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Color Rhapsody is a series of usually one-shot animated cartoon shorts produced by Charles Mintz's studio Screen Gems for Columbia Pictures. [1] They were launched in 1934, following the phenomenal success of Walt Disney 's Technicolor Silly Symphonies and Warner Bros. ' Merrie Melodies .
Holiday Land, also known as Festival of Fun Days, is a 1934 American animated short film made by Screen Gems as the first in their Color Rhapsody series. [2] It also features Screen Gems' current star, Scrappy, in his first color appearance.
Color Rhapsody (6 P) Pages in category "Columbia cartoons series and characters" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
Tashlin directed the first film in the series, the 1941 Color Rhapsody short The Fox and the Grapes, loosely based on the Aesop fable of that name. Warner Bros. animation director Chuck Jones later acknowledged this short, which features a series of blackout gags as the Fox repeatedly tries and fails to obtain a bunch of grapes in the possession of the Crow, as one of the inspirations for his ...
A Color Rhapsody cartoon that portrays the Axis dictators as animals terrorizing a forest populated by small woodland creatures. YouTube: Canada United States Stop That Tank! Ub Iwerks (uncredited) Walt Disney (producer)
Pages in category "Color Rhapsody" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
A toddler chases a frog out of his house to a nearby well where falling into the bucket, he arrives at the bottom of the well, to be magically greeted by underwater sea babies and various creatures, including the octopus law officer.
ComiColor Cartoons is a series of twenty-five animated short subjects produced by Ub Iwerks from 1933 to 1936. The series was the last produced by Iwerks Studio; after losing distributor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1934, the Iwerks studio's senior company Celebrity Pictures (run by Pat Powers) had to distribute the films itself.