Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stalling would eventually join Disney's studio as staff composer. [1] Art work featuring skeletons by Thomas Rowlandson that might have inspired Ub Iwerks' design of the skeletons in the short. Animation on The Skeleton Dance began in January 1929, with Ub Iwerks animating the majority of the film in almost six weeks. [1]
Original – The Skeleton Dance is a 1929 Silly Symphony animated short subject with a comedy horror theme. It was produced and directed by Walt Disney and animated by Ub Iwerks. In the film, four human skeletons dance and make music around a spooky graveyard—a modern film example of medieval European "danse macabre" imagery.
Original file (WebM audio/video file, VP9/Opus, length 5 min 31 s, 1,464 × 1,080 pixels, 12.06 Mbps overall, file size: 475.82 MB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
(which was released on DVD as Disney's Sing-Along Songs: Happy Haunting in 2006). They paired the song with the 1929 animated short film The Skeleton Dance by Ub Iwerks. [2] In 2010, YouTube user TJ Ski remade the video from the VHS tape, pairing the animated short with the song, after he was unable to find the original video online. [2] TJ Ski ...
The Haunted House borrows animation from Disney's first Silly Symphony cartoon, The Skeleton Dance, which was released earlier in 1929, although most of the sequence is new. [2] The Haunted House was Mickey's first cartoon with a horror theme and led the way to later films such as The Gorilla Mystery (1930) and The Mad Doctor (1933). [ 2 ]
A recent excavation expedition at a village in Denmark exceeded expectations when a team uncovered 50 well-preserved skeletons. Video shows Danish archaeologists uncovering 50 skeletons, rare ...
An excavation at England’s oldest hotel revealed 24 skeletons and a mix of additional bones, dating to over 1,000 years ago, buried in the hotel garden. The Old Bell Hotel has been continuously ...
This is a listing of all the animated shorts released by Warner Bros. under the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies banners between 1930 and 1939, plus the pilot film from 1929 which was used to sell the Looney Tunes series to Leon Schlesinger and Warner Bros.