1928) | Koko the Clown and his dog Fitz walk into a building where levers that control various aspects of the Earth are located. After Fitz presses a particular lever, the world goes topsy-turvy and out-of-control. | |
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Korn Plastered In Africa* (1931) | The story of Trader Korn and his trip to Africa. | |
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Krazy Kat: Birth Of Jazz* (1932) | A stork drops Krazy down a chimney in a musical instrument store, where he impersonates Ted Lewis and gets the whole shop to start playing jazz. | |
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Krazy Kat: Bugologist* (1916) | While in the woods studying bugs, Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse encounter a sleeping bee and an angry elephant. | |
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Krazy Kat: The Hot Cha Melody* (1935) | Krazy's a Tin Pan Alley songwriter with writer's block. The devil has a solution: steal a tune from the classics, specifically from Robert Schumann. | |
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Krazy Kat: Keeping Up With Krazy* (1962) | Ignatz Mouse is hired to sell a prefabricated house to the local brick foundry owner Kelly by a corrupt realtor. But Krazy Kat's simple home bothers Kelly. The trio becomes embroiled in a battle of wits as to whose house is better. | |
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Krazy Kat: Krazy Kat Goes A-Wooing* (1916) | Krazy Kat's serenade outside the window of Ignatz Mouse meets with a barrage of bricks. | |
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Krazy Kat: Ratskin* (1929) | The short features Krazy Kat hunting for turkey. | |
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Krazy Kat: Rodeo Dough* (1931) | Krazy and his Minnie-like girlfriend are riding on a horse kissing as they come upon a sign that advertises for a rodeo contest. Krazy reluctantly enters to impress Minnie. | |
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Krazy Kat: Seeing Stars* (1932) | Seeing Stars shows caricatures of celebrities. Krazy tries to pick a fruit from a bowl but ends up holding the waiter's long nose by mistake. | |
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Krazy Kat: The Stork Exchange* (1927) | Krazy Kat is called upon to substitute for a factory room of storks in delivering newborn infants. | |
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Krazy Kat And Ignatz Mouse At The Circus* (1916) | An animated cartoon about the adventures of Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse at the circus, where they demonstrate their courage to each other by attempting to scare a woman. | |
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La Grande Revue Philips* (1938) | La Grande Revue Philips 1938 (The Great Philips Review). This Puppet-Toon Film was a 1938 Philips Broadcast Ad made in Holland. | |
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La Petite Parade* (1959) | A French shopkeeper's life is disrupted by a daily parade. The parade consists of ze king, ze premier, all ze lords and ministers, army, navy, department sanitaire. When the department sanitaire hits a pothole, all the garbage gets dumped. | |
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Lady Ice* (2010) | See the beautiful and tragic tale of Lady Ice as she sets on an inner journey, only to realize she can never be with the one she loves. | |
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Laurel And Hardy: The Ghost Town Clowns* (1967) | The boys come upon a ghost town and are forced to spend the night. | |
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Les Chinoiseries De Placide* (1930) | Cartoon about a Chinese laundry. | |
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The Limejuice Mystery* (1930) | Sherlock Holmes parody made with marionettes. | |
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Little Annie Rooney (1931) | Fleischer Studios Cartoon Little Annie Rooney uploaded by BoopBoopaddoop features a short screensong about a fictional character called Little Annie Rooney. | |
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Little Audrey: Bing Crosby (1950s) | Bing sings Its A Marshmallow World. | |
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Little Audrey: Butterscotch And Soda (1948) | Little Audrey would rather eat candy than a nutritious lunch. She dreams about going to a candy land where she eats too much candy and gets the tummy ache blues. | |
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Little Audrey: Dizzy Dishes* (1955) | Audrey imagines inventing machines to thwart an alien invasion. | |
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Little Audrey: Goofy Goofy Gander (1950) | Little Audrey, in the schoolroom, is sent to the corner stool to memorize Mother Goose rhymes. She falls asleep and dreams that she gets a tour of Mother Goose Land by Mother Goose herself. | |
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Little Audrey: Little Audrey Riding Hood* (1955) | Little Audrey is taking a cake to her grandmother and discovers a burglar robbing the old lady's house. Audrey tricks the robber and locks him in the cellar. But he escapes and corners Audrey. Grandma comes to the rescue. | |
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Little Audrey: The Lost Dream* (1949) | Little Audrey helps a lost dream find his way back to Dream Land. | |
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Little Audrey: The Seapreme Court* (1954) | Little Audrey, while fishing, falls to the bottom of the sea, where she encounters all types of sea-life and then is arrested by the local fish-constable. | |
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Little Audrey: Song of the Birds* (1949) | Little Audrey shoots a baby bird with her air rifle and is mortified when the bird's mother, and all the other woodland animals, go into mourning. | |
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Little Audrey: Surf Bored* (1953) | Audrey keeps trying to sneak her dog onto a beach with a 'No Dogs' sign. | |
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Little Audrey: Tarts and Flowers (1950) | Little Audrey makes a gingerbread man, then takes a nap and dreams that the Gingerbread Man goes to cakeland where he tries to marry his sweetheart, Angel Cake. But Devil Food Cake interferes and carries off the bride. | |
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Little Black Sambo* (1935) | Little Black Sambo was a 1935 animated film, based on the controversial children's book of the same name. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes and is being offered only for its historical value. It is in no way meant to offend. | |
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Little Boy Blue (1936) | An animated cartoon by Ub Iwerks. | |
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The Little Broadcast* (1943) | The Great Maestro gets to conduct more than he can compose himself to in this George Pal Puppetoon. | |
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Little Brown Jug (1948) | An animated short about various woodland creatures milling and drinking apple cider. Includes a sing-a-long of the title song. | |
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Little Dutch Mill* (1934) | A variation on the story of Hansel and Gretel. A miserly mill-keeper kidnaps two Dutch children, but their pet duck runs for help like Lassie. | |
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The Little Engine That Could* (1963) | The story is about a small, blue engine asked to take over from older, more experienced engines who have somehow failed to function on a journey carrying toys to the children on the other side of the mountain. | |
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Little Gray Neck* (1948) | Defending a friend, duckling is attacked by fox and must learn to survive. | |
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The Little King: Cactus King* (1934) | The ever-curious king rides a locomotive heading West. He stokes the engine and sits on his throne, mounted in front of the speeding locomotive, while he reads a newspaper. He contends with a group of wild Indians and visits a dude ranch. | |
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The Little King: Darkest Africa* (1933) | When the Little King goes hunting in Africa, he takes along his servants, his throne and even a taxicab! The fat little monarch encounters a tree that becomes a serpent and a pelican who turns into Jimmy Durante. | |
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The Little King: The Fatal Note* (1933) | An outsider seems to want to cause nothing but destruction in the palace but the childlike monarch and his dog cause nothing but mischief on him. | |
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Little Lambkins* (1940) | A precocious toddler, wanting to return to his watermelon patch and a pair of animal friends in the country, tampers with the electronic gadgets in his new city home and creates chaos. | |
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Little Lamby* (1937) | A fox spots a lamb and fixes up a phony baby contest to trap him but other animal mothers sign their babies up. | |
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Little Lulu: Bargain Counter Attack (1946) | Little Lulu wreaks havoc in a city department store. | |
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Little Lulu: Bored Of Education* (1946) | This is a classic cartoon featuring Little Lulu and her classmate Tubby as they experience a series of events out of a history book. | |
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Little LuLu: A Bout With A Trout* (1947) | Little Lulu, torn between going fishing or going to school, chooses to go fishing...where she encounters the Fish from Hades. | |
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Little Lulu: Cad And Caddy (1947) | Lulu plans her revenge against a distressed golfer who refuses to give her a lollipop after he promised her one for caddying for him. | |
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Little Miss Spider (2001) | Little Miss Spider is a computer-animated short based on the best-selling book by artist and storyteller David Kirk. The baby spider is in search for her mother. | |
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Little Nemo* (1911) | Little Nemo a very early animation by Windsor McKay. | |
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Little Ol Bosko In Bagdad* (1938) | Bosko imagines he's in Baghdad where giant frogs want to steal the cookies he's supposed to deliver to his grandma. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes and is being offered only for its historical value. It is in no way meant to offend. | |
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Little Red School Mouse* (1949) | The primary subject taught in Mouse School is Cat Identification. One little mouse announces he doesn't know what a cat is and has never seen one. Meanwhile, Mr. Cat has found his way into the classroom. | |
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The Little Stranger* (1936) | A stranger deposits an egg in a duck's nest which hatches as a baby chicken. It doesn't fit in well with its three duckling nestmates, particularly when it comes to swimming. | |
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Little Tinker* (1948) | B.O. Skunk tries desperately to win the love of a girl, any girl, and goes to such lengths as imitating Frank Sinatra. | |
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The Lone Ranger* (1930s) | The Lone Ranger and Tonto capture a band of cattle rustlers and save the life of the rancher in this silent animated short film. | |
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Lonesome Lenny* (1946) | Screwy Squirrel is bought in a pet shop to be the companion of a daft dog so strong that he squeezes his playmates to death. | |
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Lucky Ducky* (1948) | It's hunting season, and all the ducks are wisely staying undercover - apart from this freshly-hatched little duckling, who turns out to be more than a match for two inept would-be hunters. | |
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Mad Hatter* (1940) | Maisie is looking for the perfect hat but she must special order it. Then our tale takes us to the factory where the hat designers are busy at work. | |
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Make Mine Freedom (1948) | This Cold War-era cartoon uses humor to tout the dangers of Communism and the benefits of capitalism. | |
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Man On The Land (1951) | Animated story of man's conquest of the soil through the ages with background of narration and ballads. Starts with prehistoric times and ends in the present, showing how oil-powered machines have banished the threat of famine. | |
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Mariutch* (1930) | A small Italian husband kisses his tall, fat wife goodbye as their children look on. He's immigrating to America, land of opportunity. But he misses his wife terribly. | |
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Marriage Wows* (1949) | The stars of this Screen Song cartoon are Bertha and Edgar. They are getting married and the song sung is For Me and My Gal. | |
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Mary's Little Lamb* (1935) | Despite her scolding, Mary's lamb follows her to school. It's the last day of school and the children have planned special festivities and performances. The lamb wants to participate, much to the teacher's chagrin. | |
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Meet King Joe* (1949) | Shows us the life of a common working man in America, and how he is able achieve financial success for himself thanks to investment, competition, research, and technology. | |
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Merry Kittens* (1935) | Kittens take unfair advantage of a well meaning dog, who actually is functioning as their protector. | |
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Metropopular (2001) | Metropopular is an animated short film about what the cities of America would say to one another if they could talk. Frantic about a popularity contest in which these cities are competing, they jockey for top position while arguing between themselves. | |
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The Mighty Hercules: The Defiant Mask Of Vulcan* (1963) | An evil-doer perfects his new weapon, The Mask of Vulcan. which makes him invulnerable to all threats. However Hercules, assisted by Newton and Toot, trick the Mask into losing his helmet and becoming vulnerable. | |
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Mighty Mouse: Gypsy Life* (1945) | A colony of bats invade a camp and capture the Gypsies. Mighty Mouse is called on to help! | |
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Mighty Mouse: The Pirates* (1945) | A pirate cat has his eyes set on a beautiful island mouse princess. He and his fellow pirates kidnap the beautiful girl. The natives call to Mighty Mouse for help. | |
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Mighty Mouse: Spare The Rod* (1953) | The town-fathers call on Mighty Mouse to aid the city where the juveniles are all delinquents. The super-mouse wins the respect and admiration of the delinquent-mice by his deeds of heroism while saving them from death. | |
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Mighty Mouse: Wolf! Wolf! | Little Bo Peep and her free-range sheep are threatened when Wily and Jazzy wolves attempt to capture them. But Mighty Mouse saves the day. | |
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The Milky Way* (1940) | The short explores the adventures of the three little kittens who lost their mittens, as they explore a dreamland where space is made up entirely of dairy products. | |
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Milton The Monster: Zelda The Zombie (1965) | Goo Fee hopes to trap Fearless Fly in a super-adhesive flypaper. Flukey Luke attempts to stop Spider Webb from stealing the Hopeless Diamond. Milton, Heebie and Jeebie court Zelda the Zombie. | |
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Mississippi Swing* (1939) | When the showboat comes to town, all the people flock to it. A slapstick burlesque of a minstrel show with some 1939 updates, including Gone With The Wind references. | |
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Molly Moo-Cow And Rip Van Winkle* (1935) | Molly Moo-Cow encounters a group of dwarfs playing tenpins while she is grazing, and she sees the sleeping Rip Van Winkle. | |
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Molly Moo-Cow And Robinson Crusoe* (1936) | When Molly Moo Cow gets stranded on Robinson Crusoe's island, Crusoe doesn't want her there, then Crusoe gets caught by scat-singing natives and Molly comes to the rescue. | |
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Molly Moo-Cow And The Butterflies* (1935) | Molly is a dedicated conservationist who fights for biodiversity. She rescues a bunch of butterflies after they are captured by a butterfly collector. | |
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Molly Moo-Cow And The Indians* (1935) | A Conestoga Wagon leads Molly Moo-Cow and some ducks through the hills. The ducks stop for a swim by a teepee and go to explore the settlement. Molly goes to look for them but when she finds them she discovers they're behaving like Native Americans. | |
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Molly Moo-Cow: The Hunting Season* (1935) | There is peace in the forest and among all of the animals there, including a pair of ducks who befriend Molly Moo-Cow. A pair of hunters come on the scene, go hunting and hurt the ducks, so it's Molly to the rescue. | |
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Monkeydoodle (1933) | This animation was produced by Les Elton and is one of the most bizzare animations ever made. | |
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Moonbird* (1959) | Two boys leave their home at night to veture around and encounter the Moonbird. | |
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Mother Goose: Humpty Dumpty* (1946) | Famous Mother Goose tale featuring Ray Harryhausen's third dimensional animation. | |
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Mother Goose: Little Miss Muffet | An animated version of the Mother Goose Story of Little Miss Muffet, using what is called 3 dimensional animation. Part of the Nursey Rhyme Review series. | |
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Mouse's Bride* (1928) | A mouse courts and runs off with the female mouse who seems to be working as Farmer Al's housekeeper. | |
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The Moving Pyramid* (2001) | The Moving Pyramid is a charming animated short that tells the story of corruption, power and revolution. | |
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Mr. Hook: The Good Egg (1945) | Navy seaman Mr. Hook is convinced of the value of holding on to his war bonds. | |
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Mr. Hook: The Return Of Mr. Hook (1945) | Seaman Hook has big plans for after the war, mostly involving rushing home and marrying his sweetie. So do his fellow seaman, but theirs involve buying bonds. | |
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Mr. Hook: Take Heed Mr. Tojo* (1943) | Hook is set a decade in the future, and he is telling his young son about his exploits during the war and how war bonds helped him defeat an evil Japanese pilot who was trying to attack the fleet. | |
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Mr. Hook: Tokyo Woes (1945) | This cartoon (along with other Hook cartoons) was found by accident in the garage of a former soldier who had saved them. The cartoon was finally discovered in the mid-1990s when an A and E documentary on war cartoons began production. | |
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Mr. Piper And The Story Of Ahmed The Merchant* (1963) | Mr. Piper tells a tale of Ahmed, a merchant who gets his stuff stolen and blames his donkey. | |
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Mr. Piper And The Story Of Ali Baba* (1963) | Mr. Piper meets Ali Baba. | |
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Mr. Piper And The Story Of Brave Molly* (1960) | This is the story of Molly Whuppie and the Double Faced Giant in which 3 young orphaned sisters set out to make their fortune and wind up in a house whose inhabitants include a giant, his daughters, and a housekeeper who in reality is a queen. | |
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Mr. Piper And The Story Of Hansel And Gretel* (1963) | Mr. Piper tells the story of Hansel and Gretel. | |
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Mr. Piper And The Story Of The Proud Princess* (1960) | The tale of a vain princess and the handsome prince who loves her. After she rejects the gifts that he sent to her, the prince disguises himself as a simple. | |
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Mutt And Jeff: Globetrotters* (1926) | The boys are dreaming about showing highlights of their big trip around the world to a crowded theater. | |
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Mutt And Jeff: Slick Sleuths* (1926) | Mutt and Jeff play Sherlock Holmes style detectives on the trail of the mysterious Phantom. | |
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Mutt And Jeff: Soda Jerks* (1925) | Jeff puts some pep liquid instead of the usual syrup in the sodas that Mutt serves to the customers in the malt shop. As a result, they all jump up and down and act a little more enthusiastic than usual. Silent. | |
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Mutt And Jeff: Westward Whoa* (1926) | Cowboys Mutt and Jeff tangle with a bull on the ranch where they work. | |
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The New Spirit* (1942) | In 1942 Disney created this short film for the US Treasury Department. Donald Duck learns that his tax dollars are going toward the war effort. | |
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Northwest Hounded Police* (1946) | A wolf convict makes his escape, but is pursued by a diminutive Mountie who seems to be everywhere. | |
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Nursery Scandal* (1932) | Mother Goose and a scarecrow are having a secret romance. | |
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Oh You Beautiful Doll* (1929) | As the cat tries to get the mouse out of the swinging chandelier, an unseen voice tells us to follow the Bouncing Ball to sing the title song. | |
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Old Mother Hubbard* (1935) | Old Mother Hubbard is the laundress for the king, but when she finds her cupboard bare, her dog travels to the palace where he winds up performing for the king. | |
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Once Upon A Time* (1936) | An animated film on driver safety, resulting in Once Upon a Time. This theatrical short seems to have been made to promote safety in a soft, friendly message. | |
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One Bad Knight | Very cute cartoon/advertisement which tells of a boy who falls in love with a girl and rescues her from the clutches of a bad guy. | |
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One Beer* (1991) | This is a banned cartoon from the banned episode, Elephant Issues. It's about the dangers of alcohol. WARNING: May not be suitable for young children. | |
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One Mother's Family* (1939) | A mother hen is taking her brood for a walk. They encounter obstacles along the way, such as traffic. There's a runt of the litter, who has more trouble with these than the others. | |
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Oscar's Oasis* (2011) | Oscar is a lizard living in a desert who loves to explore garbage that falls off the trucks riding through. | |
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Paddy The Pelican: Two Wet Bears* (1951) | Amos and Buster are stranded on an island with a Popeye look-alike named Beachcomber Bill. The bears are terrified because Beachcomber Bill wants to cook them for dinner. | |
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Pasta For War* (2001) | 'Pasta For War' satirizes a 1930's propaganda newsreel. A young recruit envisions formations of dive bombing bow-ties flying above columns of ravioli tanks, while he wades through marinara sauce to battle against utensils at the bottom of the sink. | |
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Pastry Town Wedding* (1934) | In a little town called Pastry Town, a group of bugs makes pastries, cookies, and cakes. The chef saves a female bug from a bee and they decide to get married, prompting the bugs to make more goodies for the wedding! | |
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The Peachy Cobbler* (1950) | A poor cobbler feeds his last crust of bread to some birds that are really elves, who show their gratitude by finishing all his work while he sleeps. | |
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The Peanut Vendor* (1933) | This film is by New Zealand filmmaker Len Lye, best known for his pioneering work with abstract animation. | |
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Peeping Penguins* (1937) | Curious penguins investigate an abandoned cabin, heedless of their mother's warning that curiosity killed the cat. | |
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Pigeon: Impossible* (2009) | A rookie secret agent is faced with a problem seldom covered in basic training: what to do when a curious pigeon gets trapped inside your multi-million dollar, government-issued nuclear briefcase. | |
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Plane Crazy* (1928) | RELEASED INTO PUBLIC DOMAIN 1/1/24: Inspired by Lindbergh's flight from New York to Paris, our character builds a plane to take his girlfriend on a romantic trip. | |
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Play Safe (1936) | A young boy is playing in the yard with some toy trains when a real train rolls by and he runs off to get a closer look. The boy starts the train and is headed toward a collision with another train when the dog saves the day! | |
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The Playful Polar Bears* (1938) | Hunters visit the home of a polar bear community, causing a bear parent to have to rescue its cub. | |
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Pleased To Eat You* (1950) | A hungry lion is captured, shortly after being tricked by a hunter. He escapes his cage and robs a hot dog stand. A chase ensues when the police pursue him. | |
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PM Picnic* (1948) | Mr. Bee spreads the word that there is going to be a 'PM Picnic' in the barn latter that evening. Promo film for PM (Plesent Moments) Whiskey to promote their new ad campaign. WARNING: Shows animated characters drinking alcohol. | |
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Pooch The Pup: King Klunk* (1933) | Pooch the Pup takes his girlfriend and an anthropomorphic camera to the jungle in search of the giant ape, King Klunk. | |
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Pookie The Alley Cat (2003) | Computer animated cartoon short about a funny little alley cat named Pookie who sings in the alley for something to eat. | |
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Poop Goes The Weasel* (1955) | Waxey the Weasel invades a chicken-coop where a chicken named Wishbone has just been hatched but Waxey takes off after Wishbone manages to outwit him. | |
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Princess Iron Fan (1941) | Produced by the Wan brothers in the midst of war, Princess Iron Fan is the first feature length animation made in China. We follow the Monkey King and his friends on their journey to the west. | |
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Prisoner's Song* (1930) | This was based on the 1924 song by Vernon Dalhart considered to be the first Country hit recording. | |
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Protectors Of Universe* (1983) | The evil android Alfred and his mistress Helen want to conquer the universe and the Mazinger 7 crew are the only thing standing in their way! Korean animation dubbed in English. | |
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Puppe And Victor* (2005) | A short Thai animation about a toy robot and a one legged doll. | |
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Puss In Boots* (1934) | When the kittens of Puss in Boots are saved from drowning by a bagpiper, the cat offers to help the man rescue a princess as repayment of his debt. | |
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Pusskin Boots | Cartoon animation by David Marsh. | |
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The Queen Of Hearts* (1934) | Playing cards come to life. As in the nursery rhyme, the queen of hearts bakes some tarts; the jack of hearts steals them. | |
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Radio Riot* (1930) | The phenomenon of radio is hot, and everyone is listening, including an overambitious goldfish, a lazy spider and three terrified mouse-children. | |
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The Rag Dog* (1935) | A musical cartoon about three kittens who get into a spat with two small dogs over milk. | |
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Raggedy Ann And Raggedy Andy* (1941) | A toyshop owner tells a little girl the story behind the two dolls she's fallen in love with. In Ragland, needles, thread, scissors and other sewing implements come to life to create the rag dolls Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy. | |
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Raging Blues* (2004) | In the 30's, with the arrival of Christmas, a developer presents a plan to build new homes to the mayor. The focus is on a young woman. Created in France in 2004 with the look and feel of 1930s animated shorts. | |
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Raiders Of Galaxy* (1985) | An alien force sends out his minions to conquer Earth for its mineral riches. | |
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Ration Bored* (1943) | Woody Woodpecker tries to steal gasoline from a car, not realizing it belongs to a police officer. | |
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The Raven* (1942) | The story involves a Raven as a door to door vacuum salesman, trying to stay on the right path, when he is convinced by his old friend the Fox to gain entrance to the castle of the Scottie Dog. | |
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Red Riding Hood (1931) | Some jazz tonic restores Grandma's youth. When the Big Bad Wolf pays a visit, he and Grandma decide to marry on the spot; but Little Red Riding Hood finds a way to stop the wedding. | |
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Reksio Ratownik* (1970s) | A Polish cartoon about a dog and a very hot summer day. Reksio tries hard to keep cool and ends up at a lake rescuing two children. Music with no dialogue. | |
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Robot vs. The Claw* (2011) | A robot plays the Claw game to try and win a prize but finds it impossible. | |
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Roger RamJet: S1E8-The Cowboy* (1965) | When a couple of cowboys get bored, they lasso Roger Ramjet's plane out of the sky. | |
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Roger RamJet: S1E20-Hi Noon* (1965) | Marshall Roger Ramjet cleans up Boot Hill by getting rid of bad guy Bernie Miller. | |
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Roger RamJet: S1E111-Portrait Of Roger* (1965) | Roger takes the American Eagles to an art gallery. | |
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Roger RamJet Vs Dr. Evilkisser* (1965) | It's 1965 and we're in the coldest of cold wars. This is the conflict's official cartoon. Roger Ramjet fights off the oddly named Dr. Ivan Evilkisser. | |
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Roller Coaster Junkie* (2011) | Animated music video expressing a love for roller coasters. | |
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Ruby Rocket Private Detective* (2007) | Ruby Rocket battles crime, and other problems! | |
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Ruff And Reddy Vol. 1 (1957) | The Ruff and Reddy Show is the first tv show produced by Hanna-Barbera. It is an animated series starring Ruff, a cat voiced by Don Messick, and Reddy, a dog voiced by Daws Butler. | |
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Ruff And Reddy Vol. 2 (1957) | The Ruff and Reddy Show is the first tv show produced by Hanna-Barbera. It is an animated series starring Ruff, a cat voiced by Don Messick, and Reddy, a dog voiced by Daws Butler. | |
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Ruffus The Dog: Around The World In 80 Days* (2010) | The whole world is the star as Ruffus and his friends tackle this great Jules Verne classic â to win a bet they must travel around the world in 80 days. | |
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Ruffus The Dog: The Three Little Pigs* (2010) | Ruffus takes on the role of The Big Bad Wolf â with a big case of bad breath â who does his best to get the chin hairs of The Three Little Pigs. | |
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The Sailor And The Seagull* (1949) | This comic training film features a disgruntled U.S. Navy sailor who gets a chance to see that living as a civilian isn't as easy as he had imagined. As a result, he decides to stay in the Navy. | |
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Salad Fingers S1E1: Rusty Spoons (2004) | The adventures of Salad Fingers, an unspecified mutated creature driven to madness by his loneliness. WARNING: Adult content that may not be appropriate for young children. | |
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Sample Without Value (1971) | Short animation about a sample without value. | |
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Say Cheese* (2001) | A computer-animated mouse gets in trouble when he eats so much cheese that he can't move, then the cat comes and his troubles really begin. | |
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Scotty Finds A Home* (1935) | A young anthropomorphic kitten wants a pet. He happens to find a puppy with no owner and takes him in. When the Scotty tracks mud into the house, Grandma says that her grandson cannot keep him. | |
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Scout Fellow* (1951) | Baby Huey dreams of becoming a Cub Scout, but the patrol out on a camping trip considers him to be too big and stupid to join. | |
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Scrappy: Sunday Clothes* (1931) | Scrappy has been told by his mother to keep his Sunday Church clothes clean--and everything seems to be conspiring to soil them. | |
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Scrub Me Mama With A Boogie Beat (1941) | Scrub Me Mama With A Boogie Beat is a public domain cartoon centering around a port city of black people. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes and is being offered only for its historical value. It is in no way meant to offend. | |
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Seven Wise Dwarfs* (1941) | This short film promoted Canadian War Bonds for the Canadian government. | |
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Sheep On The Island* (2010) | Two boats collide sending a crate with a sheep inside to an island where adventure and discovery await! | |
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Sheep Shape* (1946) | The villainous Wolf fleeces Blackie the Sheep out of his money and heads off to whet his pleasure appetites. A vampish nightclub entertainer soon separates the wolf from his ill-gotten gains, and the femme-fatale turns out to be Blackie in disguise. | |
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Shortnin Bread* (1949) | We see visual puns on the various types of sweets, such as Lady fingers walking, an upside- down cake on the ceiling, a drunk rum cake, a goofy nut cake, etc. - all going to the famous Cookie Carnival. | |
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Silver Bells And Golden Spurs* (2006) | Silver Bells and Golden Spurs is the screen adaptation of an anonymous cowboy poem by the same name, and tells the story of a showdown between two bad guys during the days of the Wild West. | |
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Simple Simon* (1935) | As in the nursery rhyme, Simple Simon meets a pieman on his way to the fair and samples his wares. However, when he makes no purchase, the pieman becomes angry, follows Simon to the fair, and makes his stay there miserable. | |
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Sinbad The Sailor (1935) | An animated cartoon by Ub Iwerks. | |
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Sintel* (2010) | Sintel is a Sci-Fi / fantasy short film, starring a little girl that befriends a baby dragon, only to face off against a much larger variety of its species to save her unusual friend. WARNING: Contains fight scenes. | |
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Slap Happy Lion* (1947) | The king of the jungle, after a well-spent day terrorizing the rest of the animals, is petrified by a mouse. | |
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Small Fry* (1939) | Junior wants to be a Big Fry, but learns the hard way that he just isn't ready for smoking in the pool room when he should be in the school room. | |
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Snow Man, The* (1940) | An angry snow man chases after furry little South Pole creatures. | |
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Sniffy Escapes Poisioning* (1967) | A film made to reach kids that drugs are dangerous as taught by dancing pills. | |
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The Snow Witch* (2006) | Two woodcutters, an old man and his young apprentice, Minokichi, get trapped in a snowstorm in the forest and take refuge in a hut. That night, Minokichi is forced to make a bargain that will later be forgotten. | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E2-Pie In The Sky* (1963) | S1E2-Pie In The Sky: Barney has another scheme to make a million dollars, and so encourages Loweezy to help him enter a Pie Contest...however, as usual, it all goes awry! | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E5-The Master* (1963) | S1E5-The Master: Snuffy's dog, Bullet, is out of shape and afraid of his own shadow. Snuffy sends him to a health club to get in shape! | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E7-Snuffy Runs The Gamut* (1963) | S1E7-Snuffy Runs The Gamut: When Snuffy tries to confront a rabbit who ate all the carrots in Loweezy's garden, Barney sees potential for him to become an Olympic contender. | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E10-Snuffy Goes To College* (1963) | S1E10-Snuffy Goes To College: Snuffy, Barney and Loweezy are enrolled at Backward University - where Snuffy develops a touch of intelligence. | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E31-There's No Feud Like An Old Feud* (1963) | S1E31-There's No Feud Like An Old Feud: Snuffy and Loweezy recall their courtship, and how they tricked their feuding fathers into allowing Snuffy and Loweezy to marry. | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E33-Feudin' And A-Fussin'* (1963) | S1E33-Feudin' And A-Fussin': Believing that Snuffy has taken his prize sow, Clem Cutplug starts a feud with his neighbor. The fighting continues until the sheriff stops the fight and not only forces Clem to repay the Smiths for damages, but also sends him to jail. | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E34-Barney's Blarney* (1963) | S1E34-Barney's Blarney: The little man goes off telling tall tales to Jughaid. | |
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Snuffy Smith And Barney Google: S1E40-The Big Bear Hunt* (1964) | S1E40-The Big Bear Hunt: While Loweezy's away, Snuffy takes Jughaid and Bizzy Buzz Buzz on a hunting trip into the woods but Bizzy is far more interested in playing house. | |
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Somewhere In Dreamland* (1936) | In their dreams, two poor and hungry tots enter a fantasy kingdom where there are more sweets than they can eat. But when they wake. | |
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A Song Of The Birds (1935) | A young boy is learning to shoot a gun at the same time that a robin is trying to teach her babies to fly. Being a typical boy, he proceeds to shoot one of the baby birds. | |
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Space Angel* (1962) | This space opera follows the adventures of an EBI (Earth Bureau of Investigation) agent as he saves the universe from various nefarious characters. Availble in Cartoons - Other. | |
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Space Angel: Ghost And Crystal Maze* (1962) | Space Angel was the code name of Scott McCloud, an agent for the Earth Bureau of Investigation. Devoted to the security and welfare of the solar system, McCloud and his crew roamed the universe in the super-spaceship, Starduster. | |
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Space Angel: The Gladiators* (1962) | A newly-discovered planet sparks a contest between Scott McCloud and friends against a civilization similar to ancient Romans. | |
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Space Angel: Incident Of The Loud Planet* (1962) | Space Angel was the code name of Scott McCloud, an agent for the Earth Bureau of Investigation. Devoted to the security and welfare of the solar system, McCloud and his crew roamed the universe in the super-spaceship, Starduster. | |
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Space Angel: Space Hijackers* (1962) | Space Angel was the code name of Scott McCloud, an agent for the Earth Bureau of Investigation. Devoted to the security and welfare of the solar system, McCloud and his crew roamed the universe in the super-spaceship, Starduster. | |
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Space Thunder Kids* (1991) | Space Thunder Kids go up against the Dark Emperor. | |
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Space Transformer* (1983) | Is a microscopic giant robot still a giant robot? And do our bodies really contain microscopic planets, suns, galaxies, and so on? Watch and find out. | |
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The Spider (1972) | Short funny animation about a irritating spider and a man who is reading the newspaper. | |
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Spinning Mice* (1935) | Live action and animation. A talking mouse tells a story of a wizard friend who tried one day to make a potion that would render all things beautiful. | |
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The Spirit Of '43 (1943) | Donald Duck deals with income taxes and their benefit to the American war effort in this inspirational documentary short animated film. | |
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The Spring-Man And The SS* (1946) | The Spring-Man was a folk hero who used springs to jump around causing terror among the German occupants. | |
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Spunky And Tadpole* (1958) | Spunky was a small boy and Tadpole was his oddly named teddy bear. The pair traveled along having adventures that were typical of early cartoons. The guys are on a frigid planet in this episode. | |
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Steamboat Willie* (1928) | RELEASED INTO PUBLIC DOMAIN 1/1/24: Steamboat Willie steers a steamboat down a river while he entertains his new passenger by playing music out of the menagerie on the boat. | |
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The Stolen Sun (1944) | A 1944 film by Soyuzmultfilm; made in the Soviet Union in the darkest days of World War 2. Russian. | |
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Stratos Fear* (1933) | Willy Whopper goes to the dentist and, while under gas, dreams he has been lifted like a toy balloon into a rather Oz-like outer space. | |
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Sugar Bear: Head Over Heels* (1964) | Sugar Bear must save his girlfriend Leslie from the evil Mervin. Sugar Bear originally appeared as a character in the 1964 Saturday morning cartoon Linus the Lionhearted. | |
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Summertime* (1935) | Summer is coming, but Old Man Winter isn't ready to retire for the year. | |
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The Sunshine Makers (1935) | This is a story of happy gnomes who have the ability to distill sunshine and bottle it in the form of milk, which they deliver around the village. | |
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Super Chicken: Wild Ralph Hiccup* (1967) | Super Chicken's secret identity was well-to-do Henry Cabot Henhouse III. When danger reared its ugly head, he would take his Super Sauce and don his Super Suit. | |
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Susie The Little Blue Coupe* (1952) | The eventful life of a little blue car. | |
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Swing Shift Cinderella* (1945) | Bored with chasing Red Riding Hood, the Wolf decides to go after Cinderella, but her fairy godmother takes a shine to him instead - and has an arsenal of magical powers to help achieve her ends. | |
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Swing You Sinners!* (1930) | Bimbo the dog is seen by a policeman trying to steal a chicken, and hides in a graveyard. Once inside, the ghosts rise from their graves and teach him a lesson. | |
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The Talking Magpies (1946) | Mr. and Mrs. Magpie find a new place to live and prove to be very bad neighbors. | |
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The Three Bears* (1935) | Playing hide-and-seek with her dog, young Goldilocks scampers away into the woods and stumbles upon a lovely little house. Unbeknownst to her, a family of bears live there. | |
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Thunderbolt The Wonder Colt* (1962) | Puppetry of Thunderbolt the Wonder Colt. | |
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Time For Love* (1935) | The courtship of two swans is interrupted by a third swan, who demonstrates his prowess at catching fish. The pen falls for him and leaves her mate, but when the interloper begins treating her cruelly, her old flame intercedes. | |
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The Timid Rabbit* (1937) | A rabbit is shy and cowardly around his girlfriend. When a wolf shows up and terrorizes the woodland creatures, he suddenly turns into a fearless hero and punches out the villain. | |
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Tinker And The Hare* (2011) | What happens when a fitness obsessed rabbit challenges an inventive turtle to a race? Based on the fable by Aesop. Narrated by Deborah Foreman. | |
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To Spring* (1936) | A tone poem on the changing of the seasons. The melting ice turns a clock that awakens a small gnome who sings a song (Time for Spring) and wakes up many other gnomes. | |
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Toby The Pup: Down South* (1931) | Toby the Pup is an animated cartoon character created by animators Sid Marcus, Dick Huemer, and Art Davis. He starred in a series of early sound shorts produced by Charles B. Mintz for RKO Radio Pictures. The series lasted from 1930 to 1931. | |
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Toby The Pup: In The Museum (1930) | Toby works as a janitor in a museum and has his own way of handling the artefacts in the exhibition. | |
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Tom Thumb* (1936) | The adventures of a miniature boy are illustrated. | |
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Toonerville Picnic (1936) | The doctor prescribes rest and relaxation at the beach for the hot-tempered Mr. Bang, who ends up suffering a crowded trolley, a hiccuping dog, an uncooperative beach chair and a goofy octopus. | |
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The Toyland Caper* (1931) | A mouse meets his girlfriend mouse in the toyshop for a date. They have a blast in toyland until a mean old cat arrives. | |
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Tramp, Tramp, Tramp (1924) | Interesting animation by Max and Dave Fleischer in which the audience was to sing along with lyrics on the screen. | |
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Trolley Ahoy (1936) | Mr. Bang makes a bet that the Toonerville Trolley can't get to the main train line on time. The bet is accepted without the knowledge of an upcoming tornado. Mr. Bang's wife saves the trolley and her husband. | |
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Tulips Shall Grow (1942) | George Pal's Puppetoon short paying tribute to the resistance of the people of Nazis occupied Holland. | |
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Twilight Is Falling* (2001) | A man endures a nightmarish situation in which time is broken and sanity questioned. | |
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Twinkletoes: Hat Stuff* (1941) | Twinkletoes is sleeping on the counter at the Wide-Awake Delivery Service. when Mysto the Magician telephones and wants his magical paraphernalia picked up at his home and delivered to the theatre in five minutes. | |
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Ugokie Kori No Tatehiki* (1933) | In the temple that became ruins, the fox that disguises as the samurai does the fight of magic with Asian racoon's parent and child. Japanese. | |
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Uncle Tom And Little Eva* (1932) | A 1930's cartoon with little dialog and a mainly musical soundtrack. Featuring an evil master and his unsuccessful attempts to maintain control. WARNING: May contain racial stereotypes. Offered only for its historical value. | |
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Undersea Adventures Of Captain Nemo: S1E1-Rescue Of A Killer* (1974) | S1E1-Rescue Of A Killer: Mark, Chris and Robbie use the Nautilus to rescue a trapped killer whale. | |
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Upa En Apuros* (1942) | An admirer of Walt Disney, Dante Quinterno launched to encourage Patoruzu adventure. The case chosen was an adaptation of the events in a strip when the gypsy Juaniyo Upa was kidnapped. From Argentina. Spanish. | |
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The Valiant Tailor* (1934) | A tailor aides his king, who is threatened by a giant and a swarm of bees. | |
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Ventriloquist Cat* (1950) | A cat learns the art of ventriloquism in order to play a series of practical jokes on a slow-witted bulldog. | |
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Wags To Riches* (1949) | A millionaire with two dogs (Spike and Droopy) leaves his fortune to Droopy with the stipulation that should he be killed the entire fortune who would to Spike. Guess what Spike is up to? | |
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Way Of The Mantis* (2006) | It is the story of an impetuous Chinese monk who finds he has a thing or two to learn from an unlikely source. The animation is rendered in a brushpainted style reminiscient of old Te Wei films. | |
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What's Buzzin Buzzard?* (1943) | Two buzzards suffer from acute food shortage and make up for it by cooking each other, or at least trying to. | |
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When The Cat's Away* (1934) | The mice will loot the kitchen. The roaches also get into the act. A rat menaces the lead mouse couple, until the cat returns. | |
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Willie Whopper: The Good Scout* (1934) | Willie is a Boy Scout who recounts his good deeds to the scoutmaster. | |
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Willie Whopper: Viva Willie* (1934) | Willie tells his friend that he was once a cowboy. | |
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Winky The Watchman* (1945) | Tennessee. Dept. of Public Health. Wartime animated film by Hugh Harman Productions that teaches children about the war going on inside their mouths. | |
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Winter Draws On* (1948) | As winter approaches, a variety of birds fly south to see a warmer climate. | |
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The Wizard Of Arts* (1941) | A Jerry Colonna-like artist takes us on a tour of a wacky museum. | |
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The Wizard Of Oz* (1933) | A storybook opens to depict little Dorothy on the grey Kansas prairies, when suddenly a cyclone comes up, turns her world to color, and she lands on a Scarecrow, who promptly gets up and walks with her. | |
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Woody Woodpecker: Pantry Panic (1941) | Weatherby Groundhog predicts a cold winter and advises all the birds to fly south. But Woody Woodpecker decides to stay, and nearly starves. | |
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Woody Woodpecker: Ration Bored* (1943) | Woody Woodpecker tries to steal gasoline from a car, not realizing it belongs to a police officer. | |
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Young Samson And Goliath: The SSX-19* (1967) | Whenever in trouble, Samson would rub his magic bracelets together and yell I need Samson power! The resulting effect would give him superhuman strength while his dog Goliath would become a powerful lion who could fly and shoot beams from his eyes. | |
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Zeppelin Vs. Pterodactyls (1942) | Based on the moderately successful Republic Pictures Zeppelin vs. Pterodactyls cliffhanger serials. The cartoon was shelved for half a century due to a three way legal dispute between Republic, Fleischer and Iwerks. |
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