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Betty Boop And Grampy (1935) | Betty goes to a party at Grampy's house, bringing along with her any and all passers-by, who immediately abandon their jobs, no matter how important. | |
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Betty Boop And Little Jimmy (1936) | Betty Boops efforts to stay in shape backfire when she becomes entangled in the exercise equipment. Jimmy seeks help for Betty, but becomes easily confused. In the meantime, Betty is becoming skinnier by the minute! | |
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Betty Boop And The Little King (1936) | The Little King finds opera boring, so he sneaks out to the local vaudeville house to watch, and eventually participate in, Betty Boop's trick horseback riding show. | |
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Betty Boop For President (1932) | Betty runs for the office of President against Mr. Nobody. Both candidates state their platform through song and dance, referring to political issues of the time. | |
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Betty Boop, M.D.* (1932) | Betty, Koko and Bimbo sell a weird concoction in their medicine show. | |
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Betty Boop With Henry, The Funniest Living American (1935) | Betty operates a pet store where Henry wishes to purchase a puppy. Betty believes that everybody should have a pet and Henry agrees and works in the shop in hopes of getting a puppy. | |
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Betty Boop's Big Boss (1933) | It's the height of the Depression, so when Betty Boop sees a 'Girl Wanted' sign, she comes on hard to the boss in order to get the job. After she gets hired, the boss comes on hard to her. | |
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Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions* (1933) | Betty travels to an invention show just full of crazy inventions. Betty and her friends demonstrate various doodads and gadgets. | |
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Betty Boop's Ker-Choo (1932) | Betty, her dog Bimbo, and Koko The Clown are in a car race where Betty wins even though she is under the weather. | |
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Betty Boop's Little Pal* (1934) | Pudgy the Pup makes a mess of Betty Boop's picnic, is sent home, and runs afoul of the dog catcher. | |
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Betty Boop's May Party* (1933) | Betty and Bimbo, as Queen and King of the May, host a giant outdoor party that gets sprayed with rubber. Koko appears briefly. | |
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Betty Boop's Rise To Fame (1934) | A newspaper man interviews Fleischer who animates Betty and then goes into a retrospective of past episodes. Interesting to see Betty interact with real life characters. | |
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Betty Boop: Admission Free* (1932) | Koko and Bimbo visit Betty Boop's penny arcade, Bimbo to flirt with Betty; but his turn at the shooting gallery becomes a hunting trip. | |
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Betty Boop: Any Rags?* (1932) | The rag and bone man passes through Betty Boop's neighborhood. | |
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Betty Boop: Baby Be Good* (1935) | Betty's baby won't go to sleep and is causing trouble around the house. It is up to Betty to develop a strategy to get the troublesome, mischievous child to sleep. | |
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Betty Boop: Bamboo Isle (1932) | This early Betty Boop features the Royal Samoans for some real island flavor. | |
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Betty Boop: Barnacle Bill* (1930) | Sailor Bimbo (as Barnacle Bill) jumps ship with his little black book and visits his lady friend, Betty Boop (with dog's ears). | |
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Betty Boop: Be Human (1936) | Betty's mean farmer neighbor abuses his animals, refusing to stop even after she sings the title song endorsing kindness. So she calls up Grampy and he shows the jerk a thing or two. | |
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Betty Boop: Betty Boop's Birthday Party* (1933) | Betty drudges in the kitchen alone until her friends (including Bimbo and Koko) hold a surprise birthday party for her...which gets rowdy. | |
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Betty Boop: Betty Boop's Bizzy Bee* (1932) | Everyone loves the wheat cakes served by short-order cook Betty, but they have a drawback. With Bimbo and Koko; no bee is involved. | |
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Betty Boop: Betty Boop's Lifeguard* (1934) | Betty takes a trip to the beach and needs the assistance of a big, hunky lifeguard when she rides her rubber horsy out too far! | |
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Betty Boop: Betty Boop's Museum* (1932) | Koko takes Betty to the museum, where she's locked in overnight and forced to sing at the skeletons' dance. | |
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Betty Boop: Betty Boop's Penthouse* (1933) | While Bimbo and Koko admire Betty, their experiment becomes a monster. | |
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Betty Boop: Betty Boop's Ups And Downs* (1932) | Betty thinks everything on Earth is for sale...even the planet itself. | |
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Betty Boop: Betty In Blunderland (1933) | Betty assembles a jigsaw puzzle when suddenly the hare leaps from the board. Betty chases the hare into the mirror, whereupon she transforms into a long-haired maiden and begins her lackadaisical trip though Blunderland. | |
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Betty Boop: Bimbo's Express* (1931) | Betty Boop (with dog's ears) is moving; Bimbo comes with his moving van and is smitten with her. Songs: Moving Day, Hello Beautiful. | |
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Betty Boop: Bimbo's Initiation* (1931) | Bimbo finds himself surrounded by a mysterious group of robed figures who invite him to become a member of their secret club. When he refuses, they fling him through a nightmarish sequence of terror and torture devices. | |
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Betty Boop: Boop-Oop-A-Doop* (1932) | In the circus, Betty Boop is the lion tamer, sings title tune on the high wire, and fights off the ringmaster. | |
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Betty Boop: Buzzy Boop (1938) | Betty's young cousin, Buzzy, takes the train to visit Betty. On the train, she's helpful, in a bratty kind of way, using her chewing gum to stick on a sleeping man's toupee, watering the flowers in a lady's hat, etc. | |
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Betty Boop: The Candid Candidate* (1937) | Betty Boop campaigns for Grampy for Mayor. He wins by one vote, but finds politics is no picnic. Urban renewal is parodied. | |
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Betty Boop: Chess Nuts (1932) | Stuck in a game a chess, Miss Boop has to fight off the letcherous advances of the king. Not to worry though, even the furniture itself is looking after her honour and modesty. | |
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Betty Boop: Crazy Town (Color)* (1932) | Betty Boop and Bimbo take a wild streetcar ride to Crazy Town, where birds swim, fish fly, and everthing else reverses normal behavior. New colorized version. | |
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Betty Boop: The Dancing Fool* (1932) | Daredevil sign painters, Bimbo and Koko, like what they see through the window of Betty Boop's Dancing School, and stay for a lesson. | |
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Betty Boop: Dizzy Red Riding-Hood* (1931) | Betty Boop goes to Grandma's through the woods despite wolf warnings; but Bimbo follows and gives the old story a new twist. | |
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Betty Boop: The Foxy Hunter* (1937) | Junior and Pudgy slip away from Betty Boop's care to go hunting with a pop-gun. | |
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Betty Boop: Grampy With The Impractical Joker* (1937) | Betty Boop's baking is interrupted by her obnoxious practical-joking cousin, Irving. Can Grampy out-joke the joker? | |
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Betty Boop: Grampy's Indoor Outing* (1936) | Betty Boop and Little Jimmy are prevented by a thunderstorm from going to the carnival; the inventive Grampy devises a substitute. | |
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Betty Boop: Ha Ha Ha* (1934) | Betty Boop and Koko dabble in dentistry, complete with laughing gas. | |
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Betty Boop: Happy You And Merry Me* (1936) | A high-buttoned Betty starring her dog, Pudgy. | |
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Betty Boop: The Hot Air Salesman* (1937) | A door to door salesman visits Betty Boop's home with a long line of useless household gadgets. | |
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Betty Boop: House Cleaning Blues* (1937) | Betty Boop has those house cleaning blues, so she calls on Grampy to help with his amazing inventions, and the housework is done in no time. | |
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Betty Boop: A Hunting We Will Go* (1932) | Amorous hunters Bimbo and Koko set out to bag some furs for coat-loving Betty Boop, but things don't turn out the way they'd planned. | |
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Betty Boop: I Heard* (1933) | The miners at Never Mine go to Betty Boop's Tavern (a jazz-jumpin' place) for lunch; back in the mine, Bimbo delves into weird realms. | |
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Betty Boop: I'll Be Glad When You're Dead, You Rascal You (1932) | This features...um, a giant disembodied Louis Armstrong head chasing Bimbo and Koko. | |
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Betty Boop: Is My Palm Read (1932) | A fortune teller tries to work his magic in order to get up close and personal with Betty. | |
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Betty Boop: Jack And The Beanstalk* (1931) | Bimbo climbs a beanstalk to find Betty Boop enslaved by the giant. | |
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Betty Boop: Kitty From Kansas City* (1931) | Sun bonneted Betty Boop takes a train to Rudy Valley where she gains weight and Rudy Vallee performs the title song with Bouncing Ball. | |
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Betty Boop: A Language All My Own (1935) | Betty flies to Japan to do a show, and sings the title number. She then dons a kimono, and sings it again in Japanese. | |
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Betty Boop: Let Me Call You Sweetheart* (1932) | Betty Boop, a nursemaid, meets a masher in the park; with the Bouncing Ball, Ethel Merman sings the title song. | |
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Betty Boop: A Little Soap And Water* (1935) | Betty Boop tries to give Pudgy the Pup a bath, with slapstick results. | |
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Betty Boop: The Lost Kitten* (1938) | A Betty Boop cartoon featuring Pudgy the dog who tries to help a lost kitten. | |
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Betty Boop: Making Stars* (1935) | Betty Boop emcees a stage show presenting future stars...performing infants. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes. | |
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Betty Boop: Mask-A-Raid* (1931) | Betty Boop is queen of the Masquerade Ball where, among other antics, Bimbo and a lecherous old man vie for her affections. | |
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Betty Boop: Minnie The Moocher (1932) | Incredibly odd and brilliant cartoon which mixes live action and 2d animation that was way ahead of its time. Calloway is on form as he performs his most famous hit, Check out the genuinely unsettling ghosts, demons and monster backing singers. | |
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Betty Boop: More Pep (1936) | Uncle Max draws Betty and Pudgy out of the inkwell. Pudgy is tired and unwilling to perform on Betty's command. Betty uses pen and ink to draw a machine that gives Pudgy more pep. Unfortunately, the machine soon runs amok, speeding up not only Pudgy and Betty, but the entire city as well. | |
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Betty Boop: Morning, Noon And Night* (1933) | To the tune of Rubinoff and his orchestra, Betty Boop and feathered friends try to save a baby bird from the booze-swilling Tom Kats Club. | |
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Betty Boop: Mother Goose Land* (1933) | Betty, while reading a book of Mother Goose stories, wishes to visit such a wonderful place. Betty's wish is granted when Mother Goose appears, and gives her a tour of Mother Goose Land. | |
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Betty Boop: Musical Mountaineers (1939) | This was one of the later Betty Boops and as most fans know she was the victim of the efforts to clean up films. So Betty here is a businesswoman. | |
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Betty Boop: No! No! A Thousand Times No!!* (1935) | Betty Boop and Freddie appear on stage in a melodrama, wherein Betty sings the title song to the villain. | |
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Betty Boop: Not Now* (1936) | A caterwauling cat annoys Betty Boop and Pudgy; the latter tries cat-chasing, but bites off more than he can chew. | |
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Betty Boop: The Old Man Of The Mountain (1933) | Another wonderful and imaginative cartoon. The music is by Cab Calloway and this cartoon features 2 tunes by Cab Old Man Of The Mountain and The Scat Song. | |
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Betty Boop: On With The New* (1938) | Betty Boop quits her job as overworked short-order cook to run an automated baby-care center. Will she regret it? | |
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Betty Boop: Out Of The Inkwell* (1938) | At the Fleischer studio, a black janitor, learning to hypnotize, conjures Betty Boop out of the inkwell and tries some suggestions on her. But two can play at that game... | |
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Betty Boop: Parade Of The Wooden Soldiers (1933) | An action figure of Betty Boop drops in on a small toy shop; the other toys come to life and crown her their queen. But there's a big rag doll of King Kong... | |
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Betty Boop: Popeye The Sailor* (1933) | Popeye, Bluto and Olive visit a carnival where Betty is performing. | |
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Betty Boop: Poor Cinderella (1934) | Betty's version of Cinderella. | |
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Betty Boop: Pudgy The Watchman* (1938) | Betty Boop hires a feline professional Mouse Eradicator to take over from Pudgy the Pup who makes friends with mice. But after initial successes, Mr. Al E. Katz gets drunk on the job. | |
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Betty Boop: Red Hot Mamma* (1934) | Betty Boop, sleepless on a freezing night, builds a nice hot fire which proves too much of a good thing; in a dream she visits Hell, sings Hell's Bells, and makes Hell freeze over! | |
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Betty Boop: Rhythm On The Reservation* (1939) | Betty Boop's Swing Band | |
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Betty Boop: Riding The Rails* (1938) | Betty Boop goes to work on the subway (Trample 'Em R.R. Co.). Pudgy the Pup follows her and gets more ride than he bargained for. | |
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Betty Boop: S.O.S.* (1932) | A sinking ship leaves three survivors on a life raft: Bimbo, Koko and Betty Boop. Good news/bad news: they're rescued by a pirate ship. | |
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Betty Boop: Sally Swing* (1938) | Betty Boop, auditioning bandleaders for a college swing dance, discovers a cleaning woman who resembles Betty Grable. | |
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Betty Boop: The Scared Crows* (1939) | Betty Boop's house is invaded by lively crows and she finds ways to handle the problem. | |
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Betty Boop: She Wronged Him Right (1934) | Betty Boop appears on stage with Freddie in an old-fashioned mortgage melodrama. | |
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Betty Boop: Silly Scandals* (1931) | In a vaudeville act, Betty Boop (with dog's ears) sings You're Drivin' Me Crazy. Bimbo sneaks into the show and runs afoul of a stage hypnotist. | |
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Betty Boop: Snow White (1933) | Betty Boop's step-mother is jealous of Betty's looks and wants her to be beheaded, but she fails in the end. | |
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Betty Boop: So Does An Automobile* (1939) | In this 1939 cartoon, Betty Boop runs a hospital for sick automobiles. | |
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Betty Boop: A Song A Day* (1936) | At Betty Boop's Animal Hospital, various species have appropriate ailments. Morale becomes a problem; Professor Grampy to the rescue! | |
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Betty Boop: Stop That Noise* (1935) | Driven crazy by urban noises, Betty flees to the country. All the honking (and burping) ducks, buzzing bees and pesky mosquitoes, pigs and cows send her back to the good old city. | |
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Betty Boop: Stopping The Show* (1932) | After watching a Paramount Noose Reel and a cartoon with Bimbo and Koko the Clown, the audience is thrilled when Betty Boop appears on stage to sing and imitate Fanny Brice and Maurice Chevalier. | |
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Betty Boop: Swat The Fly (1935) | Betty Boop just wants to make a little cake for her and Pudgy, but the kitchen has an obnoxious fly determined to ruin the day. The pesky fly makes for classic pie-throwing antics. | |
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Betty Boop: Training Pigeons (1936) | Betty Boop is training a flock of pigeons, but one stray leads Pudgy the pup on a precarious chase over the rooftops. | |
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Betty Boop: When My Ship Comes In* (1932) | Betty Boop bets on a horse race and wins. She dreams about how she would use the money to change the world. | |
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Betty Boop: Whoops! I'm A Cowboy (1937) | Wiffle Waffle proposes to Betty Boop, but she tells him that she wants to marry a bronco busting cowboy. He heads off to a dude ranch to learn how to become a real cowboy. |
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