Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Michael Barrier writes, "Baby Bottleneck, like Book Revue (1946), reveals just how great Bob Clampett's impact was on the Warner Bros. cartoons in the early 1940s... As so often in Clampett's best cartoons, there is a prevailing air of hysteria and madness: The stork is drunk, inexperienced help is delivering babies to the wrong mothers, everything is a mess — and all is bliss."
Storks is a 2016 American animated comedy film co-produced by Warner Animation Group, RatPac-Dune Entertainment and Stoller Global Solutions, and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures.
Coco (Born August 10) is baby male pup who wears a red scarf around his neck. He along with his twin brother Nuts were rescued by Cinnamoroll when a white Stork got shocked by lightning during a thunderstorm, causing the bag to fall from its beak. Cinnamon, quickly flew down to catch the bag that the stork was carrying.
Richard, an orphaned sparrow, is adopted by a family of storks who raise him as one of their own. As the flock's annual winter migration nears, Claudius, his adoptive father and the leader of the flock, informs him that, as a sparrow, he is unable to migrate with them, despite the protests of Richard's adoptive brother, Max, and his adoptive mother, Aurora.
The Stork Exchange is a 1927 silent animated short film starring Krazy Kat. [1] This film was thought to be lost but has been found. It is also one of the earliest in the cartoon series to feature Manny Gould and Ben Harrison's version of Krazy, the first of few incarnations derived from George Herriman's famous character.
A stork (the same stork from Dumbo) delivers a flock of newborn lambs to their expectant mothers, but finds that he had mistakenly brought along a lion named Lambert (apparently misinterpreting its name), which was supposed to go to South Africa; one of the mother sheep, who was heartbroken at not receiving a lamb, forcefully demands the stork leave Lambert with her.
The Fox and the Stork involves a fox who invites a stork for dinner and provides soup in a dish that the stork cannot drink from, and is in turn invited for dinner by the stork and given food in a narrow jug which he cannot access. It cautions readers to follow the principle of do no harm. [55]
Baby Huey is a gigantic and naïve duckling cartoon character. He was created by Martin Taras for Paramount Pictures ' Famous Studios , and became a Paramount cartoon star during the 1950s. Huey first appeared in Quack-a-Doodle-Doo , a Paramount Noveltoon theatrical short produced in 1949 and released in 1950.