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Birthday:
07-14-1894
Deathday:
06-25-1979 (84 years)
Birthplace:
New York City, New York, USA
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
David "Dave" Fleischer (July 14, 1894 – June 25, 1979) was an American animator film director and film producer, best known as a co-owner of Fleischer Studios with his older brother Max Fleischer. He was a native of New York City.
Sometime around 1913-1914, Dave began working as a film cutter for the American branch of Pathé, the French company that was the world's largest film production and distribution company, and the largest manufacturer of film equipment, in the first decades of the 20th Century.
Dave Fleischer was notable during the brothers' early days as the rotoscope model for their first character, Koko the Clown. He went on to become director and later producer of the studio's output. Although he is credited as "director" of every film released by the Fleischer studio from 1921 to 1942, the lead animators actually performed directorial duties, and Fleischer mainly served as producer. Among the cartoon series Fleischer supervised during this period were Talkartoons, Betty Boop Cartoons, Popeye the Sailor, Color Classics and several others; Popeye would go on to be the top rival of Mickey Mouse. He also supervised two animated features released through Paramount Pictures, Gulliver's Travels (1939) and Mr. Bug Goes to Town (1941). The debt Fleischer Studios owed to Paramount for the budgets of those features, worsened by the lack of success that came from the studio's non-Popeye cartoons, was called in by Paramount; this forced the brothers to give the studio to Paramount on May 24, 1941. However, both were still able to remain in charge of Fleischer Studios for a time.
Fleischer was asked by Paramount to put the popular comic book hero Superman into a cartoon series. The big-budget Superman series became the most successful cartoon of the late period of Fleischer Studios. However, relations between Dave and Max were deteriorating. The feud starting simmering after the married Dave began an adulterous affair with his Miami secretary in 1938, and was followed by more personal and professional disputes.
In April 1942 Fleischer, no longer able to cooperate with his brother, left the company to become President of Screen Gems at Columbia Pictures, although he remained co-manager of Fleischer Studios until Paramount reorganized the studio in May 1942 after Max and Dave's contracts expired. Now owned wholly by Paramount, the studio was re-organized as Famous Studios, although the name wasn't officially adopted until May 1943.
In the late-1940s, Fleischer moved over to Universal, where he became a special effects expert and general problem-solver, working on films such as Francis (1950), The Birds (1963), and Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967).
Fleischer died of a stroke on June 25, 1979 in Woodland Hills, California, having spent over a decade in retirement.
David "Dave" Fleischer (July 14, 1894 – June 25, 1979) was an American animator film director and film producer, best known as a co-owner of Fleischer Studios with his older brother Max Fleischer. He was a native of New York City.
Sometime around 1913-1914, Dave began working as a film cutter for the American branch of Pathé, the French company that was the world's largest film production and distribution company, and the largest manufacturer of film equipment, in the first decades of the 20th Century.
Dave Fleischer was notable during the brothers' early days as the rotoscope model for their first character, Koko the Clown. He went on to become director and later producer of the studio's output. Although he is credited as "director" of every film released by the Fleischer studio from 1921 to 1942, the lead animators actually performed directorial duties, and Fleischer mainly served as producer. Among the cartoon series Fleischer supervised during this period were Talkartoons, Betty Boop Cartoons, Popeye the Sailor, Color Classics and several others; Popeye would go on to be the top rival of Mickey Mouse. He also supervised two animated features released through Paramount Pictures, Gulliver's Travels (1939) and Mr. Bug Goes to Town (1941). The debt Fleischer Studios owed to Paramount for the budgets of those features, worsened by the lack of success that came from the studio's non-Popeye cartoons, was called in by Paramount; this forced the brothers to give the studio to Paramount on May 24, 1941. However, both were still able to remain in charge of Fleischer Studios for a time.
Fleischer was asked by Paramount to put the popular comic book hero Superman into a cartoon series. The big-budget Superman series became the most successful cartoon of the late period of Fleischer Studios. However, relations between Dave and Max were deteriorating. The feud starting simmering after the married Dave began an adulterous affair with his Miami secretary in 1938, and was followed by more personal and professional disputes.
In April 1942 Fleischer, no longer able to cooperate with his brother, left the company to become President of Screen Gems at Columbia Pictures, although he remained co-manager of Fleischer Studios until Paramount reorganized the studio in May 1942 after Max and Dave's contracts expired. Now owned wholly by Paramount, the studio was re-organized as Famous Studios, although the name wasn't officially adopted until May 1943.
In the late-1940s, Fleischer moved over to Universal, where he became a special effects expert and general problem-solver, working on films such as Francis (1950), The Birds (1963), and Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967).
Fleischer died of a stroke on June 25, 1979 in Woodland Hills, California, having spent over a decade in retirement.
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Their works
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Ko-Ko's Conquest
Act like Himself
event1929
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Clown thinks being a hero is easy, but his animator tries to prove him otherwise
Betty Boop: Queen of the Cartoons
Act like Self (archive footage)
event1995 star_border 8
top_panel_open
From the A&E "Biography" series, a review of the birth, development and cinematic history of Betty Boop, the flapper cartoon character who has been a popular icon since the 1930s.
The Ouija Board
event1920 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Max Fleischer draws Koko and a haunted house, while his colleague and the janitor mess around with a Ouija board. When Max goes over to take a look, Koko is haunted by ghosts and inanimate objects, and escapes into the real-world studio.
Noise Annoys Ko-Ko
event1929
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Clown visits the country.
Ko-Ko's Hot Dog
Act like Second Cartoonist (uncredited)
event1928
top_panel_open
Max and Dave Fliescher are eating hot dogs in their animation studio and begin drawing. The hot dog becomes a "real" dog, and it and Ko-Ko the Clown alarmingly end up inside a Gas Chamber.
Out of the Inkwell: The Fleischer Story
Act like Himself (archive footage)
event2008 star_border 6
top_panel_open
A documentary about the Fleischer brothers and how they revolutionized animation.
Ace of Spades
Director
event1931 star_border 6
top_panel_open
A Talkartoons cartoon featuring Bimbo doing card tricks.
Koko Packs 'Em
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
Max is moving out of his studio, so Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown packs up everything in sight (even using a super-charged vacuum cleaner that sucks up the furniture and the moving men).
Ko-Ko's War Dogs
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
An animated film where Ko-Ko the clown becomes involved in a war.
Koko Chops Suey
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko wants to learn how chop suey is made, and Ko-Ko and Fitz have their fun with a caricatured Chinese character.
Mr. Bug Goes to Town
Director
event1941 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
The happy tranquility of Bugville is shattered when the populace learns that a colossal skyscraper is to be built over their tiny town.
The Ugly Dino
Director
event1940 star_border 2
top_panel_open
A mother dinosaur hatches three little cuties, but the fourth is "ugly." He gets an inferiority complex because his brothers won't play with him, and they treat him meanly. When a big sabertooth tiger comes along, the baby dinosaur begs the predator to eat him. The little dino says, "Eat me, eat me....I have a face that even a mother couldn't love." The "ugly dino" ends up saving the day, and his mother showers him with kisses and hugs.
Granite Hotel
Director
event1940 star_border 6
top_panel_open
It's just another day at the Granite Hotel.
The Glow Worm
Director
event1930
top_panel_open
A Screen Song of the old standard.
Inklings, Issue ??
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
A British reissue of a Fleischer Inklings short with sound narration.
Gulliver's Travels
Director
event1939 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
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. In this he is alternately aided and hampered by the Lilliputian town crier and general fussbudget, Gabby. A life-threatening situation develops when the bumbling trio of Blefiscu spies, Sneak, Snoop, and Snitch, manage to steal Gulliver's pistol.
Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor
Director
event1936 star_border 6.6
top_panel_open
Two sailors Sindbad and Popeye decide to test themselves in order to prove their supremacy. Popeye is then presented with a series of daunting tasks by Sindbad.
The Mechanical Monsters
Director
event1941 star_border 7.1
top_panel_open
Superman battles a criminal mastermind and his robot army.
Taking the Blame
Director
event1935 star_border 4.9
top_panel_open
Betty brings home a cat as a playmate for her pet puppy, Pudgy. The cat manages to get Pudgy blamed for all his misbehaviour.
Minnie the Moocher
Director
event1932 star_border 6.6
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and Bimbo run away from home, but that night they are scared by a chorus of ghosts singing the title song.
Superman
Director
event1941 star_border 6.9
top_panel_open
After The Daily Planet receives a letter from a mad scientist threatening to wreak destruction with his Electrothanasia Ray, Lois Lane heads out in the hopes of getting more information for a news story.
Musical Memories
Director
event1935
top_panel_open
An elderly couple reminisce about their youth and courtship while looking through their collection of stereoscopic photographs.
The Magnetic Telescope
Director
event1942 star_border 7.2
top_panel_open
When police interfere with a reckless scientist's experiment, it creates a deadly meteor shower only Superman can stop.
Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves
Director
event1937 star_border 7.8
top_panel_open
Popeye the Sailor, accompanied by Olive Oyl and Wimpy, is dispatched to stop the dreaded bandit Abu Hassan and his force of forty thieves.
The Chinaman
Director
event1920 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Max Fleischer considers hiring a new cartoonist. While the new guy draws Max's portrait, Koko gets into a fight with a cartoon Chinese man.
Snow-White
Director
event1933 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Trouble starts when the queen's magic mirror says Betty Boop is fairest.
Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp
Director
event1939 star_border 7.5
top_panel_open
Olive Oyl's screenplay for an Aladdin movie comes to life and Popeye battles for control of a genie in this, the last of the three Popeye color films.
Out of the Inkwell
Director
event1938 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
In a tribute to the Fleischer brothers shorts of the '20s, a janitor hypnotizes Max Fleischer's pen to draw Betty Boop.
I Yam What I Yam
Director
event1933 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Popeye, Olive Oyl and Wimpy are shipwrecked on an island of hostile Indians
Popeye the Sailor
Director
event1933 star_border 6.9
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto fight for the love of Olive Oyl in their debut short, featuring Betty Boop.
Billion Dollar Limited
Director
event1942 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Robbers target a special train carrying a billion dollars worth of gold, and the only one who can stop them is Superman!
The Arctic Giant
Director
event1942 star_border 7.1
top_panel_open
A frozen Tyrannosaurus rex is found and put on display in a museum, but when he thaws out and revives, Superman has to stop his rampage!
The Bulleteers
Director
event1942 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Criminals with rocket powered car loot and extort the city, and only Superman can stop them!
Electric Earthquake
Director
event1942 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
A scientist uses an earthquake machine to threaten the city, and only Superman can stop his extortion plan!
Terror on the Midway
Director
event1942 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
When things go wrong at the circus, it's up to Superman to stop the escaped animals.
Volcano
Director
event1942 star_border 7.2
top_panel_open
Superman comes to the rescue when a volcano erupts.
Poor Cinderella
Director
event1934 star_border 6.4
top_panel_open
In the only Betty Boop color cartoon, Cinderella (Betty) goes to the ball thanks to her fairy godmother. Later, only her foot fits the glass slipper.
Birthday
Director
event1922 star_border 5
top_panel_open
A birthday celebration with Max Fleischer's Inkwell Clown.
Stoopnocracy
Director
event1933 star_border 4.9
top_panel_open
An animated short chronicling the adventures of Colonel Stoopnagle and Budd.
The Kids in the Shoe
Director
event1935 star_border 4
top_panel_open
The old lady who lives in a shoe has a bit of trouble with her gaggle of children. They won't eat their porridge, won't brush their teeth or comb their hair. As soon as their mother's in bed, they launch a wild party, playing musical instruments and doing a swinging rendition of Smiley Burnette's classic "Mama Don't Allow No Music Playing Round Here." They then have a massive pillow fight until the old woman wakes up.
The Old Man of the Mountain
Director
event1933 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Betty Boop goes to see the fearsome Old Man of the Mountain for herself; he sings the title song and a duet with Betty.
Down Among the Sugar Cane
Director
event1932 star_border 3.5
top_panel_open
Lillian Roth sings the title song; also animated sequences.
Romantic Melodies
Director
event1932 star_border 2.7
top_panel_open
Bimbo leads an awful German street band to serenade Betty Boop, but she prefers Arthur Tracy, 'Street Singer of the Air,' who in live- action sings several old-fashioned songs with a Bouncing Ball.
I Eats My Spinach
Director
event1933 star_border 7.2
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive Oyl visit a rodeo.
Goonland
Director
event1938 star_border 6.9
top_panel_open
Popeye sails to Goon Island in search of his Pappy. He finds the place populated by the imposing, but ugly, goons, and a "no humans" sign. His imprisoned pappy at first ignores him, but when Popeye is caught by the goons and carried off, his can of spinach lands near Pappy and it works just as well on him as it does on Popeye.
Betty Boop's Museum
Director
event1932 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Koko is recruiting customers for a 50 cent sightseeing tour of the museum. Betty is Koko's only passenger. Betty gets locked inside by accident. The skeletons from the displays come to life and chase Betty, until she is finally rescued by Bimbo.
Mother Goose Land
Director
event1933 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Betty, while reading a book of Mother Goose stories, wishes she could visit such a wonderful place. Betty's wish is granted when Mother Goose appears, and gives her a tour of Mother Goose Land. Betty has a wonderful time until Little Miss Muffet's spider chases her, with lecherous ends in mind. All of the characters come to Betty's rescue. Betty wakes up in bed with all the fairy tale characters surrounding her.
Dizzy Red Riding-Hood
Director
event1931 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Betty Boop goes to Grandma's through the woods despite wolf warnings; but Bimbo follows and gives the old story a new twist.
The Cobweb Hotel
Director
event1936 star_border 6.9
top_panel_open
A spider runs a hotel for flies where he keeps his guests captive. A pair of fly newlyweds arrive and check in. Fortunately, the husband is "flyweight champion". After a pitched battle featuring arrows (fountain pen nibs) and a machine-gun (aspirins shot from a perfume atomizer), the spider winds up in a bottle of library paste.
Females Is Fickle
Director
event1940 star_border 4
top_panel_open
Olive Oyl brings her new pet goldfish onto Popeye's ship, but the fish jumps out of its bowl and into the sea. Olive pressures Popeye to go after it.
KoKo's Earth Control
Director
event1928 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko 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. Note that this cartoon contains strobe flashing.
Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning
Director
event1932 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Reis and Dunn (with Betty Boop) sing the Irving Berlin song with a Bouncing Ball. In a cartoon army camp, everything rises before the soldiers.
Any Rags
Director
event1932 star_border 4.9
top_panel_open
The rag and bone man passes through Betty Boop's neighborhood.
S.O.S.
Director
event1932 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
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…
Betty Boop's Ups and Downs
Director
event1932 star_border 6.1
top_panel_open
Due to the great depression, property prices start falling. The planet Earth goes up for sale. Mars and Venus make bids, but Saturn, characterised as an old Jew, makes a lower but winning bid. Then just to see what happens, he removes the earth's magnet, and gravity disappears.
Crazy-Town
Director
event1932 star_border 5.6
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and Bimbo take a wild streetcar ride to Crazy Town, where birds swim, fish fly, and everthing else reverses normal behavior.
Admission Free
Director
event1932 star_border 4.9
top_panel_open
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.
Chess-Nuts
Director
event1932 star_border 6
top_panel_open
An initially realistic chess game becomes a chaotic, animated quest for the favors of Betty Boop (the black queen) by Bimbo (white king) and others, with elements of bowling and football. Koko appears.
I'll Be Glad When You're Dead You Rascal You
Director
event1932 star_border 6.1
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and friends meet Louis Armstrong on a jungle safari.
Betty Boop's Bizzy Bee
Director
event1932 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Everyone loves the wheat cakes served by short-order cook Betty, but they have a drawback. With Bimbo and Koko; no bee is involved.
Betty Boop for President
Director
event1932 star_border 6.1
top_panel_open
Betty's campaign tries to appeal to everyone. Real candidates are parodied, but campaign promises are a bit bizarre.
Boop-Oop-A-Doop
Director
event1932 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
In the circus, Betty Boop is the lion tamer, sings the title tune on the high wire, and fights off the lecherous ringmaster.
Betty Boop, M.D.
Director
event1932 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Betty, Koko and Bimbo sell a weird concoction in their medicine show.
The Dancing Fool
Director
event1932 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
Daredevil sign painters Bimbo and Koko like what they see through the window of Betty Boop's Dancing School, and stay for a lesson.
Betty Boop's Bamboo Isle
Director
event1932 star_border 6.1
top_panel_open
On a South Sea isle, Bimbo meets Betty in the guise of a hula dancer.
A Hunting We Will Go
Director
event1932 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown and Bimbo overhear Betty Boop singing about how much she wants a fur coat. That's enough for them. Now they're off to bag themselves a moose, a bear, a fox, a lion, a leopard. It doesn't much matter as long as a fur coat will bag Betty. But neither of them are especially competent at the sport. Koko has to put up with a moose that fires back; while Bimbo suffers the wrath of a lion who multiplies after being shot. And neither hunter accounts for Betty's fickleness or her kind heart.
I Ain't Got Nobody
Director
event1932 star_border 2
top_panel_open
The Mills Brothers perform two songs with the Bouncing Ball.
Cartoon Factory
Director
event1924 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown discovers a machine that can make cartoons.
Just a Gigolo
Director
event1932 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Irene Bordoni sings the title song in French and English with a Bouncing Ball. Cartoon sequences: Betty Boop as a cabaret emcee and cigarette girl; a romantic tom-cat gigolo.
Rudy Vallee Melodies
Director
event1932 star_border 3.8
top_panel_open
Betty Boop, trying to keep a party lively, is aided by Rudy Vallee, who comes to live-action life from a sheet music cover and sings several songs with the Bouncing Ball.
The Robot
Director
event1932 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Bimbo is a mechanic whose girlfriend (not Betty) agrees to marry him if he wins a fight against "One-Round Mike." Quick as a wink, he transforms his car into a robot to help him in the ring!
Minding the Baby
Director
event1931 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
Bimbo's minding his baby brother, but neighbor Betty Boop (with dog's ears) wants him to come over and play.
Stopping the Show
Director
event1932 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
At the theatre, a 'Paramouse Noose Reel' and a Bimbo and Koko cartoon are followed by Betty Boop's stage performance; she sings and does imitations of Helen Kane, Fanny Brice and Maurice Chevalier.
Time on My Hands
Director
event1932 star_border 2
top_panel_open
In this surrealist entry, a fisherman deals with rebellious worms; a diver flirts with a Betty Boop-like mermaid who becomes Ethel Merman, singing the title song in live-action with a Bouncing Ball.
The Betty Boop Limited
Director
event1932 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
On a special train, Betty's show troupe rehearses: Betty sings, Bimbo juggles, and Koko does a soft-shoe. The train itself also does tricks.
You Try Somebody Else
Director
event1932 star_border 2.8
top_panel_open
Ethel Merman sings the title song with a Bouncing Ball. Animated sequence: a cat burglar, just out of jail, raids Betty Boop's icebox.
Let Me Call You Sweetheart
Director
event1932 star_border 4
top_panel_open
Betty Boop, a nursemaid, meets a masher in the park; with the Bouncing Ball, Ethel Merman sings the title song.
Betty Boop's Birthday Party
Director
event1933 star_border 5.1
top_panel_open
Betty drudges in the kitchen alone until her friends (including Bimbo and Koko) hold a surprise birthday party for her… which gets rowdy.
Is My Palm Read
Director
event1933 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
For customer Betty Boop, psychic reader Prof. Bimbo conjures up an adventure on a haunted tropical island in his crystal ball.
Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party
Director
event1933 star_border 6.4
top_panel_open
Betty Boop hosts a Hallowe'en party with a few uninvited guests.
Parade of the Wooden Soldiers
Director
event1933 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
A toy version of Betty Boop drops in on a small toy shop. The other toys come to life and crown her their queen. Then the cartoon quickly turns into Fleischer's idea of King Kong.
Seasin's Greetinks!
Director
event1933 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Popeye skates over to Olive's house to give her a Christmas present: ice skates of her own. While he's teaching her, Bluto skates up and gets fresh; of course, Popeye fights him. When Olive rejects Bluto again, he sends her careening on an ice floe towards a waterfall.
Dinah
Director
event1933 star_border 2
top_panel_open
The Mills Brothers perform the title song with Bouncing Ball; cartoon animals load and sail the cargo ship 'Dinah Lee' to Mills music.
Wild Elephinks
Director
event1933 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive, adrift on a raft, land on what apparently is Africa, and are immediately battling elephants and gorillas (also a moose!). Popeye eventually battles an entire menagerie at once - after first gulping down a can of spinach, of course.
Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions
Director
event1933 star_border 6.1
top_panel_open
In a circus tent, Betty, Bimbo and Koko demonstrate some gadgets reminiscent of TV ads; an animated sewing machine gets out of hand.
Betty Boop's May Party
Director
event1933 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
Betty and Bimbo, as Queen and King of the May, host a giant outdoor party that gets sprayed with rubber. Koko appears briefly.
Betty Boop's Penthouse
Director
event1933 star_border 6.9
top_panel_open
While Bimbo and Koko admire Betty, their experiment becomes a monster.
Betty Boop's Ker-Choo
Director
event1933 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Betty, Koko, and Bimbo drive at the auto races; Betty has a cold, and her sneezes help her win.
Ain't She Sweet
Director
event1933 star_border 5.6
top_panel_open
19th century song pluggers in vaudeville theaters and in the streets invited audiences to join in the chorus; this tradition of participation appeared in movie theaters by the mid-teens. When sound arrived, Fleischer Studios’ delightful “Screen Songs” added witty animated prologues and celebrity singers to prepare the audience for the ball that bounced through the lyrics.
I Heard
Director
event1933 star_border 6.4
top_panel_open
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.
Blow Me Down!
Director
event1933 star_border 6.6
top_panel_open
Popeye sails into Mexico, where Olive is a dancer and Bluto is a bandit.
Morning, Noon and Night
Director
event1933 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
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.
Boilesk
Director
event1933 star_border 2
top_panel_open
An old-fashioned "Burlesk" variety show, mostly animated with a live-action performance of "I'm Playing with Fire" by the Watson Sisters.
Betty Boop's Big Boss
Director
event1933 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Betty takes a secretarial job where the boss sexually harasses her… but not without some encouragement from Betty.
Popular Melodies
Director
event1933 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios Screen Song. Arthur Jarrett sings some songs with the Bouncing Ball; Betty Boop appears for "One Hour with You" and "Boop-Oop-A-Doop".
Ko-Ko's Catch
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
Max is busy with his pretty new secretary and puts Koko and Bimbo on automatic for the day -- he sets a pantograph to draw a world run by slot machines like mechanical banks. However, is the creator in control of his creation, or is it the other way around?
Bimbo's Express
Director
event1931 star_border 5.9
top_panel_open
Betty Boop (with dog's ears) is moving; Bimbo comes with his moving van and is smitten with her. Songs: "Moving Day," "Hello Beautiful."
Noah's Lark
Director
event1929 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Noah seems to have major problems with his animals when they all get restless and leave the ship to go to Coney Island and Luna Park to get away from him.
Chinatown, My Chinatown
Director
event1929 star_border 4.8
top_panel_open
In this one, there are two Chinese men on screen. One is eating and the one to the right of him is ironing. The one eating seems to be so dumb as to accidentally swallow a shirt that was just ironed in front of him.
Jack and the Beanstalk
Director
event1931 star_border 5.4
top_panel_open
A Max & Dave Fleischer cartoon from 1931. Bimbo climbs a beanstalk to find Betty Boop enslaved by the giant.
The Herring Murder Case
Director
event1931 star_border 6
top_panel_open
The Herring is murdered, and detective Bimbo is trying to find his killer.
Silly Scandals
Director
event1931 star_border 5.4
top_panel_open
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.
In My Merry Oldsmobile
Director
event1931 star_border 6.1
top_panel_open
A lady is rescued from a villain by a heroic young man, who then takes her for a spin in his Oldsmobile.
The Male Man
Director
event1931
top_panel_open
Like most Fleischer cartoons from the early '30s, there are lots of stream-of-conscious gags here. They are related by Bimbo's adventures as a mailman.
Kitty from Kansas City
Director
event1931 star_border 4.5
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Sun bonneted Betty Boop takes a train to "Rudy Valley" where she gains weight and Rudy Vallee performs the title song with Bouncing Ball.
I'd Climb the Highest Mountain
Director
event1931 star_border 1.5
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After some slapstick mountain climbing, the title song is sung with the Bouncing Ball, then spoofed with humorous images. All animated.
After the Ball
Director
event1929 star_border 1
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This one covers the 19th century ballad in a very respectful manner: although the written reprise is gagged up, the song is introduced very respectfully by an unshown Irish tenor and then offered for the audience's singing without any voice-over to lead them.
Betty Co-ed
Director
event1931 star_border 4.5
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A young dog calls on Betty but fraternity hazers kidnap him. With a Bouncing Ball, Rudy Vallee sings the title tune.
Any Little Girl That's a Nice Little Girl
Director
event1931 star_border 3.8
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A Bouncing-Ball rendition of the title song features animated cats.
Mask-A-Raid
Director
event1931 star_border 5.9
top_panel_open
Betty Boop is queen of the Masquerade Ball where, among other antics, Bimbo and a lecherous old man vie for her affections.
Little Annie Rooney
Director
event1931 star_border 1
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Features a short screen song about a fictional character called little Annie Rooney, this version is the Fleischer studios version the voice of little annie rooney is done by little ann little. Betty Boop makes a cameo appearance as a stature figure & she wears the same hat as little annie rooney. This cartoon has a similarity to Betty Boop's Birthday, which was released in (1933) One of the same Quotes were used for both cartoons,(Oh I'm So Happy) Also the music is alike.
Twenty Legs Under the Sea
Director
event1931 star_border 6
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Bimbo is out on the ocean, fishing in a lifeboat, when he catches a big one -- or it catches him and drags him down to the bottom of the ocean.
Ko-Ko's Reward
Director
event1929
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Thanks to Magic Ink, a live-action girl joins Koko in a haunted house.
That Old Gang of Mine
Director
event1931 star_border 1
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An alley cat pining for her tom is cheered up by a friendly mouse; the title song is presented with a Bouncing Ball. All-animated.
Invisible Ink
Director
event1921 star_border 6.9
top_panel_open
Koko The Clown continually interrupts an animator, who turns his attention to trapping the clown.
Tree Saps
Director
event1931 star_border 1
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A series of blackout gags organized around a lumber camp.
The Bum Bandit
Director
event1931 star_border 5
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Masked bandit Bimbo holds up a train carrying someone tougher… Betty Boop (with dog's ears), played by a different, deeper-voiced actress.
Oh, You Beautiful Doll
Director
event1929 star_border 1
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In this one, a cat is cleaning a store carpet when he gets interrupted by a mouse. After they do a brief tap dance, a lady cat comes in which has the male cat already smitten.
Teacher's Pest
Director
event1931 star_border 3.3
top_panel_open
Elementary school-aged Bimbo is late to school, where he presents a note signed my father to his leonine bespectacled teacher.
Ko-Ko's Hypnotism
Director
event1929
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A live-action amateur hypnotist mesmerizes Ko-Ko the clown and Fitz the dog; but a witch teaches them how to take their revenge…
I've Got Rings on My Fingers
Director
event1929 star_border 1
top_panel_open
In this one, a traffic cop is up in the sky on a platform guiding various planes and birds on their way.
Put on Your Old Gray Bonnet
Director
event1929 star_border 1
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A band of cartoon animal musicians-- including their long-haired lion conductor -- warm up before going into the title song.
Swing You Sinners!
Director
event1930 star_border 6.8
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Bimbo is seen late at night, trying to steal a chicken. He runs away from a policeman and enters a haunted cemetery. Various ghosts and monsters tell him that he will be punished for his sin.
Trip to Mars
Director
event1924 star_border 7
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Max sends Ko-Ko on a rocket toward the moon, but Ko-Ko crash lands on Mars, where he encounters bizarre creatures and contraptions. Meanwhile, Max himself is blasted into outer space.
Mysterious Mose
Director
event1930 star_border 5.9
top_panel_open
Betty Boop (with dog's ears) can't sleep on a scary night, so she sings the title song and meets the gentleman in question...a surreal version of Bimbo.
Strong to the Finich
Director
event1934 star_border 6
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Olive runs some kind of boarding school. She serves her charges a huge bowl of spinach, but they are less than enthusiastic about it. Popeye comes by and demonstrates the values of spinach: he feeds some to a tree, which grows huge and sprouts a variety of fruit; he feeds a hen, which lays a dozen eggs, and he eats some himself to resist a prizefighter passing by.
Betty Boop's Trial
Director
event1934 star_border 4.5
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A traffic cop tries to make time with Betty; she speeds to get away, is arrested, and undergoes a musical trial.
Can You Take It
Director
event1934 star_border 7.2
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Popeye sees Olive going into the Bruiser Boys Club, where she works in the hospital ward. Their motto, "Can you take it?", is a clear challenge to Popeye. President Bluto puts Popeye through the tests, and while he fares better than most, he still ends up in the hospital ward, until he eats his spinach and goes after the members.
The Raven
Director
event1942 star_border 8
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A vacuum cleaner selling raven pesters the inhabitant of a castle.
This Little Piggie Went to Market
Director
event1934 star_border 2
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Singin' Sam of radio fame performs a musical version of the nursery rhyme with Bouncing Ball. Animated sequence: a parody newsreel.
In the Good Old Summertime
Director
event1930 star_border 5
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In this one, we get 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.
There's Something About a Soldier
Director
event1934 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
Betty Boop recruits for the Army by offering inductees a kiss. The recruits march off to war with a force of giant mosquitoes!
Betty Boop's Little Pal
Director
event1934 star_border 5
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Pudgy the Pup makes a mess of Betty Boop's picnic, is sent home, and runs afoul of the dog catcher.
The Stein Song
Director
event1930 star_border 2.5
top_panel_open
Another sing-a-long Fleischer cartoon, this time starring Rudy Vallee
Keep in Style
Director
event1934 star_border 5.2
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Betty Boop puts on a musical show of new inventions and styles; her creation of "ankle skirts" sweeps the nation.
Red Hot Mamma
Director
event1934 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
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!
I'm Afraid to Come Home in the Dark
Director
event1930 star_border 1
top_panel_open
A humanized dog comes from a bar and fights with his shadow in the dark just before a bouncing ball comes on and the singer warbles "I'm Afraid to Come Home in the Dark".
La Paloma
Director
event1930 star_border 1
top_panel_open
The beginning has the main character wooing a woman on a balcony with the flower she sends down then putting the moves on him.
In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree
Director
event1930 star_border 3.5
top_panel_open
The clock and whistle above a factory door sound for lunch, and the workers run out. A bear tries to eat his sandwich, but it opens like a big mouth, when he opens...
A Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight
Director
event1930 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
A drunk mouse dances out of a newspaper office and posts leaflets advertising a Hot Time.
Yes! We Have No Bananas
Director
event1930 star_border 1
top_panel_open
A couple of very skinny rats steal some bananas from a costermonger. He pursues them and extracts some revenge, which leads into the title tune of this Fleischer Screen Song.
When My Ship Comes In
Director
event1934 star_border 5.4
top_panel_open
Betty Boop wins the Irish Sweepstakes, and fantasizes about what she'll do with the money.
Betty Boop's Rise to Fame
Director
event1934 star_border 5.7
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A reporter interviews Max Fleischer about his creation, and Betty illustrates with excerpts from three prior cartoons.
Betty Boop's Life Guard
Director
event1934 star_border 5.4
top_panel_open
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!
The Man on the Flying Trapeze
Director
event1934 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye comes to ask Olive out, but finds she's gone off with the title character. Popeye goes to the circus (ringmaster Wimpy) looking for her, to find she's part of the act; an aerial battle ensues.
Grand Uproar
Director
event1930 star_border 8
top_panel_open
Bimbo sings a funny take-off of "Gay Caballero" and the comedy construction is adequate to the situation.
Come Take a Trip in My Airship
Director
event1930 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Kitty, a girl black cat, gets a piano delivered to her rooftop apartment by two Bimbo-like piano movers, using a pulley to hoist it up the outside.
She Wronged Him Right
Director
event1934 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Betty Boop appears on stage with Freddie in an old-fashioned mortgage melodrama.
Betty Boop's Prize Show
Director
event1934 star_border 5
top_panel_open
In a melodrama at the Slumbertown Theatre, Freddie is the sheriff and Betty is a school-marm desired by outlaw "Phillip the Fiend."
I Wished on the Moon
Director
event1935 star_border 3.2
top_panel_open
A Screen Song from the Fleischer Studios with the song "I Wished on the Moon".
I Feel Like a Feather in the Breeze
Director
event1936 star_border 5
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The title song is sung with the Bouncing Ball, plus animated sequence.
Reaching for the Moon
Director
event1933
top_panel_open
A Screen Song from the Fleischer Studios with the Irving Berlin song "Reaching for the Moon".
Lazy Bones
Director
event1934 star_border 1
top_panel_open
A Screen Song from the Fleischer Studios with the song "Lazybones".
Never Should Have Told You
Director
event1937 star_border 1
top_panel_open
A Screen Song from the Fleischer Studios with the song "Never Should Have Told You".
Talking Through My Heart
Director
event1936 star_border 7
top_panel_open
A Screen Song from the Fleischer Studios with the song "Talking Through My Heart".
My Gal Sal
Director
event1930 star_border 5
top_panel_open
This Screen Song version of Paul Dresser's ballad is given a very soapy interpretation by a basso and then a barbershop group.
Bimbo's Initiation
Director
event1931 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Bimbo finds himself surrounded by a mysterious group of robed figures who invite him to become a member of their secret organisation. When he refuses, they fling him through a nightmarish sequence of terror and torture devices. Will our hapless hero make it out alive?
Mariutch
Director
event1930 star_border 4.3
top_panel_open
An Italian immigrant discovers his wife is a hootchy-kootchy dancer. Later, the audience is invited to follow the bouncing ball and sing along to "Mariutch Down at Coney Island.
Fire Bugs
Director
event1930 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Bimbo has problems trying to put out a fire that's burning a building to a crisp.
Strike Up the Band
Director
event1930 star_border 4
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A boat sails the sea at night, with the moon watching from above. Bimbo-like sailors march around the deck, then fall through a trap door.
Wise Flies
Director
event1930 star_border 7
top_panel_open
A hillbilly sleeps; atop his bald head, flies have constructed a playground. Other flies ski-jump off his nose...
The Fresh Vegetable Mystery
Director
event1939 star_border 7.5
top_panel_open
Crime strikes the vegetable world when Mrs. Mama Carrot awakens and finds her children have been carrot-napped. She summons the Irish-Potato Police and they are soon on the trail of the culprit. But the various suspects they round up, and grill, aren't the criminals. They finally track down the guilty parties, who turn out to be a gang of mice in disguise. Thrown into a third-degree mousetrap, the mice soon confess. Bleeding Heart Warning: This cartoon contains racial stereotypes (an Irish potato), and cruelty to vegetables...and mice.
Radio Riot
Director
event1930
top_panel_open
The phenomenon of radio is hot, and everyone is listening, including an overambitious goldfish, a lazy spider and three terrified mouse-children.
Sky Scraping
Director
event1930 star_border 7.5
top_panel_open
A Dave Fleischer's Talkartoon Sound Cartoon Featuring Bimbo. As work begins on a high-rise building, Bimbo is too lazy, and all he thinks about is getting some sleep. The crazy building structure goes straight into the sky and through the moon.
Bedelia
Director
event1930 star_border 3
top_panel_open
In this one, someone is wooing the title character who is seen sleeping in bed with her bare feet showing on screen in near close-up. When she gets up, we see her putting on her long blonde wig and false teeth, both of which constantly fall off when she's walking to the balcony!
Up to Mars
Director
event1930 star_border 7
top_panel_open
In this one, Bimbo is playing fireworks in an abandoned yard except for a mouse (who suspiciously looks like Mickey in one close-up scene) who laughs derisively at him.
Hot Dog
Director
event1930 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Bimbo is out stalking the ladies in his car when he is arrested by the police. Now he has to explain himself to the judge.
Dizzy Dishes
Director
event1930 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
The Fleischer's Talkartoon short that debuted the now infamous Betty Boop.
Barnacle Bill
Director
event1930 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Sailor Bimbo (as Barnacle Bill) jumps ship with his little black book and visits his lady friend, Betty Boop (with dog's ears).
Pudgy Takes a Bow-Wow
Director
event1937 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Betty Boop's stage show takes a new turn when Pudgy the pup and his feline enemy get into the act.
Rhythm on the Reservation
Director
event1939 star_border 5.4
top_panel_open
Betty Boop's Swing Band (sans musicians) visits an Indian reservation where Betty teaches the braves the true meaning of 'rhythm.'
Betty Boop and Little Jimmy
Director
event1936 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Betty tries a regime of exercise, but her weight loss gets out of hand. She sings "Keep Your Girlish Figure".
Musical Mountaineers
Director
event1939 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Betty Boop runs out of gas in Feud County, and wins over the initially hostile hillbillies with her dancing.
The Candid Candidate
Director
event1937 star_border 4.9
top_panel_open
Betty Boop campaigns for Grampy to be the new mayor and he wins. As soon as he takes office, the citizens come out from everywhere to complain and to demand he fix things. Grampy is in his element.
We Did It
Director
event1936 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
While Betty Boop is away, the kittens get into mischief. Will Pudgy the pup take the blame as usual?
You're Not Built That Way
Director
event1936 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Pudgy the pup tries to emulate a tough bulldog, but Betty Boop sings him the error of his ways.
The Hot Air Salesman
Director
event1937 star_border 4.1
top_panel_open
A door to door salesman visits Betty Boop's home with a long line of useless household gadgets.
Betty Boop and the Little King
Director
event1936 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Betty encounters The Little King when, bored by the opera, he sneaks out to join in with her rodeo routine.
A Song a Day
Director
event1936 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
At Betty Boop's Animal Hospital, various species have appropriate ailments. Morale becomes a problem; Professor Grampy to the rescue!
Training Pigeons
Director
event1936 star_border 4.9
top_panel_open
Betty Boop is training a flock of pigeons, but one stray leads Pudgy the pup on a precarious chase.
My Friend the Monkey
Director
event1939 star_border 5.1
top_panel_open
A hurdy-gurdy man goes by Betty Boop's house; she wants to buy his monkey, which causes plenty of trouble for Pudgy the Pup.
Pudgy Picks a Fight
Director
event1937 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Betty Boop is so delighted with her new fox fur that Pudgy the Pup grows jealous, then thinks he's killed it...
Not Now
Director
event1936 star_border 5.1
top_panel_open
A caterwauling cat annoys Betty Boop and Pudgy; the latter tries cat-chasing, but bites off more than he can chew.
A Date to Skate
Director
event1938 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Popeye takes Olive roller skating in a rink. She's never skated before, so he has to teach her, and she's not a quick learner. Before long Olive ends up outside the rink, rolling wildly out of control.
Tramp, Tramp, Tramp the Boys Are Marching
Director
event1926 star_border 6
top_panel_open
“Tramp, Tramp, Tramp the Boys Are Marching” features a song that dates back to the Civil War, one which was still familiar to audiences of the 1920s. The cartoon begins as Koko the Clown emerges from an inkwell-- an iconic image for animation buffs --and then steps over to a chalkboard to draw an orchestra. The band, “Koko's Glee Club,” marches to a nearby cinema (accompanied by a dog who beats cymbals with his tail) where they lead the audience in the title song.
Fadeaway
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
This fascinating series features Max himself, filmed in live action, sitting at a drawing board and concocting adventures for his star performer Ko-Ko the Clown. Max is supposedly the guy in charge, and he takes sadistic glee in putting Ko-Ko through various forms of hell, but the clown usually fights back and sometimes gets the best of his Uncle Max. FADEAWAY elevates this charged relationship to new heights (or depths?) of nightmarish surrealism; it's also one of the most enjoyable Inkwell cartoons I've seen to date, packing lots of imaginative, unpredictable twists and turns into an eight minute running time.
Educated Fish
Director
event1937 star_border 5.6
top_panel_open
A small fish doesn’t pay attention in school, and ends up getting caught on a hook. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in partnership with UCLA Film and Television Archive in 2013.
The Clown's Little Brother
Director
event1920 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown's little brother comes to visit and wreaks havoc in Max Fleischer's studio.
Hide and Seek
Director
event1932 star_border 4
top_panel_open
A Fleischer Studios cartoon....
Modeling
Director
event1921 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
The Clown causes trouble for the Cartoonist, and a sculptor using the studio, when he escapes from his backdrop and hides in the wet clay of a bust.
The Automobile Ride
Director
event1921 star_border 3.5
top_panel_open
Max draws Koko on the drawing board. He then receives a call and leaves. Koko leaves after but not before taking some money from Max's wallet that he left behind. Max arrives to his date then comes back to his office to get his wallet. After recovering it, he drives with his date to get twelve gallons of gas. Koko arrives just as the pump is going and mischievously takes the hose from the car as the hose falls to the ground unknowingly to anyone else. Just as the wasted twelve gallons are up, Koko puts it back in the car before Max retrieves it! He gets his wallet and finds his money gone so he excuses himself.
Child Psykolojiky
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye and Poopdeck Pappy are trying to play poker, but Swee'Pea's crying keeps interrupting them. Pappy wants to smack the tot, but Popeye persuades him to try psychology instead. Popeye tells the story of how "George Washlincoln" chopped down the cherry tree. Inspired, Swee'Pea chops a hole in the floor, then tells the truth. Popeye rushes out to buy him a reward, leaving Pappy in charge, but Pappy believes in a rather dangerous style of parenting, introducing him to William Tell (from both ends of the gun). Pappy lies about it to Popeye.
Bubbles
Director
event1922 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Max and Koko The Clown bet who can blow the biggest soap bubble.
Jumping Beans
Director
event1922 star_border 7.5
top_panel_open
Max tricks Koko with a jumping bean. Koko finds a way to duplicate himself to get his revenge.
Now You're Talking
Director
event1927 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Bell Telephone instructional film shows how - and how not - to treat your upright desk telephone set. Don't wiggle the hook excessively, don't tangle the cord, keep away from water, etc.
Koko Needles the Boss
Director
event1927 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Clown is brought to life with a needle and thread.
A Car-Tune Portrait
Director
event1937 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
An orchestra puts on a symphony.
Wimmin Hadn't Oughta Drive
Director
event1940 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Popeye has a new car; Olive wants a driving lesson. Things don't go well.
Bed Time
Director
event1923 star_border 6.6
top_panel_open
First, Max, in his pyjamas, gets back up and draws an isolated mountain area and puts Koko on top of a steep mountain. "That will keep you busy for the night," says the real-life somewhat nasty cartoonist to his subject. The cartoon really gets wild from that point with guest appearances from Mutt and Jeff, and other "stars" of the day as Koko experiences one adventure after another from the "Cave Of The Winds" to Goliath chasing him all over.
Koko Back Tracks
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko and Fitz find that everything in their cartoon world is moving backwards. After entering the real world, they go inside a clock and move the hands backward, causing life all around the city to run in reverse.
Trapped
Director
event1923 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko is chased by a cartoony spider while Max deals with a mouse in his office.
The Paneless Window Washer
Director
event1937 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Bluto dirties all of an office building's windows himself, to drum up business for his window cleaning service. When he gets to Olive's stenographer office, about ten floors up, she says no: Popeye's going to wash her windows. And the battle with Popeye is on.
Bridge Ahoy!
Director
event1936 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive are taking a ferry run by Bluto. When they find out the fare, they decide, with Wimpy, to build a bridge. Bluto does what he can to sabotage this plan - until spinach time, of course.
Play Safe
Director
event1936 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
A young boy obsessed with trains sneaks out to play with the real trains that run just a few feet from the fence around his house. When he falls off of one and is knocked unconscious, he has a dream.
I Wanna Be a Life Guard
Director
event1936 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Popeye applies for a lifeguard job when he sees Olive in the pool, but Bluto also wants the job (and Olive). The manager, Wimpy, asks them to demonstrate their skills in a contest. Popeye does well, until Bluto demonstrates lifesaving and first aid on him.
What -- No Spinach?
Director
event1936 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Wimpy is working for Bluto in his diner and trying to filch all the food he can eat. Popeye comes in and orders roast duck, but Wimpy grabs the drumsticks, then coats it with pepper sauce. Popeye walks out in anger and Bluto comes after him. Wimpy takes advantage of the resulting battle to load up on hamburgers.
Somewhere in Dreamland
Director
event1936 star_border 7.2
top_panel_open
A poor boy and girl in rags gather wood in the snow. They pass by a tailor, a butcher and a baker, all of whom pity the children. Later, they arrive home. Their poor mother sets before them the only food she can: Stale bread. The children get ready for bed; In their dreams, visions of ice cream and donuts, candies and cakes fill their sleeping minds-- Will they awake to the same sorry situation?
I-Ski Love-Ski You-Ski
Director
event1936 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye takes Olive mountain climbing. Bluto sets various traps for them along the way.
Never Kick a Woman
Director
event1936 star_border 6.6
top_panel_open
Popeye teaches Olive the art of self-defense, which comes in handy when a woman boxer flirts with him.
The Little Stranger
Director
event1936 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
A stranger deposits an egg in a duck's nest; it hatches as a baby chicken. It doesn't fit in well with its three duckling nestmates, particularly when it comes to swimming. Momma tries to solve the swimming problem with a couple of leaves, but sends the chick home when that fails.
Hawaiian Birds
Director
event1936 star_border 6
top_panel_open
When the lady bird leaves her lover to join a performing group, he goes to try to win her back.
Little Swee'pea
Director
event1936 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye takes Swee'pea to the zoo and spends most of his time rescuing the tot from the various animals.
Greedy Humpty Dumpty
Director
event1936 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Greedy Humpty Dumpty's wall of gold is not enough. He wants all the gold in the sun, too.
A Clean Shaven Man
Director
event1936 star_border 6.6
top_panel_open
That's what Olive wants. To even the score, the boys visit Wimpy's barber shop. Wimpy is out, so they shave each other; you'd think Popeye would know better than to let Bluto at him with a razor.
Hold the Wire
Director
event1936 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Popeye is wooing Olive on the phone when Bluto comes over. He overhears, taps into the line, and impersonates Popeye. They proceed to have a high-wire fight on the telephone lines outside Olive's house.
Let's Get Movin'
Director
event1936 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Olive is moving out of her apartment; she's hired Bluto to move her things, but Popeye comes over to visit and won't be shown up.
Brotherly Love
Director
event1936 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Olive preaches the need for brotherly love on the radio. Popeye, hearing this, does a number of good deeds: helping two workmen raise a safe, straightening a wrecked car, and helping two boys sneak into a baseball game. But when he tries to break up a fight, it's more than he can handle alone. Olive and her followers come along and try to help, but it's too much for them, too. Of course, once Popeye has his spinach...
Vim, Vigor and Vitaliky
Director
event1936 star_border 7.7
top_panel_open
Popeye is running a women's gymnasium next door to Bluto's cabaret. Seeing Popeye's greater success with women, Bluto dresses in drag and challenges Popeye to various feats of strength.
The Spinach Roadster
Director
event1936 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye drives up to take Olive for a ride, but Bluto in his much fancier car does what he can to spoil their jaunt.
Grampy's Indoor Outing
Director
event1936 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and Little Jimmy are prevented by a thunderstorm from going to the carnival. Inventive Grampy devises a substitute.
I Can't Escape from You
Director
event1936 star_border 1
top_panel_open
The title song sung by Billie Bailey and played by Joe Reichman's band with Bouncing Ball. Animated sequence: a parody 'Snooze Reel'.
I Don't Want to Make History
Director
event1936 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios Screen Song. Vincent Lopez and His Orchestra play the title tune, sung by an uncredited crooner with castanets and a Bouncing Ball. Animated sequence: a parody newsreel at the New News Theatre.
More Pep
Director
event1936 star_border 5.4
top_panel_open
In a return to the Out of the Inkwell format, Betty Boop invents a pep formula to speed up lazy Pudgy, but it escapes into the real world with rapid results.
No Other One
Director
event1936 star_border 1
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Hal Kemp and his orchestra play the title tune with singer Skinnay Ennis and a Bouncing Ball.
Inklings, Issue 12
Director
event1925 star_border 7
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Series of animated vignettes linked by a disembodied hand which appears to be drawing the illustrations. In the first segment, the hand turns around a drawing of an old man and canine-hero Rin Tin Tin magically appears. In the second set of segments, drawings of children morph into adults who look completely unlike their youthful countenances. in the final segment, the hand slices up "The House That Jack Built" into the pictures of the most significant characters in the children's rhyme, and then reattaches the slips of paper to reform the house.
Koko Trains 'Em
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
Max is inspired by a cute puppy, and gives Ko-Ko a trained dog to show off in a circus ring. The dog performs a variety of tricks, but things get out of hand once Ko-Ko's trained fleas are let loose into the crowd.
No! No! A Thousand Times No!!
Director
event1935 star_border 4.9
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and Freddie appear on stage in a melodrama, wherein Betty sings the title song to the villain.
A Little Soap and Water
Director
event1935 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Betty Boop tries to give Pudgy the Pup a bath, with slapstick results.
Swat the Fly
Director
event1935 star_border 5.1
top_panel_open
Betty wants to bake a cake, but a fly appears in her kitchen and all heck breaks loose.
Betty Boop with Henry the Funniest Living American
Director
event1935 star_border 4.6
top_panel_open
Henry, comic strip character, gets a job at Betty Boop's pet store.
Making Stars
Director
event1935 star_border 3.6
top_panel_open
Betty Boop is singing on stage and is joined by a series of very funny alternate stars... a set of babies.
Making Friends
Director
event1936 star_border 4.7
top_panel_open
Pudgy the pup takes Betty Boop's advice ('Go Out and Make Friends With the World') to heart and befriends various wild animals.
Time for Love
Director
event1935 star_border 6
top_panel_open
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 and chases her around the pond, her old flame intercedes and chases the evil swan away.
Happy You and Merry Me
Director
event1936 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
A stray kitten wanders into Betty Boop's house, gets sick on candy, and is cured with catnip by Betty and Pudgy the pup.
I'm in the Army Now
Director
event1936 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Olive tells Popeye and Bluto that she loves a man in a uniform, so they try to sign up at the recruiting station - that can only take one of them.
Be Human
Director
event1936 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Betty Boop is incensed at her farmer neighbor's cruelty to his animals. Grampy knows how to teach him a lesson.
Judge for a Day
Director
event1935 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Betty Boop, annoyed by 'public pests' like backslappers, gum parkers, and mud splashers, imagines what she'd do to them if she were a judge.
Stop That Noise
Director
event1935 star_border 4.3
top_panel_open
A sleepless Betty can't take the noise of the city any more, and heads out into the country for some peace and quiet. She soon discovers that the country has its own problems.
Betty Boop and Grampy
Director
event1935 star_border 6.9
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and some friends go to Grampy's house for a party.
Adventures of Popeye
Director
event1935 star_border 6.6
top_panel_open
In live action, a big kid is attacking a little kid for his "Adventures of Popeye" comic book, so Popeye gives the little kid pointers, in the form of clips from four of his earlier pictures.
Baby Be Good
Director
event1935 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Betty Boop tells naughty Little Jimmy a corrective fairy tale.
A Language All My Own
Director
event1935 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
Betty Boop takes her stage act on the road, and plays in Japan to great acclaim.
You Gotta Be a Football Hero
Director
event1935 star_border 5.6
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive are attending a football game; Bluto's team takes the field, and Olive is swept off her feet, becoming a cheerleader for him. Popeye signs up and becomes quarterback of the opposing team, which is skinny and pathetic looking, compared to Bluto's team of huge bruisers. Things go badly, of course, until Popeye eats his spinach and becomes a whole football team himself, winning both the game and Olive.
The Hyp-Nut-Tist
Director
event1935 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Popeye takes Olive to a stage show of a hypnotist (Bluto), who also levitates objects. While he's doing this, Popeye makes him lose his concentration, so in retaliation, the hypnotist pulls Olive on stage and turns her into a chicken. Popeye comes down to fight and the hypnotist tries to turn him into a monkey, but Popeye pulls a mirror into place. He recovers, and turns Popeye into a donkey, then smacks him around a bit, but spinach comes to the rescue.
Pleased to Meet Cha!
Director
event1935 star_border 6
top_panel_open
The boys arrive at Olive's house at the same time, but at different doors. They both come in, and whenever Olive isn't looking, they start fighting. She catches them, and tells them one will have to leave. Bluto tells Popey that whoever does the best trick can stay. As a result, they find ever more creative ways to abuse each other, much to Olive's merriment. Eventually, though, they start destroying her house, and Olive throws them both out, for a little while, anyhow.
King of the Mardi Gras
Director
event1935 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
A Mardi Gras celebration, looking pretty much like any carnival. Bluto is a strongman, claiming to be King of the Mardi Gras, and drawing a large crowd. Popeye, nearby, claims only, "I yam what I yam," and has no crowd, but still draws Bluto's wrath.
An Elephant Never Forgets
Director
event1935 star_border 4
top_panel_open
A collection of animals goes to school; their teacher, a goose, asks them several questions, during which time an ape, sitting behind an elephant, keeps tormenting the elephant. The teacher leaves the room, putting a turtle in charge. While she's gone, things go fine for a while, but the ape starts an all-out book tossing brawl. As the teacher returns, everyone suddenly stops, and although the room is a shambles, she congratulates them on behaving and dismisses them for the day.
Be Kind to 'Aminals'
Director
event1935 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive Oyl can't ignore it when produce vendor Bluto comes by with his terribly overloaded cart, whipping his horse and denying it water. They intervene.
The Song of the Birds
Director
event1935 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
A boy gets trigger happy with his BB gun, but soon regrets it.
Choose Your 'Weppins'
Director
event1935 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Policeman Wimpy loses his handcuffed prisoner when he's distracted by a hamburger shop. The escapee drops into the weapon-filled pawnshop Popeye and Olive are running, and quickly gets in a fight with Popeye.
Dancing on the Moon
Director
event1935 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Honeymooning couples of various animal species take a rocket ship excursion to the moon. Spectacular lunar scenery.
For Better or Worser
Director
event1935 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Popeye's failures in the kitchen send him on a quest for a wife. He visits the "matrimonial agency" and picks Olive at the same time Bluto picks her. Of course, the boys settle their problem with their fists. Soon, Bluto and Olive are visiting Justice of the Peace Wimpy, with Popeye temporarily detained.
Little Nobody
Director
event1936 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
Pudgy the pup meets the female pup next door, whose snobbish owner calls him a "little nobody". A pep talk from Betty Boop turns Pudgy into a hero.
Beware of Barnacle Bill
Director
event1935 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
To the classic tune of "Barnacle Bill the Sailor", Olive explains that she can't marry Popeye because she's in love with Barnacle Bill (an unusually large Bluto), who then comes by and proceeds to pound Popeye (until he eats his spinach, of course).
Dizzy Divers
Director
event1935 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto are deep sea divers. Popeye has a treasure map; for some reason he cuts Bluto in on the deal, but of course, Bluto's idea of 50-50 isn't exactly fair...
The Spinach Overture
Director
event1935 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye's ensemble is rehearsing the opening of the Poet and Peasant Overture (with interpolations of the Popeye theme and "I've Been Working on the Railroad"). Maestro Bluto drops in from next door to conduct and play violin and show Popeye up. Popeye plays horribly until he unlocks the previously unexplored artistic benefits of spinach.
On with the New
Director
event1938 star_border 5.1
top_panel_open
Overworked as cook and dishwasher at a busy diner, Betty Boop calls it quits and accepts a job as nursery attendant at Bundle From Heaven Nursery.
False Alarm
Director
event1923
top_panel_open
An "Out of the Inkwell" short featuring Ko-Ko the Clown, this time as a fireman.
Bunny Mooning
Director
event1937 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Jack and Jill Rabbit get hitched in this classic Fleischer Studios cartoon (made a year before Bugs Bunny hit the scene).
A Kick in Time
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
Spunky is kidnapped and sold at an auction to a cruel Italian peddler. It's up to Hunky to save him.
You Can't Shoe a Horse Fly
Director
event1940 star_border 5
top_panel_open
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 dad's help. But the fly is merely stunned, and rallies a new attack, this time with friends. Father eventually kills the lot of them.
Ants in the Plants
Director
event1940 star_border 7
top_panel_open
A classic about an anteater who makes life rough for a colony of ants. In the ant community, the queen spreads warnings of their greatest enemy, the Anteater. "He's a menace, he's a brute, he will scoop you with his snoot." Their motto is "make him yell uncle," which they do when the anteater invades them.
I Yam Love Sick
Director
event1938 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
Olive is reading a romance novel and munching on a gift box of candy from Bluto when Popeye drops by. She's too absorbed to notice him, so he feigns illness. The doctors are at a loss for a cure.
The Two-Alarm Fire
Director
event1934 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto run adjoining (and competing) fire companies. When Olive's huge house catches fire, they are soon more interested in fighting each other than the fire. When Bluto goes to the roof to rescue Olive, the fire strands him there. Popeye eats his spinach and rescues them, but it's too late for the house.
A Dream Walking
Director
event1934 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto each wants to save Olive as she sleepwalks onto a construction site. But most of their efforts go into preventing each other from being the hero.
Ha! Ha! Ha!
Director
event1934 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
After drawing Betty Boop, Max Fleischer (live-action) leaves the studio; Betty and Koko try amateur dentistry, releasing enough laughing gas to convulse the 'real world.'
Shoein' Hosses
Director
event1934 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Wimpy is such a terrible helper that blacksmith Olive fires him. Both Popeye and Bluto see the help wanted sign; they compete for the position. Of course, their competition wrecks the shop.
Shiver Me Timbers!
Director
event1934 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Popeye, Olive, and Wimpy stumble across a ghost ship. They climb aboard, and it proceeds to scare them in various ways.
Sock-a-Bye, Baby
Director
event1934 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
When Popeye takes the baby for a walk in the stroller, the little one won't be quiet unless he's sleeping. Of course there's no end of noisiness.
The Dance Contest
Director
event1934 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive compete as partners in a dance contest. Naturally, Bluto butts in.
She Reminds Me of You
Director
event1934 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios Screen Song. At a super-automated theatre, the Eton Boys (in live-action insert) sing the title song aided by the Bouncing Ball.
Small Fry
Director
event1939 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
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.
We Aim to Please
Director
event1934 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive open a diner, singing the title song. Alas, their first two customers are Wimpy (who actually gets them to fall for the "gladly pay you Tuesday" schtick) and Bluto, who orders 6 sandwiches and refuses to pay for them. This leads, of course, to a fight, which Popeye needs his spinach to win.
Let's You and Him Fight
Director
event1934 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Bluto is the boxing champ, Popeye his challenger, Wimpy the timekeeper. Popeye is pounded mercilessly until Olive comes by with a can of spinach.
All's Fair at the Fair
Director
event1938 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
A couple goes to the World's Fair.
Betty in Blunderland
Director
event1934 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Betty falls asleep doing a jigsaw puzzle and finds herself through the looking glass into a modern, urban wonderland. The shrinking potion comes from a "Shrinkola" dispenser. When most of the characters assemble, Betty sings "How Do You Do" to them. But the jabberwock steals Betty away.
Axe Me Another
Director
event1934 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Pierre Bluto, running a logging camp, has thrown Olive into the river because he didn't like her spinach. Popeye rescues her and proceeds to beat Bluto in a lumberjack contest.
Let's Sing with Popeye
Director
event1934 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye walks around while singing his theme song, followed by a sing-along.
Love Thy Neighbor
Director
event1934 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios Screen Song. Mary Small, "the little girl with the big voice", sings the title song with a Bouncing Ball. Animated sequence: a parody "Nosey News" reel.
Little Dutch Mill
Director
event1934 star_border 6
top_panel_open
A miserly mill-keeper kidnaps two Dutch children, but their pet duck runs for help like Lassie.
My Wife's Gone to the Country
Director
event1931 star_border 1
top_panel_open
A woman is packing her kids and belongings for a trip to the country. Dad will miss her it seems, but once they are gone Dad goes crazy partying.
So Does an Automobile
Director
event1939 star_border 4.8
top_panel_open
At Betty Boop's Auto Hospital, the cars are treated for various humanlike ailments.
Be Up to Date
Director
event1938 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Betty Boop's Traveling Department Store comes to Hillbillyville; the mountain folks find old uses for the new gadgets.
Thrills and Chills
Director
event1938 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and Pudgy take the train to a ski resort and enjoy the winter sports while Betty evades a masher.
The Scared Crows
Director
event1939 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Betty Boop and Pudgy, doing the spring planting, are plagued by crows.
Buzzy Boop
Director
event1938
top_panel_open
Betty's young cousin, Buzzy, takes the train to visit Betty.
Pudgy the Watchman
Director
event1938 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Betty Boop hires a feline professional "Mouse Eradicator" to take over from Pudgy the Pup who makes friends with mice.
Sally Swing
Director
event1938 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Betty Boop, auditioning bandleaders for a college swing dance, "discovers" a cleaning woman who resembles Betty Grable
Ko-Ko's Harem Scarem
Director
event1929 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko and Fitz emerge from an inkwell into the sultan's harem.
Ko-Ko's Haunted House
Director
event1928 star_border 9
top_panel_open
A friend of KoKo's animator draws a haunted house, and KoKo and his dog Fitz go inside. There, they encounter frightening hallways where every door leads to a new spook.
Honest Love and True
Director
event1938 star_border 3.8
top_panel_open
Betty Boop is a poor-but-honest-actress in the Gay 90s who, hungry and cold, gets a job as a singer in a dance-hall saloon.
Hunky and Spunky
Director
event1938 star_border 5.6
top_panel_open
A short film about a mother and her son, she teaches him life skills later on the son gets niked by a man so the young donkey can be his work slave and his mother saves him. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in partnership with the UCLA Film and Television Archive in 2013.
Big Bad Sindbad
Director
event1952 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Popeye is taking his nephews to the museum, and proves to them that he is the greatest sailor in the world by telling them of a time he bested Sindbad the Sailor when Sindbad tried to abduct Olive Oyl.
Popeye Makes a Movie
Director
event1950 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive prepare to make a movie while his nephews watch. The movie is a significant portion of Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves, which makes up over 80% of this release (beginning with Popeye, Olive, and Wimpy suffering in the desert), and despite admonitions, the nephews get involved a couple times, most notably tossing Popeye his can of spinach.
School Days
Director
event1932 star_border 1
top_panel_open
A Fleischer Studios Screen Song. Gus Edwards and his kids were a famous vaudeville act where many big stars (such as Eddie Cantor) began their careers. In live action, Gus and the kids sing "School Days" along with the bouncing ball. In the surrealistic cartoon sequence, the schoolhouse has chicken legs.
The Tears of an Onion
Director
event1938 star_border 9
top_panel_open
It's harvesting season, so all the fruits and vegetables come out to play.
The Swing School
Director
event1938 star_border 4.8
top_panel_open
At Betty Boop's Music School for Animals, Pudgy the dog doesn't do so well, but puppy love triumphs.
Pudgy and the Lost Kitten
Director
event1938 star_border 2.5
top_panel_open
Its mostly about pudgy the dog, Betty Boop is mainly unseen in this cartoon she makes a few small appearances from the beginning to the end, other than the cat from an earlier betty boop cartoon called happy you & merry me makes a return also with his mother.
Plumbing Is a 'Pipe'
Director
event1938 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Olive has a small leak in a pipe; she makes the mistake of calling Wimpy to fix it, and the even bigger mistake of asking Popeye to help her do something until Wimpy can arrive. Meanwhile, Wimpy keeps realizing he's forgotten his tools, his gloves, etc. and going back. Popeye finally eats his spinach and manages some fixes to the system.
Riding the Rails
Director
event1938 star_border 6
top_panel_open
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.
Learn Polikeness
Director
event1938 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Olive takes Popeye to Professor Bluteau to learn some manners.
Let's Celebrake
Director
event1938 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto pick up Olive to celebrate New Year's Eve with them. Popeye brings along her granny out of sympathy.
Mutiny Ain't Nice
Director
event1938 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Popeye is leaving on his sailing ship, much to Olive's chagrin. She ends up accidentally stowing away in a trunk. Popeye discovers her, but she can't stay, because the crew will think she's a jinx. She tries to hide, but this only scares the crew more, because they think the ship's haunted. When she is revealed, the crew comes after her to throw her off, and then turns on captain Popeye.
Bulldozing the Bull
Director
event1938 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Popeye visits the bullfight only because of lovely Senorita Olive. He finds himself accidentally in the toreador box, even though he doesn't want to fight because it's cruelty to animals. Popeye rides the bull like a bronco, then gets tossed around a bit. The bull plants Popeye in the ground and attacks; the crowd turns on Popeye. Olive comes down to help and the bull chases her. The crowd throws vegetables at Popeye, including (fortunately) spinach.
Let's All Sing Like the Birdies Sing
Director
event1934 star_border 1
top_panel_open
This series of animated cartoons- sometimes including bits of live action- took popular songs of the day and combined the popular "bouncing ball" following the lyrics in an effort for audience sing-along's. "Let's All Sing Like the Birdies Sing" sung by Artie Dunn and Les Reis.
Big Chief Ugh-Amugh-Ugh
Director
event1938 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Big Chief Ugh-Amugh-Ugh is looking for a squaw. Meanwhile, Popeye and Olive are wrestling with their recalcitrant mule and Olive accidentally lands in the Indian camp. Popeye catches up to her. There's an unfair fight, and Popeye is about to be burned at the stake. He drops his spinach, but it cooks and pops into his mouth.
The Jeep
Director
event1938 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Popeye brings his magical dog, The Jeep, over to see Olive and Swee'pea, just as the tyke has escaped from his crib. The Jeep leads Popeye on a merry chase looking for Swee'pea.
Cops Is Always Right
Director
event1938 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye is heading over to see Olive when he hits a traffic island where a cop is directing traffic; when he gets there, he manages to get more tickets for blowing his horn and parking illegally. The cop rings the bell, and Popeye manages to wreck Olive's apartment by dropping what he's doing, each time he writes a ticket.
Tune Up and Sing
Director
event1934
top_panel_open
A girl and a tree both play the violin.
The Playful Polar Bears
Director
event1938 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Hunters visit the home of a polar bear community, causing a bear parent to have to rescue its cub.
Hold It!
Director
event1938 star_border 4
top_panel_open
When the lights of the city go dim, all of the kitties are let outdoors to prowl. Holding a meeting, they come up with a plan to rid themselves of a neighboring dog. The cats proceed to torment him, chase him with a water hose, and try feeding him.
The House Builder-Upper
Director
event1938 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
When Olive Oyl's house burns down, firefighters Popeye and Wimpy decide to build her a new house.
Ghosks Is the Bunk
Director
event1939 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
Olive reads a ghost story to Popeye and Bluto. Bluto leaves and rigs a haunted house and lures them to it. But they quickly discover him and, even better, a can of invisible paint.
Leave Well Enough Alone
Director
event1939 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye, feeling sorry for the puppies in the window of Olive Oyl's pet shop, buys all the animals (mostly dogs) and sets them free. A parrot declines to go, singing the title song to explain why it likes it just fine in the shop. Meanwhile, the freed dogs are not faring well.
It's the Natural Thing to Do
Director
event1939 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Popeye's fan club sends a telegram asking them to tone down the violence and act civilized. So everyone dresses up and acts formal - for a while, at least.
Yip-Yip-Yippy
Director
event1939 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Yip Yip Yippy is a 1939 Fleischer Studios animated short film. The short was the final official entry of the "Betty Boop" series. Although this was billed as a Betty Boop cartoon, it didn't feature Betty Boop.
Wotta Nitemare
Director
event1939 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
Popeye is having a dream. In it, Bluto interupts his and Olive's flirtations with one another and keeps having the upper hand.
The Barnyard Brat
Director
event1939 star_border 4
top_panel_open
A Hunky and Spunky animated short.
Hello How Am I
Director
event1939 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Olive invites Popeye over for a hamburger dinner. His roommate Wimpy hears this and disguises himself as Popeye in order to be who enjoys the feast.
Always Kickin'
Director
event1939 star_border 4
top_panel_open
Hunky is teaching her son Spunky how to kick properly. She has him practice with a mattress propped against a tree. Spunky befriends a family of birds who are building a nest. Spunky copies their design and builds a nest of his own. Although he is a donkey, he tries to imitate the birds in flight and falls out of his nest.
Customers Wanted
Director
event1939 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto are running competing penny arcades, trying to bring in customer Wimpy. Of course, he would gladly pay Tuesday for a penny today. And of course, their competing arcades show clips featuring each of them, with well over half of this short thus recycled.
Never Sock a Baby
Director
event1939 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye spanks Swee'Pea and sends him to bed without supper. He wrestles with his conscience over this, while Swee'Pea packs a bundle and runs away from home.
Springtime in the Rock Age
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
Oversize garden pests overcome the springtime urge to garden. The story opens in the spring. A caveman starts working in his garden, where a humongous locust comes and eats his goods. After going inside, he finds another huge (Stone Age-sized) bug at the table eating. The caveman then makes his own meal, only to be infested at his door by bees! It's caveman vs. big bugs in this hilarious entry, loaded with great gags plus caricatures of Groucho and Harpo Marx.
The Fulla Bluff Man
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A persistent door-to-door salesman tries to sell his wares in a gated community that doesn't allow peddlers. He makes a killing selling clubs to a bunch of battling street brawlers.
Way Back When Women Had Their Weigh
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A comic look at prehistoric life.
Mommy Loves Puppy
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A walrus steals the brandy from a Saint Bernard puppy.
The Dandy Lion
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
An American Indian girl disguises a friendly mountain lion as a dog in order to keep him as a pet.
Balloons
Director
event1923
top_panel_open
The Inkwell Clown goes for a balloon ride. Later, Max's studio is filled with so many balloons that it floats away.
Way Back When a Triangle Had Its Points
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A (lost?) Stone Age Cartoon
The Foul Ball Player
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A comic look at prehistoric life. Inept Stone Age characters play baseball.
Sneak, Snoop and Snitch
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
Spies Sneak, Snoop and Snitch try to sneak up on the king while he is sleeping in order to steal some riches.
Pedagogical Institution (College to You)
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A comic look at prehistoric life.
Bring Himself Back Alive
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A sadistic big game hunter, Hyde Skinner (a self-described Fur Trapper And All Around Dirty Guy), uses a poor little turtle as a pack mule. He does his best to kill any animal he can for the sport of it, for furs, etc. Skinner is out to trap an egotistical lion, who struts along with scat-like banter. Hyde Skinner sets a trap for the lion, and corners him in a cave. He tries to force him out with a lit stick of dynamite, which the lion pushes back at Skinner. Skinner backs up, stepping into his own trap with the fuse on the dynamite burning. He grabs the turtle, and writes a message for help on his chest, then begs the turtle to hurry. The poor turtle does his best to run, but in slow motion, as the dynamite fuse continues to burn down. While still running along, the dynamite explodes off camera, and the turtle stands up and wipes the message off his chest.
Way Back When a Razzberry Was a Fruit
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A comic look at prehistoric life.
Wedding Belts
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A comic look at prehistoric life- about how boy might have gotten girl.
Way Back When a Nag Was Only a Horse
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A comic look at prehistoric life.
Way Back When a Nightclub Was a Stick
Director
event1940
top_panel_open
A comic look at prehistoric life.
Koko Celebrates the Fourth
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko and Fitz celebrate the Fouth of July with fireworks and end up rocketed to an island inhabited by cannibals.
The Cure
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
Max has a toothache, and it's up to The Clown and a bespectacled rabbit to pull out the aching tooth.
The Constable
Director
event1940 star_border 10
top_panel_open
Gabby is constable in the village, and the mayor is on his case to catch pig thieves.
Puttin on the Act
Director
event1940 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Olive rushes over to show Popeye the headline: Vaudeville is coming back. They agree to rehearse their old act. After a brief song-and-dance intro, the act begins: Popeye demonstrating his strength while Olive displays her flexibility and balance; impersonations of Jimmy Durante, Stan Laurel and Groucho Marx; and the last act, more feats of strength and agility.
Little Lambkins
Director
event1940 star_border 4
top_panel_open
A mother puts her baby boy in an outdoor playpen, but he's more mature than she realizes, and quickly breaks out, and with the help of a raccoon and a squirrel, they are soon raiding the watermelon patch. Mother returns: turns out it's moving day, and the family is moving to the city.
Doing Impossikible Stunts
Director
event1940 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Mystery Pictures is looking for a stunt man. Swee'pea tags along with Popeye, but he sends the tot home. Popeye shows clips of his stunts to the director, who is impressed; when he goes to put on the last reel, Swee'pea, who snuck back in, hands him Lost and Foundry (1937), which features Swee'pea saving the day. The director signs Swee'pea.
Popeye Meets William Tell
Director
event1940 star_border 5
top_panel_open
William Tell shoots an arrow, barely missing Popeye, then tells Popeye that he has just lost his son in an unfortunate arrow incident. Tell then defies the High Governor and is ordered to shoot an apple off his son's head; Popeye stands in for his son.
Fightin Pals
Director
event1940 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Dr. Bluto sails off to Darkest Africa for exploration. Popeye, who stayed behind, hears a radio report that Bluto is lost and sets sail - on a raft - in search of him.
Olive's $weep$take Ticket
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Olive gets a phone call that she has won first prize in a sweepstake. After a frantic search, she locates her ticket, only to have it blow out the window. Help, Popeye!
Wimmin is a Myskery
Director
event1940 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
When Popeye tells Olive Oyl that he will propose to her the next morning, she has a dream that their four boys will run roughshod over their house.
Nix on Hypnotricks
Director
event1941 star_border 6.4
top_panel_open
A hypnotist, frustrated by not having anyone to practice on, cold-calls Olive and hypnotizes her over the phone into coming to his office. Popeye rushes after her.
My Pop, My Pop
Director
event1940 star_border 7.8
top_panel_open
Popeye's 99-year-old father won't admit he's too old to help Popeye build a ship. Popeye tells him to build one side while he builds the other; Pappy's side is a mess. He falls asleep helping hoist the mast. While Pappy sleeps, Popeye rebuilds his side and finishes the above-decks, with a little help from spinach, of course.
Popeye Presents Eugene, the Jeep
Director
event1940 star_border 5.6
top_panel_open
Olive sends Popeye a puppy, Eugene the Jeep, for his birthday, but despite Popeye's best efforts to make it sleep outside, it keeps finding its way back into the house. A rare spinach-free Popeye.
Snubbed by a Snob
Director
event1940 star_border 5
top_panel_open
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. Spunky makes a few more overtures, and eventually they set off on a chase, running across a bull from time to time. The horse stops to eat a lot of apples and drink far too much water; this leaves him too bloated to move much at all. The two continue to anger the bull, which gives chase; Spunky saves the colt, and they all live in harmony.
The Mighty Navy
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye joins the US Navy and routs the enemy in a one-man battle, but not before he causes his commanding officer plenty of aggravation.
Vitamin Hay
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
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.
Olive's Boithday Presink
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye wants to get Olive a fur coat, but after a run-in with dishonest furrier Geezil decides the best way is to go hunting for a bear himself.
Quiet! Pleeze
Director
event1941 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Poopdeck Pappy has a hangover. He asks Popeye to help him by keeping the noise down. Among the disturbances he deals with: a crying baby across the way, a horse-drawn milk truck, a factory whistle, a radio, a traffic accident, a construction site, and a blasting site.
Problem Pappy
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye's Pappy takes a flagpole sitting job atop a tall building without telling Popeye. Popeye goes to rescue him, but he doesn't want to go until an electrical storm hits.
Poopdeck Pappy
Director
event1940 star_border 5.9
top_panel_open
Popeye's elderly father, Pappy, wants to go out at night. Popeye wants him to sleep.
Shakespearian Spinach
Director
event1940 star_border 4.3
top_panel_open
Popeye has replaced Bluto in the Spinach Theatre's production of Romeo and Juliet (Olive, of course), much to Bluto's surprise and dismay. Bluto does what he can to sabotage the production, like cranking up the snow and wind machines, and eventually coming onstage, even though Olive wants no part of him.
King for a Day
Director
event1940 star_border 8
top_panel_open
Gabby has a letter to deliver to the king of Lilliput; when he arrives, the king is in the bath and Gabby tries on the royal robe. The king emerges and gives Gabby a stern look; Gabby hands over the letter and leaves quickly. The letter, however, is ominous: "Please be at home today; I have orders to shoot you."
Pest Pilot
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye runs a small airport, and Pappy wants to be a pilot.
Onion Pacific
Director
event1940 star_border 4.3
top_panel_open
The race is on for the state railroad franchise: It's the Onion Pacific - Popeye - against the Sudden Pacific - Bluto. There's a kiss from Olive for the winner!
Nurse-Mates
Director
event1940 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
The boys show up simultaneously to take Olive to the movies. She needs to visit the hairdresser first, and tells the boys to take care of Swee'Pea: bath, dress him, and nap. Of course, with these two, nothing is simple.
Stealin Aint Honest
Director
event1940 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Olive has a map that shows the location of her secret gold mine, but while she's showing it to Popeye, claim jumper Bluto photographs it and gets there first.
Me Feelins is Hurt
Director
event1940 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Olive sends a farewell letter to Popeye: She's over sailors; it's cowboys for her; she's gone out west, to Bar None Ranch. Popeye immediately travels there to find her - and discovers Bluto runs the place.
The Wizard of Arts
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
A Jerry Colonna-like artist takes us on a tour of a wacky museum
I'll Never Crow Again
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Olive's garden is being raided by some very persistent crows; she calls Popeye for help, and it takes him the rest of the cartoon to hit on the solution.
Swing Cleaning
Director
event1941 star_border 7.8
top_panel_open
Gabby is a servant in a castle and is required to do a little housework.
Twinkletoes Gets the Bird
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
Twinkle Toes, the incompetent carrier pigeon, is set with the task of delivering a rare parrot to the Royal Zoo.
Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy
Director
event1941 star_border 8
top_panel_open
A toyshop owner tells a little girl the story behind the two dolls she's fallen in love with.
Flies Ain't Human
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye is trying to take a nap, but he's plagued by house flies that keep landing on him. He gets rid of most of them, but one in particular seems bent on making Popeye's life miserable, particularly after Popeye makes the mistake of flicking it into a can of spinach.
Fire Cheese
Director
event1941 star_border 7
top_panel_open
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.
It's a Hap-Hap-Happy Day
Director
event1941 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Gabby goes camping with the Mayor.
Zero the Hound
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
A cartoon in the Animated Antics series from the Fleischer Studios about Zero the Hound.
Sneak, Snoop and Snitch in Triple Trouble
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
Sneak, Snoop and Snitch try to tunnel out of prison even though they've already been pardoned.
Copy Cat
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
A small cat annoys his elder by imitating everything he does. Eventually, the bigger cat catches a mouse, knowing the copy cat won't be able to perform the same feat.
All's Well
Director
event1941 star_border 7.4
top_panel_open
When Gabby tries to make everything well, he comes to fussy baby and attempts to change the baby's diaper. Can Gabby change the baby's diaper? Find out on Gabby's "All's Well"
Two for the Zoo
Director
event1941 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Gabby is forced to take care of a strange animal called a Kango.
Popeye Meets Rip Van Winkle
Director
event1941 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Rip Van Winkle is being thrown out for nonpayment of rent (for twenty years). Popeye happens by and carts the sleeper home, but soon discovers that Rip has a sleepwalking problem that gets both of them into some trouble with some dwarves.
Gabby Goes Fishing
Director
event1941 star_border 6.8
top_panel_open
Gabby teaches a young boy how to fish, even though the boy was doing much better without him.
Twinkletoes - Where He Goes Nobody Knows
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
Twinkletoes, the incompetent carrier pigeon, is charged with the task of delivering a package, little guessing that it contains a time bomb.
Twinkletoes in Hat Stuff
Director
event1941
top_panel_open
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. The twinkly-one runs to the magician's house, picks up the heavy suitcase and flitters off in a hurry. But the case pops open and out pops Mysto's magical hat and other tools-of-the-trade. The rabbit escapes from the hat and Twinky has to chase it, while being flabbergasted at the magical display going on all around him. Will he get to the theatre on time?
Fleets of Stren'th
Director
event1942 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
When enemy planes attack the battleship he's serving on, Popeye fights back.
Olive Oyl and Water Don't Mix
Director
event1942 star_border 7.7
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto agree that women are too much trouble, so they agree to swear off them, which lasts about five seconds, until Olive comes on board ship for a tour. The boys vie for her attention.
Kickin' the Conga Round
Director
event1942 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Shore leave in South America; Bluto muscles in on Popeye's girl, Olivia Oyla. Popeye muscles him out, but when they get to the conga club, he doesn't care to dance, so Bluto wins again.
Many Tanks
Director
event1942 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Bluto's in the Army; he tries to sneak off base, but can't. Popeye passes by, Bluto invites him in, then swaps uniforms. Popeye ends up in a tank drill.
Baby Wants a Bottleship
Director
event1942 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Olive is going shopping and drops Swee'pea off for Popeye to watch. Popeye carves a sailboat for him, but the tyke spots Popeye's battleship, and the puny toy boat will no longer do. He climbs aboard, and there's the expected mayhem. Notable sequences include a stint on the ship's cannon's control board, with Popeye caught on the barrel, then in the gears; also, at the end, Swee'Pea hitches a ride atop a torpedo just as Olive is returning and Popeye's out cold.
Blunder Below
Director
event1942 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye's on a battleship, on which he's banished to the boiler room. A Japanese sub comes along. Can Popeye save his ship from the enemy?
Pip-eye, Pup-eye, Poop-eye an' Peep-eye
Director
event1942 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye's 4 newphews try to sneak out instead of eating their spinach, so Popeye demonstrates some of the benefits: playing piano, dancing, shadow boxing but each is met with "but we don't like spinach." Finally, Popeye spanks them, and they start eating their spinach. After which, they play the piano until it breaks then use boards from the wreckage to spank Popeye.
The Dresden Doll
Director
event1922 star_border 5
top_panel_open
In this one, Max has run low on ink, so Ko-Ko finishes drawing himself and then heads over to the camera room, where he creates his own characters, a mechanical dancing Dresden doll with whom he falls in love and a couple of automaton musicians. He gets rid of the musicians, but, alas, the projectionist gets oil onto Ko-Ko's soon-to-be bride, melting her.
Spinach Packin' Popeye
Director
event1944 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Popeye donates blood, then dashes off to a boxing match with Bluto. He loses. Olive, who heard this on the radio, rejects him as no longer strong enough for her, and is preparing to join the army (where Bluto apparently is). Popeye stops her at the door, and insists on showing her sequences from two earlier two-reelers to prove his strength, but she's unimpressed. Fortunately, this was all a dream; he awakens in the blood bank, and dashes over to see Olive, who reaffirms her love.
Ko-Ko's Focus
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
Whispers in the Dark
Director
event1937 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Gus Arnheim and his band play the title song, sung by June Robbins (with Bouncing Ball). Animated sequence:...
The Foxy Hunter
Director
event1937 star_border 4.3
top_panel_open
Junior and Pudgy slip away from Betty Boop's care to go hunting with a pop-gun.
Twilight on the Trail
Director
event1937 star_border 1
top_panel_open
The Westerners sing the title song with Bouncing Ball. In animated sequences, a singing cowboy tells tall tales about his exploits.
The New Deal Show
Director
event1937 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Betty Boop emcees a show of pet-aid gadgets. Object: a "new deal for pets." Some ideas copied from Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions (1933).
Chicken a la King
Director
event1937 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
A rooster sultan is bored by his harems. A duck strongly resembling Mae West entices him. Her lover arrives, and they do battle; the lovers leave, and the sultan, humiliated, turns to his harem, who beat him up.
Ding Dong Doggie
Director
event1937 star_border 5.1
top_panel_open
Against Betty Boop's orders (and to his own discomfiture), Pudgy the Pup accompanies a dalmatian fire dog to a fire.
Whoops! I'm a Cowboy
Director
event1937 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Betty Boop's runt of a suitor thinks he'll have better luck if he takes cowboy lessons at a dude ranch; slapstick results.
Please Keep Me in Your Dreams
Director
event1937 star_border 1
top_panel_open
After a parody newsreel, the title song is sung by Barbara Blake and played by Henry King and his orchestra with a Bouncing Ball.
House Cleaning Blues
Director
event1937 star_border 5.7
top_panel_open
Housecleaning blues are just what Betty Boop has the morning after a wild party. Grampy to the rescue!
The Impractical Joker
Director
event1937 star_border 5.8
top_panel_open
Betty Boop's baking is interrupted by her obnoxious practical joking cousin Irving. Can Grampy out-joke the joker?
My Artistical Temperature
Director
event1937 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Popeye and Bluto share an art studio; Popeye is a sculptor, and Bluto paints. Olive drops in for a likeness, and the boys compete. When they start to fight, Olive starts to leave, but Popeye convinces her to stay when he eats his spinach and vanquishes Bluto.
Service with a Smile
Director
event1937 star_border 4.3
top_panel_open
Betty Boop is desk clerk at the Hi-De-Ho-Tel ("Food Served with Every Meal") where the guests have many legitimate complaints. Fortunately, Grampy's inventions fix everything.
Zula Hula
Director
event1937 star_border 4.8
top_panel_open
Disabled in a thunderstorm, Betty Boop and Grampy's plane lands on a tropic island where Grampy soon re-invents the comforts of home... until hostile, racially-stereotyped natives intrude.
Protek the Weakerist
Director
event1937 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Olive asks Popeye to walk her dog Fluffy, but Popeye is embarrassed because Fluffy is as weak looking as the name implies. Sure enough, when Bluto and his bulldog come by, the dogs (and their owners) get in a fight.
Hospitaliky
Director
event1937 star_border 6.7
top_panel_open
To get at nurse Olive, Popeye and Bluto fake various illnesses. Olive sees through this and tells them they need to be either very sick or hurt real bad, so they try to get hurt, but both have a sudden run of what would normally be very good luck. Out of desperation, Popeye feeds Bluto the spinach when they start fighting.
I Likes Babies and Infinks
Director
event1937 star_border 6.4
top_panel_open
Swee'pea is crying, so Olive calls on Popeye to cheer the baby up. Popeye and Bluto compete by doing various silly antics.
Peeping Penguins
Director
event1937 star_border 5.2
top_panel_open
Curious penguins investigate an abandoned cabin, heedless of their mother's warning that "curiosity killed the cat."
Organ Grinder's Swing
Director
event1937 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive are grooving to the sounds of Wimpy the organ grinder, but their neighbor Bluto wants him to move on. Popeye and Bluto settle their disagreement in their usual fashion.
Popeye's Premiere
Director
event1949 star_border 10
top_panel_open
Popeye and Olive are at the premiere of Popeye's new movie. He gets a little too wrapped up in the movie, interacting with it at various points, and even handing the screen version of himself a can of spinach. The movie itself is the story of Aladdin, minus the songs and about half the footage of the short it's cut from.
Fowl Play
Director
event1937 star_border 7.1
top_panel_open
Popeye gives Olive a parrot that he's trained. Bluto sets the bird free and then tries to kill it.
The Twisker Pitcher
Director
event1937 star_border 6.3
top_panel_open
Baseball: Bluto's Bears vs. Popeye's Pirates, and both Bluto and Popeye have girlfriends cheering them on.
The Football Toucher Downer
Director
event1937 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Swee-Pea is reluctant to eat his spinach, so Popeye tells him about the football game when he was young (against Bluto, with Olive cheering and Wimpy keeping score) and also reluctant to eat his spinach.
Lost and Foundry
Director
event1937 star_border 6.2
top_panel_open
Popeye, an employee at Useless Machine Works, is on his lunch break when Olive stops by and Swee'Pea crawls into the factory. He narrowly misses several horrible fates while Popeye tries to save him and gets into much worse trouble.
Little Lamby
Director
event1937 star_border 5
top_panel_open
The fox spots a little lamb and disguises himself with a beard and bushy eyebrows. He posts an announcement for a baby contest, and the animal mothers spruce up their little ones (a rabbit and a pig). Meanwhile, the fox builds his judging stand. Several contestants are rejected: a squirrel, three ducklings, a whole family of rabbits, before the winner, little lamby.
I Never Changes My Altitude
Director
event1937 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Popeye is sitting outside Olive's lunchroom at the airport, distraught. She's closed the business to fly away with an aviator (Bluto, of course). But it's hardly what she expected; he has her painting his plane, while it's flying; when she says she's rather go back to Popeye, he tries to throw her off the plane. Popeye sees this, and takes off in a plane, just in time to help her out. The boys get into a dogfight, and Bluto manages to demolish Popeye's plane.
Morning, Noon and Night Club
Director
event1937 star_border 7.6
top_panel_open
'Popito' and 'Olivita' are a dance team, performing at Wimpy's Cafe. Bluto is jealous, and heckles and otherwise disrupts the act.
Accordion Joe
Director
event1930 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Bimbo becomes a long distance accordion champ and comes through with a load of credit.
The Cow's Husband
Director
event1931 star_border 7
top_panel_open
Bimbo as a bullfighter.
Christmas Comes But Once a Year
Director
event1936 star_border 7.1
top_panel_open
At an orphanage, the children are sad because they received used defective toys as gifts. Professor Grampy sees the children while passing by in his sled and has an idea on how to give them a merry Christmas.
The Peanut Vendor
Director
event1933 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
A man tries to sell peanuts at the Zoo but is harassed by an elephant and various animals, so he asks a singer for help.(Note: not to be confused with the stop motion short of the same name.)
Ko-Ko's Magic
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Clown's hijinks with a magic powder.
Ko-Ko's Hot Ink
Director
event1929 star_border 8
top_panel_open
Drawn with steaming ink, Koko and Fitz try to cool off.
Ko-Ko Hops Off
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Koko the clown and his dog attempt a round-the-world flight.
Ko-Ko's Big Sale
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown and his dog try to become salesmen.
Ko-Ko the Kid
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown seeks the Fountain of Youth.
Chemical Ko-Ko
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown tries a mad scientist's formula on various animals.
Ko-Ko's Tattoo
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
Max draws a tattoo of a cat on his coworker, and Fitz chases the cat around when the tattoo comes to life.
Ko-Ko's Courtship
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown and Fitz the dog escape into the live-action world.
Koko the Convict
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Directed by Dave Fleischer.
Darling Nelly Gray
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Clows sets up the song "Darling Nelly Gray".
Margie
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Out of the Inkwell Films delivers the song "Margie".
Out of the Inkwell
Director
event1919 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Directed by Dave Fleischer.
Pay Day
Director
event1922
top_panel_open
The jobless Clown (yet to be named KoKo) doesn’t get to share in Max’s earnings. But he does more than a good day’s work when he catches a burglary on film with some fine camera work of his own.
The Challenge
Director
event1922
top_panel_open
The Clown (yet to be named KoKo) provokes Max, suggesting that he would win handily in a fight if they were the same size. Max obliges, drawing a cartoon version of himself to step into the ring and settle the matter once and for all.
The Show
Director
event1922
top_panel_open
The Inkwell Clown and his three partners rehearse their parts in a show while en route to the theatre in Max's car.
Contest
Director
event1923 star_border 5
top_panel_open
The Clown (yet to be named KoKo) holds a contest, offering 100 dollars to whomever can ride “Dynamite” the trick mule for five minutes. Once the crowd discovers the mule is mechanical, however, they chase the Clown in a fury. When they corner him, Max has to step in to stop the chaos.
Masquerade
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
When Max dons a clown costume for a masquerade party, Ko-Ko takes to taunting him. Intending to get back at Ko-Ko, Max jumps into his own drawing—a serious tactical error, as he soon learns.
The Boxing Kangaroo
Director
event1920 star_border 4
top_panel_open
The Inkwell Clown battles a boxing kangaroo.
The Reunion
Director
event1922 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Max helps the Inkwell Clown prepare for a family reunion.
Vacation
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown spends a vacation at a rubbery amusement park.
Come Take a Trip in My Airship
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes, Song Car-Tunes, or (some sources erroneously say) Sound Car-Tunes, is a series of short three-minute animated films produced by Max Fleischer and Dave Fleischer between May 1924 and September 1927, pioneering the use of the "Follow the Bouncing Ball" device used to lead audiences in theater sing-alongs. The Song Car-Tunes also pioneered the application of sound film to animation.
The Runaway
Director
event1924 star_border 5
top_panel_open
The Inkwell Clown runs away from Max and winds up falling through a crack in the floorboards and into a fiery Hell.
League of Nations
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
KoKo assembles fellow clowns from around the globe to defend earth from a martian attack.
Sparring Partner
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
KoKo accidentally spills ink on Max’s letter. An irritated Max draws him an oversized sparring partner. Remarkably, KoKo somehow manages to win, and with no one watching him, wastes no time in retaliating against Max.
The Hypnotist
Director
event1922
top_panel_open
Koko fights with his shadow while under hypnosis.
The Circus
Director
event1920 star_border 7.1
top_panel_open
One of the "Out of the Inkwell" series of silent short films featuring a combination of live action and hand-drawn animation.
Ko-Ko Makes 'Em Laugh
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko and Fitz try to make a humorless Indian laugh.
The Storm
Director
event1924 star_border 6.5
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Inkwell Clown and a baby get caught in a hurricane.
Ko-Ko on the Run
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko competes against a rival clown in a race.
Koko the Hot Shot
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
Max creates a penny arcade with a shooting gallery, much to the detriment of Ko-Ko and Fitz the Dog.
I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles
Director
event1930 star_border 1
top_panel_open
An Unusual Classic Cartoon where a bunch of Different Animals get all Nice and Clean to perform the song, " I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles". A Screen Songs sing along Max Fleischer presentation by National Telefilm Associates Inc.
Koko Plays Pool
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Max Fleischer and brother David are playing pool when Koko and Fitz force their way out of the ink bottle. They want to play pool too, so Max obligingly draws a table for their use.
Ko-Ko the Knight
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
When a beautiful princess escapes from the ink bottle, only to be captured by a villainous knave, Max draws a stove which he has Ko-Ko use as armor, inflates Fitz into a destrier and sends them off in a deed of daring-do.
Surprise
Director
event1923 star_border 4
top_panel_open
Koko is trying to rescue his sweetheart, who is trapped atop a rugged mountain. However, when Max Fleischer runs out of ink, how will he draw the ladder for Koko to climb?
You're Driving Me Crazy
Director
event1931 star_border 1
top_panel_open
This short starts and ends very well, with animated sequences and a great deal of jazzy scat singing being done by various animals, all to the musical strains of the song, "You're Driving Me Crazy". There's a dancing lion which looks a bit like Betty Boop, monkeys and a whole host of other animals, including at least one Cab Calloway sound-alike.
Vaudeville
Director
event1924 star_border 6
top_panel_open
An "Out of the Inkwell" cartoon featuring Ko-Ko the Clown.
Comin' Thro' the Rye
Director
event1926
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This is the cartoon version of Comin' thro' The Rye by fleischer Studios.
KoKo Explores
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Koko and Fitz are sitting around bored while Max writes the day's scenario. When one of the cannibals he is writing about steals Max' head, it's up to our intrepid hero to rescue the boss, who doesn't know how to do things without his top.
My Old Kentucky Home
Director
event1926 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
This 1926 Fleischer Song Car-Tune encouraged movie going audiences to follow the bouncing ball, or racist caricature, and join in on a minstrel classic. In this way, the short joined sentimentality, a sense of the collective, and community to an already nostalgic minstrel performance.
Row, Row, Row
Director
event1930 star_border 3.5
top_panel_open
It concerns a person (who's either a dog-an early version of Bimbo, perhaps-or a bear-he sorta resembles Van Beuren's Cubby Bear), who goes to a bar and picks up a girl despite her being with someone. In fact, they perform an Apache dance before she chases him to a boat which is when the title song gets performed with the Famous Bouncing Ball before the characters start stepping on the last verses.
Koko’s Kane
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Koko and Fitz want to play, but Max is working on his newest invention -- he actually was an inventor and held patents on rotoscoping -- so he stuffs them in a safe with his convertible cane/umbrella. When they start pushing buttons, things start to happen.
Fishing
Director
event1921 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Max is too rushed to do a thorough job of drawing Koko this morning. Max is going fishing. However, to amuse the clown, he draws a fishing pole and a pond before he goes.
Ko-Ko in Thanksgiving
Director
event1925
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Koko likes to join Max and his friends for Thanksgiving dinner. He can, under the condition of screening his films.
Sleepy Time Down South
Director
event1932 star_border 3.5
top_panel_open
Fire chief Bimbo is called to a house on fire, and rescues the Boswell Sisters and their piano, who start performing "When It's Sleepy Time Down South".
The Einstein Theory of Relativity
Director
event1923 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
"The Einstein Theory of Relativity" is the short version (587 m) of the lost American long version (1219 m) of Hanns Walter Kornblum's original German feature "Die Grundlagen der Einsteinschen Relativitäts-Theorie" from 1922 that is also lost.
Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie
Director
event1932 star_border 1
top_panel_open
The Round Towners Quartet sings the title song with a Bouncing Ball. Cartoon sequence: Betty Boop and Bimbo go ice skating.
Song of Victory
Producer
event1942 star_border 6
top_panel_open
A vulture, a gorilla and a hyena (“with no small resemblances to actual dictators”) bully the woodland animals, who eventually fight back, using the letter V as their victory symbol.
Prisoner's Song
Director
event1930 star_border 1
top_panel_open
An early Fleischer Screen Song, this time the bouncing ball follows Guy Massey's "The Prisoner's Song"
Koko Nuts
Director
event1925
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Koko the clown is sent to the nut house by Max.
The Herring Murder Mystery
Producer
event1943
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A man working in a fish cannery has a guilty conscience and begins to imagine he is a murderer. In his delirium/dream the fish try him for murder in a crazy court-room scene at the bottom of the ocean, which incorporates the 'Information, Please" radio routine, and also has a fish-jury who sing a little ditty called "There's Nothing On the End of the Hook." Re-released to theaters again in 1954, before Columbia sold it to television stations.
Sweet Adeline
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Follow the bouncing ball sing-along
Ko-Ko's Queen
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko convinces the animator to draw him a woman, but she turns out to be scrawny and ugly. He takes her to a beauty parlor and plumps her up, then shaves the back of her head and slaps a mask onto it. She wins a beauty contest, but they're both thrown out when she can't sit on her throne, thus exposing the ruse. Ko-Ko draws himself a new girl, who comes to life.
Koko Sees Spooks
Director
event1925 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Koko the clown encounters supernatural beings.
Big Chief Koko
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
When a Native American artist sells a selection of his background drawings and original characters to Fleischer, Koko gives the new arrivals a cold reception.
Koko's Toot Toot
Animation
event1926
top_panel_open
Max is taking a railroad trip and pulls out his pen to draw Koko, Fitz and a railroad. Maybe the trip is too bumpy, because nothing works as it is supposed to.
Koko's Paradise
Animation
event1926 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Max Fleischer is going to a shooting gallery, so he practices on Koko and Fitz, sending them both to Paradise in this slightly erratic but funny cartoon.
KoKo the Kop
Director
event1927 star_border 6
top_panel_open
Part of the 'Inkwell Imps' series.
Looney Tunes Spotlight Collection Vol:2
Director
event2004 star_border 9.3
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Thirty more cartoons from the vaults of Warner Bros. to spotlight the inimitable Looney Tunes characters
The Clown's Pup
Director
event1919 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Max Fleischer draws a clown, who comes alive on the page. The clown doesn't like the way he is drawn and demonstrates his own artistic abilities.
Perpetual Motion
Director
event1920 star_border 4.5
top_panel_open
Part of Max Fleischer's "Out of the Inkwell" series.
Inklings No. 10
Director
event1928
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Lighting Sketches of US Presidents and world locations.
Bizarre Cartoons Of The Past
Director
event2007
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Before the animation industry became dominated by the major studios and their familiar stable of characters, there were other companies who entertained theater audiences with wild excursions into cartoon fantasies. Experimentation was the rule as the boundries of cinematic animation were being pushed to the limit and many of these early productions have the raw look of a work in progress. These classic animated shorts from the early days of sound were created by nearly forgotten production pioneers like Van Beuren Studios and Max and Dave Fleischer. Hilarious, inventive, sometimes risque and often surreal, these films are the fabulous forerunners of every cartoon we've ever watched in the theater or on TV. Laugh again at the cartoons your grandparents enjoyed in the 1930s.
In the Good Old Summer Time
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes is a series of short three-minute animation films produced by Max Fleischer and Dave Fleischer between May 1924 and September 1927, pioneering the use of the "Follow the Bouncing Ball" device used to lead audiences in theater sing-alongs.
Ko-Ko Smokes
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Max draws a big cigar and Ko-Ko and Fitz want to smoke it. Max's coworker smokes up a storm in the office until the fire marshal arrives.
Ko-Ko the Barber
Director
event1925
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In this 1925 Out of the Inkwell short, Ko-Ko the Clown becomes a barber. As usual, he eventually escapes the animated world for the "real." He hides in a shaving mug and when Max tries to lather up.
Shadows
Director
event1923
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Max torments the Inkwell Clown with shadow puppet animals.
Jingle Bells
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
From the Fleischer Brothers, creators of Betty Boop, comes this "Screen Song." Screen Songs were early sound shorts designed for patrons to sing along with in the cinema.
Koko in 1999
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
This Out of the Inkwell cartoon features the Fleischer Studios continuing character, Ko-Ko, seeming to draw himself, and to battle with the environment created for him. It speaks to the self-referentiality of early animation, and to the creation of characters who are made to rebel against their makers.
Just One More Chance
Director
event1932 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Betty Boop entertains at a gambling den with Bimbo in attendance; Arthur Jarrett (film debut) sings the title song with a Bouncing Ball.
Russian Lullaby
Director
event1931 star_border 5
top_panel_open
A Max Fleischer Screen Songs cartoon with part of it devoted to cartoon animation and the other part to Arthur Treacy, radio's Street Singer, doing the Irving Berlin song, with words and dancing-ball double-exposed at the lower left of the frame for audience participation.
Smiles
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "Smiles" the bouncing ball 'Screen Song' treatment.
By the Beautiful Sea
Director
event1931
top_panel_open
A boy dog walks down the train tracks singing "I Ain't Got Nobody," with a train coming. He looks at a photo of his girlfriend, and she razzes him. He lies down on the tracks, but the train bypasses the section of tracks that he's lying on! He jumps off a cliff, but a tree saves him. The ball bounces... we see him on the sidewalk, crying, and singing to passersby.
My Baby Just Cares for Me
Director
event1931 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "My Baby Just Cares for Me" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
Please Go 'Way and Let Me Sleep
Director
event1931 star_border 4
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "Please Go 'Way and Let Me Sleep" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
And the Green Grass Grew All Around
Director
event1931 star_border 1
top_panel_open
It's a shotgun wedding, a big boy fly to a little girl fly, with her bearded dad holding the shotgun. A wedding party ensues, with an energetic hoe-down involving lots of dancing and playing insects. The preacher-bug gorges himself on cake. The ball bounces over a live field of tall grass. A boy and girl bug smooch in the middle of a sunflower.
I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now
Director
event1931 star_border 4
top_panel_open
White boy and girl cats spoon at a desk. A black boy cat comes to call. She sends him away, but he tries to lure her with catnip on the end of a line. White "daddy" cat holds her back, and the black boy cat walks home. The ball bounces over lava lamp-like shapes. Cats dance on top of a wooden fence, then on the song lyrics. A black boy and girl cat spoon on top of a fence, and in a window.
Sing a Song
Director
event1932
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios' 'Screen Song' sings a bunch of songs with the bouncing ball.
I Like Mountain Music
Director
event1933 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "I Like Mountain Music" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
Somebody Stole My Gal
Director
event1931 star_border 5.3
top_panel_open
A boy dog walks down the train tracks singing "I Ain't Got Nobody," with a train coming. He looks at a photo of his girlfriend, and she razzes him. He lies down on the tracks, but the train bypasses the section of tracks that he's lying on! He jumps off a cliff, but a tree saves him. The ball bounces... we see him on the sidewalk, crying, and singing to passersby.
Show Me the Way to Go Home
Director
event1932 star_border 2
top_panel_open
The cartoon characters only want one thing: a drink. Very funny situations, followed by a singalong to three drinking songs. In a live-action sequence in the middle of the cartoon, a drunk staggers around while the audience sings to him.
By the Light of the Silvery Moon
Director
event1931 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "By the Light of the Silvery Moon" the bouncing ball 'Screen Song' treatment.
Shine on Harvest Moon
Director
event1932
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "Shine On Harvest Moon" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
On a Sunday Afternoon
Director
event1930 star_border 2.5
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "On a Sunday Afternoon" the bouncing ball 'Screen Song' treatment.
Alexander's Ragtime Band
Director
event1931 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Three distinct segments: 1) A dog is taking a music lesson from a lion when a mouse starts playing as well. 2) The "Bouncing Ball" segment, consisting of the words to the title song. 3) Some kooky animation of an "Instrument Orchestra," in which the instruments are playing themselves, and a whole cast of animals march to the last chorus.
Sing, Sisters, Sing!
Director
event1933
top_panel_open
Strange goings-on in a department store, which is having a fire sale while it's on fire. Mice run a movie projector. In a live-action sequence, the singing Three X Sisters lead three bouncing-ball selections, the first Scottish, the second German, the last a bit of a black stereotype.
Aloha Oe
Director
event1933 star_border 3
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "Aloha Oe" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
Sing, Babies, Sing!
Director
event1933 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Baby Rose Marie is dropped by an animated stork, into a chimney. She sings a song to moms everywhere, "An Orchid For You." She then is seen dressed as an Indian and performs "Hiawatha's Lullaby."
Sweet Jennie Lee
Director
event1932
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "Sweet Jennie Lee" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
Song Shopping
Director
event1933 star_border 3.5
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios 'Screen Song' with Ethel Merman singing the songs.
When Yuba Plays the Rumba on the Tuba
Director
event1933 star_border 2
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios 'Screen Song' of "When Yuba Plays the Rumba on the Tuba".
When the Red, Red, Robin Comes Bob, Bob Bobbin' Along
Director
event1932 star_border 4
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "When the Red, Red, Robin Comes Bob, Bob Bobbin' Along" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
Magic on Broadway
Director
event1937
top_panel_open
Part of Paramount/Fleischer Novelty-Cartoon shorts which featured animation in part of it and live-action in th other half. The cartoon half of this entry has a slot-machine player cheating the machines in a penny-arcade by tying a string to the coin and pulling it out again. The machines get rather animated about being cheated and the petty-gambler receives some rough treatment. The second half is about four minutes of music from Jay Freeman and his band, featuring Johnny Russell as the vocalist.
Thanks for the Memory
Director
event1938
top_panel_open
A Fleischer Studios Screen Song with a popular tune.
It's Easy to Remember
Director
event1935
top_panel_open
Richard Himber And His Ritz Carlton Orchestra perform one of the big hits of the day- "It's Easy To Remember." Himber even does a magic trick before the singer performs.
Down by the Old Mill Stream
Director
event1933 star_border 1
top_panel_open
It's apple time, and all the strange little Fleischer bugs waste no time getting the apples to ferment so that they can immediately get drunk.
Keeps Rainin' All the Time
Director
event1934 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios giving "Stormy Weather (Keeps Rainin' All the Time)" the 'Screen Song' bouncing ball treatment.
Boo, Boo, Theme Song!
Director
event1933 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Ghosts sing and wash.
You Leave Me Breathless
Director
event1938
top_panel_open
A "Screen Songs" short mixing live action with cartoons. The animated section deals with what will be seen on the television sets of the future, i.e., a fountain of youth operating in Turkey, a cow mowing the lawn and feeding at the same time, and other items and then the TV set brings on Jimmy Dorsey and his Orchestra, with Bob Eberle singing "You Leave Me Breathless."
The Hills of Old Wyomin'
Director
event1936
top_panel_open
Fleischer Studios Screen Song of "The Hills of Old Wyomin'".
You Came to My Rescue
Director
event1937
top_panel_open
Shep Fields and his Orchestra perform "You Came To My Rescue."
You Took the Words Right Out of My Heart
Director
event1938 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Made by Max Fleischer as part of Paramount's "Screen Songs" series, and combining cartoon action with live performers. Opens as a cartoon showing kidding newsreel-type shots of a lion tamer, a tight-rope walker, an actor and a sweepstakes winner as caught by a candid(animation) camera. Ends with a cut to live action with Jerry Blaine and his Streamline Rhythm Orchestra playing while band vocalist Phyllis Kenny sings the title song.
Ye Olde Melodies
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Screen song by the Fleischer Studios
Yankee Doodle Boy
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Screen song from Fleischer Studios
KoKo Lamps Aladdin
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko the Clown enters a storybook and uses Aladdin's magic lamp to make his wishes come true.
Ko-Ko's Kink
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
An Inkwell Imp short.
Koko Gets Egg-Cited
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko gathers eggs on a farm while Max works on an incubator.
The Big Fun Carnival
Director
event1957
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The first of a series of 12 compilation features (number 1-12)made for theatres to use as a Saturday Matinee offering aimed strictly at children. Marian Stafford, folk-singer Jared Reed, and The Bunin Puppets appear before and after each cartoon short. All of the cartoon shorts were originally released by Paramount, and included "The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins (1943)" - Betty Boop's "Crazy Town (1932)" - "The Silly Goose/Dumme Ganslein, Der (1945)" - "The Busy Little Bears (1939)" - "Toys Will Be Toys (1949)", and other Paramount cartoons, shorts and a couple of the audience-participation Screen Song singalong shorts. Strictly sold on a "Park-the-kids-and-go-shopping" or "Cheap Baby-Sitting" basis, and, since it was geared toward the kids, there was also a bath-room break intermission about halfway through the film. New footage and some of the cartoons in Technicolor, but a few of the cartoons were black-and-white.
Flies
Director
event1922 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown is antagonized by flying insects.
The Puzzle
Director
event1923 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Koko the Clown and his creator, Max Fleischer, go on a strange journey to Puzzle Town.
It's the Cat's
Director
event1926 star_border 1
top_panel_open
Neighborhood cats come to the tiny Ko-Ko Theatre to watch Ko-Ko and Fitz stage a variety of entertaining acts, from acrobatics to high-diving to statuelike tableaux vivants.
Koko Baffles the Bulls
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
"Out of the Inkwell" cartoon by Fleischer Studios.
Mother Gooseland
Director
event1924 star_border 5
top_panel_open
"Out of the Inkwell” cartoon by Fleischer Studios.
Koko Hot After It
Director
event1926 star_border 6
top_panel_open
“Out of the Inkwell” cartoon by Fleischer Studios.
By the Light of the Silvery Moon
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
An early animated Song Car-Tune from the Fleischer Studios.
When the Midnight Choo-Choo Leaves for Alabam'
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
An early animated Song Car-Tune from the Fleischer Studios.
Oh Mabel
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
A Dave Fleischer Cartoon
Fleischer Cartoons: The Art & Inventions of Max Fleischer
Director
event2024 star_border 10
top_panel_open
A celebration of art by legendary animator Max Fleischer. Features: KoKo's Kozy Korner (1928), Somewhere in Dreamland (1936), Any Rags? (1932), Small Fry (1939), Dinah (1933), The Old Man of the Mountain (1933), and Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor (1936).
Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean
Director
event1931
top_panel_open
Al Shean performs a solo version of the classic vaudeville song "Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean".
Max Fleischer: Lost Cartoons
Director
event2015 star_border 10
top_panel_open
A series of rare Max Fleischer sound cartoon shorts released by animation historian Jerry Beck. Fleischer was a pioneer in the development of the animated cartoon and served as the head of Fleischer Studios. He brought such animated characters as Betty Boop, Koko the Clown, Popeye and Superman to the movie screen and was responsible for a number of technological innovations including the Rotoscope.
That's My Baby!
Associate Producer
event1944 star_border 5
top_panel_open
A love triangle occurs between the publisher's daughter Betty Moody. comic book artist Tim Jones, and the company's wily manipulative manager Hilton Payne. In addition, Betty's dad, Phineas Moody suffers from severe melancholy; and an emergency cure of laughter is required to save his health.
No Eyes Today
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Fleischer "Out of the Inkwell" cartoon featuring Koko
Hurray for Betty Boop
Animation Director
event1980 star_border 7.3
top_panel_open
Betty Boop runs for president in a loose storyline assembled from Fleischer cartoons redrawn by Korean animators.
In the Shade of the Old Applesauce
Director
event1931
top_panel_open
This short animation is dubbed a "Paramount Screen Souvenir" is a lost Fleischer Studios Screen Song featuring Betty Boop and Bimbo.
Marriage Wows
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Second Talkartoon by the Fleischer Studios. UCLA has nitrate elements on this title, therefore is not a lost cartoon.
Ko-Ko Squeals
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
Previously thought lost. Now discovered and restored by the Fabulous Fleischer Cartoons project. Ko-ko's adventures take him from the amusement park all the way to the palm of his human romantic adversary in this rarely seen toon.
Koko at the Circus
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Max draws a circus poster featuring Ko-Ko the Clown and Fitz the dog, but the circus owner wants them replaced with a giant. On the poster, Ko-Ko and Fitz find ways to take on their oversized rival.
Koko's Field Daze
Director
event1928
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko is up to his usual mischief as Max prepares to run a track race.
Another Bottle, Doctor
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Carrie is a chorus girl traveling with a medicine show. They stop outside a sanitarium to peddle their elixirs, not knowing the bogus sanitarium is providing bodies for an enterprising mortician.
KoKo's Klock
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Max asks Ko-Ko to act as his alarm clock before going to sleep. While Max sleeps, Ko-Ko goes to work dressing Max for the next day and replacing his surroundings so he'll be ready to go when the alarm clock rings in the morning.
The Fortune Teller
Director
event1923 star_border 5
top_panel_open
Max and Koko get mixed up with a live action gypsy fortune teller and then caught up with ghosts and monsters in this, as usual, delightful OUT OF THE INKWELL offering.
'Morning, Judge
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
After Uplift Society-champion Crabbine Hicks has the musical revue shut down, her son Buster hides the out-of-work chorus girls in their home, while Crabbine is out of town. While cooking sausage, Buster starts a fire...
Buzzy Boop at the Concert
Director
event1938 star_border 5.5
top_panel_open
Buzzy Boop at the Concert is a 1938 Fleischer Studios animated short film starring Betty Boop's young Tomboy cousin Buzzy Boop.
The Sheik of Araby
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
Dave Fleischer short.
Inklings, Issue Unknown
Director
event1927
top_panel_open
Series of animated vignettes linked by a disembodied hand which appears to be drawing the illustrations.
Koko in Toyland
Animation
event1925
top_panel_open
In this Christmas season release, Max assembles a toy train track while Ko-Ko the Clown visits a cartoon toyland, playing cops and robbers and rescuing a doll in distress.
Max Fleischer's Superman 1941-1942
Director
event2009 star_border 7.5
top_panel_open
More than just a landmark in superhero animation, Max Fleischer's Superman shorts were no less than the foundation for so many shows that succeeded it. Playing in theaters in 1941-42, only a few years after the Man of Steel made his debut in Action Comics, these 17 exciting films were produced by Fleischer and made famous the phrase "This looks like a job for Superman!" At 10 minutes, each film had just enough time to run the opening credits, establish the threat, let Lois Lane make a headstrong rush into peril, and allow Clark Kent to change to his alter ego and save the day. The films show a remarkably dynamic and atmospheric storytelling style that enables them to hold up for modern viewers. At first the films followed a science fiction-fantasy theme, but not unexpectedly for that time soon focused on wartime concerns.
Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?
Director
event1926
top_panel_open
The Fleischer Studio's ever popular Follow-the-Bouncing-Ball series began in the early 1920s when studio boss Max Fleischer was approached by songwriter Charles K. Harris (best known for "After the Ball") who wondered whether audiences could be inspired to sing along with an animated cartoon.
The Vacationers' Paradise
Director
event1942
top_panel_open
An animated travelogue instructs vacationing Northerners on proper tourism etiquette when visiting Miami Beach.
Amoozin' But Confoozin'
Producer
event1944
top_panel_open
Lil' Abner is tired of his daily environment.
The Gullible Canary
Producer
event1942
top_panel_open
A hobo crow tricks a canary out of his comfortable cage with inflated promises of happiness in the outside world.
Mass Mouse Meeting
Producer
event1943
top_panel_open
A mouse is chosen by his peers to bell the cat so they will know when he's coming. After the cat realizes that he has been duped, he plans a little surprise of his own.
The Disillusioned Bluebird
Producer
event1944
top_panel_open
A Dave Fleischer produced animated short.
Beside a Moonlit Stream
Director
event1938
top_panel_open
A lost Screen Songs cartoon.
Old Black Joe
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
A lost Screen Songs cartoon.
Daisy Bell
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
A lost Screen Songs cartoon.
Dixie
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
A lost Screen Songs cartoon.
Ko-Ko's Crib
Director
event1929
top_panel_open
Ko-Ko and Fitz are tasked with taking care of a baby.
Ça cartoon : Spécial Popeye
Animation Director
event2005
top_panel_open
Ça cartoon hosts introduce a TV special dedicated to the spinach-lover Popeye!
If You Could Shrink
Director
event1920
top_panel_open
Special photography conveys the experience of a person shrunken to one-sixteenth of an inch in height, viewing everyday objects from a new, up-close perspective.
Experiment No. 2
Director
event1919
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
Experiment No. 3
Director
event1919
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
Slides
Director
event1919
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
Poker
Director
event1920
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
Cartoonland
Director
event1921
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
The Mosquito
Director
event1922
top_panel_open
The Inkwell Clown watches a mosquito land on Max's nose as the cartoonist tries to take a nap, and later finds himself battling a giant mosquito in his cartoon world.
The Battle
Director
event1923
top_panel_open
Two artists fight with each other, as their drawn characters wage war in the studio.
Mother, Mother, Mother Pin a Rose on Me
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
The Laundry
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
Goodbye My Lady Love
Director
event1924
top_panel_open
A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Thaddeus and Arline
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
An Out of the Inkwell short.
The Sidewalks of New York
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Sailing, Sailing, Over the Bounding Main
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes.
Old Pal
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Old Folks at Home
Director
event1925
top_panel_open
A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Oh, Suzanna
Director
event1925
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Nutcracker Suite
Director
event1925
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An Out of the Inkwell short.
My Bonnie
Director
event1925
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Koko Steps Out
Director
event1925
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Ko-Ko learns to dance the Charleston from Max's real-life daughter Ruth Fleischer.
Koko Eats
Director
event1925
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An Out of the Inkwell short.
East Side, West Side
Director
event1925
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Dixie
Director
event1925
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Daisy Bell
Director
event1925
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes song.
Yak-A-Doola-Hick-A-Doola
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
When I Lost You
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
When I Leave This World Behind
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Toot Toot Tootsie
Director
event1926
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Koko and Fitz need only each other to learn the ins and outs of conducting a train.
Ta-Ra-Ra-Boom-Dee-Aye
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes.
Pack Up Your Troubles
Director
event1926
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The Screen Tune with some animation and "Pack Up Your Troubles" with a bouncing ball.
Old Black Joe
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Oh What a Pal Was Mary
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
My Wife's Gone to the Country
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Micky
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Koko's Big Catch
Director
event1924
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A Stuart reissue of the title 'Trapped' from 1923.
Koko Kidnapped
Director
event1926
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An Out of the Inkwell short.
I Love a Lassie
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Finiculee Fincula
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Everybody's Doing It
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Alexander's Ragtime Band
Director
event1926
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A mouse interrupts a music lesson with some tunes of his own.
Waiting for the Robert E. Lee
Director
event1927
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short
Tumbledown Shack in Athlone
Director
event1927
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
The Rocky Road to Dublin
Director
event1927
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Oh I Wish I Was in Michigan
Director
event1927
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
That Little Big Fellow
Director
event1927
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Telephone current (personified as an animated messenger boy) travels to and fro across telephone wires to demonstrate what happens when a call is made through the late-1920s telephone system.
Koko the Kavalier
Director
event1927
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Koko's Quest
Director
event1927
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KoKo and Fitz look into a crystal ball and are told to go East toward the crooked tree. Eager for any sort of adventure, they happily accept their quest without a question asked.
KoKo Kicks
Director
event1927
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Call Me Up Some Rainy Afternoon
Director
event1927
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
KoKo's Parade
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
KoKo's Kozy Korner
Director
event1928
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Ko-Ko and Fitz live a life of luxury in a mansion full of servants, until the fantasy is burst when they wake up in a barn.
Ko-Ko's Germ Jam
Director
event1928
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The boss has got a microscope, but it might as well be another canvas for Koko, as he delves deep into the world of germs.
Ko-Ko's Dog-Gone
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko's Chase
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko's Big Pull
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko's Bawth
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko's Act
Director
event1928
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The Boss has KoKo and Fitz put on a show. The pair can’t seem to satisfy him, but as always are successful in getting under his skin.
Ko-Ko on the Track
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko in the Rough
Director
event1928
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Ko-Ko wants to play golf and finds his life complicated by a wife.
Ko-Ko Heaves-Ho
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko Goes Over
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko Cleans Up
Director
event1928
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An Inkwell Imps short.
My Pony Boy
Director
event1929
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A Screen Songs short.
Mother, Mother, Mother Pin a Rose on Me
Director
event1929
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A Screen Songs short.
Ko-Ko's Signals
Director
event1929
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Not allowed to go to the football game, KoKo and Fitz explore the sport on their own time, unlocking some hidden potential.
Ko-Ko's Saxaphonies
Director
event1929
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An Inkwell Imps short.
Ko-Ko's Knock Down
Director
event1929
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When KoKo is sent to deliver a message to a woman across the way, things quickly get out of hand, and Fitz must come in to clean up the mess.
Goodbye My Lady Love
Director
event1929
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A Screen Songs short.
Texas in 1999
Director
event1931
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An advertising short.
Suited to a T.
Director
event1931
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An advertising short.
Step On It
Director
event1931
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With Bimbo- made for Texaco Motor Oil.
For Me and My Gal
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
I Love to Fall Asleep
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
My Sweetie
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Never Say Never
Director
event1935
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A Fleischer Studios, Inc short.
Beautiful Eyes
Director
event1926
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A Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes short.
Let's All Go to the Lobby
Director
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An animated chorus line of treats dances down a theater aisle while singing a jingle that encourages the audience to visit the concession stand.
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