Ad
related to: looney tunes merrie melodies 1950s version youtube
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
VHS – Looney Tunes Presents: Marvin the Martian: Space Tunes (reissued version) DVD – Looney Tunes Super Stars' Bugs Bunny: Hare Extraordinaire (wildscreen) Blu-ray/Digital – Looney Tunes: Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Collection, Disc 2; Streaming – Boomerang App; First WB cartoon produced in 3-D, and the only such cartoon until 2010's ...
1950-04-01 Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 2: The Hypo-Chondri-Cat* 1950-04-15 Looney Tunes Mouse Chronicles: The Chuck Jones Collection: It's Hummer Time* 1950-07-22 Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 6: Dog Gone South* 1950-08-26 Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 6: Canary Row* 1950-10-07 Looney Tunes Platinum Collection: Vol. 3: Pop ...
Originally, Merrie Melodies placed emphasis on one-shot color films in comparison to the black-and-white Looney Tunes films. After Bugs Bunny became the breakout character of Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes transitioned to color production in the early 1940s, the two series gradually lost their distinctions and shorts were assigned to each ...
Michigan Jackson [1] Frog is an animated cartoon character from the Warner Bros.' Merrie Melodies film series. Originally a one-shot character, his only appearance during the original run of the Merrie Melodies series was as the star of the One Froggy Evening short film (December 31, 1955), written by Michael Maltese and directed by Chuck Jones. [2]
Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros. Cartoons, by Jerry Beck and Will Friedwald (1989), Henry Holt, ISBN 0-8050-0894-2; Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist by Chuck Jones, published by Farrar Straus & Giroux, ISBN 0-374-12348-9; That's Not All, Folks! by Mel Blanc, Philip Bashe.
The remaining black-and-white Merrie Melodies shorts made from 1933 to 1934 and the black-and-white Looney Tunes shorts were not included in the library as the TV rights were sold to Guild Films in 1955. [18] Former Warner cartoon director Bob Clampett was hired to catalog the Warner cartoon library. Warner Bros. retained the ancillary rights ...
The ban has been continued by UA and the successive owners of the pre-August 1948 Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies. Since 1968, these shorts have not been officially broadcast on television and have only been exhibited theatrically by Warner Bros. once (in 2010, see below for more details) since their withdrawal. They have turned up, however, on ...
"Merrily We Roll Along" is a song written by Charlie Tobias, Murray Mencher, and Eddie Cantor in 1935, and used in the Merrie Melodies cartoon Billboard Frolics that same year. It is best known as the theme of Warner Bros.' Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoon series since 1936. The first two lines of Cantor's recording are: