Wednesday, December 24, 2025
Christmas Eve Cartoons
To celebrate the holidays, both the eggnog and Yule log guzzle a Tom & Jerry - and watch Tom & Jerry!
After all, we eagerly look forward to watching the new Tom & Jerry Blu-ray set - and note that the Bill Hanna worked on the following Christmas season cartoon for Rudy Ising back in 1936.
In 1938-1939, MGM, with high hopes to replicate the box-office success of the Fleischer Studio's epic Popeye cartoons, produced a series based on The Katzenjammer Kids comic strip. While The Captain & The Kids cartoons, unlike Popeye, were far short of a smash hit, they're actually pretty decent, especially when directed by Friz Freleng. Here's The Captain's Christmas.
After swilling a Tom & Jerry or two, Canadians not named Bob & Doug McKenzie and Geddy Lee strongly suggest watching A Cosmic Christmas by Toronto's Nelvana Productions.
Believe it or not, Ralph Bakshi Productions made a holiday special, Christmas in Tattertown (1988), a pilot for a series that ultimately didn't sell.
In 1944, a bunch of American animators from Walt Disney Productions, led by director David Hand were offered the opportunity to set up their own studio in Great Britain by J. Arthur Rank. David Hand Productions made the Animaland and Musical Paintbox series. The following, Ginger Nutt's Christmas Circus, is Animaland's Yule offering and pretty darn entertaining.
Several of the talented crew of artists who produced the Animaland cartoons also worked on the excellent 1933 Walt Disney Silly Symphony version of The Night Before Christmas, the studio's followup to Santa's Workshop (1932)
Stop-motion animation, entymologists and bugs absolutely MUST be represented in the holiday entertainment mix, so here's The Insects' Christmas (1913) by Ladislaw Starewicz.
We finish today's Christmas Eve offering featuring a bunch of festive cartoons, including the ever-cheerful Grampy in Christmas Comes But Once A Year (1936), posted by Steve Stanchfield on Cartoon Research couple of years ago. Love how the stalwart patriarch in the first of the cartoons owns a 16mm projector and runs 1930's Terrytoons for the family on Christmas.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment