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The Moose Hunt is a Mickey Mouse short animated film first released on April 30, 1931, as part of the Mickey Mouse film series. [1] It was the twenty-eighth Mickey Mouse short to be produced and the fourth of that year.
Moose Hunters is a 1937 American animated short film produced by Walt Disney Productions and released by United Artists. It was the 93rd short in the Mickey Mouse film series, and the fourth for that year. [2] The cartoon stars Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy on a moose hunting expedition.
The Moose Hunt: United States Traditional Animation Mother Goose Melodies: United States Traditional Animation Movie Mad: United States Traditional Animation Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean: United States Traditional Animation My Baby Just Cares for Me: United States Traditional Animation My Wife's Gone to the Country: United States Traditional ...
His first comics appearance was in the Mickey Mouse comic strip in July 1931, [22] two months after the release of The Moose Hunt. In 1938, Pluto headlined in the Silly Symphony Sunday comic strip, in an adaptation of his Silly Symphony short, Mother Pluto. [23] Pluto was later featured in several sequences of the Silly Symphony strip in 1939 ...
The following is a list of films and other media in which Mickey Mouse has appeared, only featuring projects either created or licensed by The Walt Disney Company, the originators and trademark holder of the character, and not any fair use-protected parody content, content made by other studios and artists following the character's entry into the public domain or parody content that has ...
The Moose Hunt; Moose Hunters; More Kittens; Morgan's Ghost; Moth and the Flame; Mother Goose Goes Hollywood; Mother Goose Melodies; Mother Pluto; Moving Day (1936 film)
Alpine Climbers is a 1936 American animated short film produced by Walt Disney Productions and released by United Artists.The cartoon follows Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Pluto climb the side of a mountain.
This short is one of the only two Mickey Mouse cartoons in which Pluto speaks; the other is The Moose Hunt (1931). [3] The cartoon ends with Mickey, Minnie and Pluto as "blackface stereotypes". [4] The blackface sequence has sometimes been cut on television airings. [5]