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• Final MGM cartoon with Coffee the Lion. September 21, 1935: Happy Harmonies: The Old Plantation: Rudolf Ising • First cartoon in Three-strip Technicolor not released by Disney. • First MGM cartoon with Tanner the Lion, who would be used on all color MGM cartoons until the studio's closure in 1957. October 19, 1935: Happy Harmonies ...
January 7, 1938 Man-Proof: January 14, 1938 Love Is a Headache: February 4, 1938 Everybody Sing: February 11, 1938 Of Human Hearts: February 15, 1938 Paradise for Three: February 18, 1938 A Yank at Oxford: Made by MGM-British: February 25, 1938 Arsène Lupin Returns: March 4, 1938 Merrily We Live: Presented by Hal Roach (A Hal Roach Feature ...
In March 1938, MGM hired film sales executive Fred Quimby, a man with no experience in the animation industry, [15] to set up and run the new MGM cartoon department. Among the holdovers from the Harman-Ising regime, William Hanna and Bob Allen were appointed directors, and Carmen Maxwell became production manager.
Happy Harmonies is a series of thirty-seven animated cartoons distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and produced by Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising between 1934 and 1938. [1] Produced in Technicolor, these cartoons were very similar to Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies and Warner Brothers’ Merrie Melodies musical series.
The Care Bears Movie: March 29, 1985 [fr 2] The Adventures of the American Rabbit: February 14, 1986 [fr 2] Murakami-Wolf-Swenson Films Inc. GoBots: Battle of the Rock Lords: March 21, 1986 [fr 4] Hanna-Barbera Productions Tonka Corporation: All Dogs Go to Heaven: November 17, 1989 [st 1] Sullivan Bluth Studios Rock-a-Doodle: April 3, 1992 [fr ...
In 1938, the comic strip The Captain and the Kids (Rudolph Dirks' parallel version of his own strip The Katzenjammer Kids) was adapted by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, becoming the studio's first self-produced series of theatrical cartoon short subjects, directed by William Hanna, Bob Allen, and Friz Freleng.
On Christmas Eve, two young squirrels ask their grandfather (voiced by Mel Blanc) who the "men" are in the phrase "Peace on Earth, good will to men."The grandfather explains that men went extinct when he was a young child, and that he could never make sense of the creatures, whom he perceived as like monsters due to having only ever seen them wearing gas masks and carrying guns with bayonets.
(1938) [1] Hamateur Night (1939) [1] ... MGM cartoons. The films listed below were last owned by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer when the time for their renewals came up.