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The cartoon shows Donald living as a firefighter along with his nephews. When the nephews get tired of Donald's snoring, they sound the fire alarm to wake him up, but Donald instead thinks that there is a fire so he rushes to get on the fire truck. He then comes back up to blow the horn to wake them up.
Donald's Tire Trouble is a cartoon by Walt Disney Productions, featuring their character Donald Duck. It was directed by Dick Lundy and released in 1943. [ 1 ] The cartoon pokes fun at the difficulties involved in America's rubber rationing , a consequence of World War II .
For the first act, Donald Duck recites "Mary Had a Little Lamb" and "Little Boy Blue", but when he says, "come blow your horn", the orphans disrupt the performance by loudly blowing their noses. A frustrated Donald challenges them to fight but is pulled backstage.
The Donald Duck Story (1954) A Day in the Life of Donald Duck (1956) On Vacation (1956) Where Do Stories Comes From (1956) The Plausible Impossible (1956) At Home with Donald Duck (1956) Your Host, Donald Duck (1956) Donald's Award (1957) Duck for Hire (1957) Mars and Beyond (1957) (cameo) [4] Donald's Weekend (1958) Four Tales On A Mouse (1958 ...
Donald then deliberately trips Pete, sending him literally under the grass, under some soldiers, and out again into the arsenal building, where he gets hold of several grenades, shouting "I'll blow you to parts!", and begins blowing things up to stop Donald, on the warpath against him, starting with a tree that literally flies into the air and ...
Donald is intent on building a freeway through their tree. Chip as a knight and Dale as his stead get swallowed by the tractor grabber but they escape and disable its teeth. Before Donald can smash the tree the chipmunks sabotage the tractor. Donald tries to blow them up with dynamite but they blast him in the sky instead. 22: Up a Tree: June 3 ...
Donald Duck is known in Nordic countries as Kalle Anka in Sweden, [42] Anders And in Denmark, Andrés Önd in Iceland, Donald Duck in Norway, [43] and Aku Ankka in Finland. [42] In the mid-1930s, Robert S. Hartman , a German who served as a representative of Walt Disney, visited Sweden to supervise the merchandise distribution of Sagokonst (The ...
It was later proclaimed as the best Donald Duck comic of all time by the Norwegian readers. A scene from the Disney animated feature Dumbo, where Dumbo blows square bubbles of alcohol-tinted water, might have inspired the part of the story where Donald's nephews blow square bubbles of chewing gum.