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Pussyfoot/Cleo, in contrast, is a petite and extremely cute, blue-eyed black-and-white tuxedo cat to whom Marc Antony is utterly devoted with motherly passion. The characters seem to be named as an allusion to Mark Antony and Cleopatra , who were lovers detailed in Plutarch 's Parallel Lives .
The front of the Crazy Cow box usually had a large cartoon cow, smiling cheerfully. On the box for both strawberry and chocolate Crazy Cow, the cow was white with brown spots and wore a hat and a cowbell around her neck. The back of the box often included enticements in the form of images of promotional items included for "free" in the box.
Sleepy Holler is a 1929 silent animated short film by Winkler Pictures, and stars Krazy Kat. [1] It is the character's last silent film. It is also the last film of the series to be distributed by Paramount Pictures .
Big Yella; Bigg Mixx; Captain Rik; Cinnamon and Apple; Coco the Monkey; Chocos the Bear (defunct); Cornelius Rooster; Crunchosaurus Rex; Dig 'Em the Frog; Donald Duck; Loopy Bee
According to Emi Nagashima, designer of Gudetama, the origin of the character was the start-up breakfast for Japanese workers: tamago kake gohan (raw egg on white rice). It is argued, then, that eggs have rich symbolic and metaphoric potential in terms of the millennial workers that inspired its creation. Gudetama is only the yolk, not the ...
This is a list of the 122 cartoons of the Popeye the Sailor film series produced by Famous Studios (later known as Paramount Cartoon Studios) for Paramount Pictures from 1942 to 1957, with 14 in black-and-white and 108 in color. [1]
Series Title Director Animator Release Date DVD Release Notes Mickey Mouse: The Barn Dance: Walt Disney: Ub Iwerks: March 14 "Mickey Mouse in Black and White, Volume Two" First Disney short distributed by Columbia Pictures, excluding Plane Crazy.
The Ugly Duckling is an animated black-and-white cartoon released by Walt Disney in 1931 as part of the Silly Symphonies series. This cartoon was later remade into a color version released in 1939, [1] which follows the original Andersen story much more faithfully. [1]