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The Kids in the Shoe is a 1935 short animated film produced by Max Fleischer. It is a humorous retelling of the classic nursery rhyme. It is a humorous retelling of the classic nursery rhyme. This short film was released on May 19, 1935, as part of the Color Classics collection.
Jack and Old Mac (1956) Disney Animated, Short; The Mouse that Jack Built (1959) animated short; A 1967 animated short The House That Jack Built was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. [14] The climax of the first adventure of the British fantasy series Sapphire & Steel hinged on the recitation of the rhyme. [15]
The House That Jack Built is a 1967 National Film Board of Canada animated short based on the nursery rhyme "This Is the House That Jack Built".Directed by Ron Tunis, written by Don Arioli and produced by Wolf Koenig, the eight-minute film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film, losing to Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day at the 41st Academy Awards.
Old King Cole is a Disney cartoon in the Silly Symphonies series, based on several nursery rhymes and fairy tales, including "Old King Cole". It was directed by David Hand and released on July 29, 1933. [1] It's a semi-remake of the 1931 Silly Symphony short Mother Goose Melodies, but in color, with more details and technically advanced animation.
In this short, a trio of jazz-singing jesters sing three Mother Goose nursery rhymes, while an off screen narrator explains their origins in three animated vignettes. The rhymes include: "Little Jack Horner": Thomas Horner (steward to Richard Whiting, the last abbot of Glastonbury), allegedly stealing a title deed in transit to Henry VIII of ...
Pages in category "Films based on nursery rhymes" ... Mother Goose Rock 'n' Rhyme This page was last edited on 3 April 2017, at 22:46 (UTC). Text ...
Walter Lantz produced an Oswald cartoon the same year, The Merry Old Soul, which refers to the nursery rhyme. Old King Cole makes an appearance in the 1938 Merrie Melodies short film Have You Got Any Castles.
The short was released on December 23, 1938. [2] The film parodies several Mother Goose nursery rhymes using caricatures of popular Hollywood film stars of the 1930s. The film was directed by Wilfred Jackson and was the third-to-last Silly Symphony produced.