Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Recap / LooneyTunesInThe30s

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Looney_Tunes_In_The_Thirties_3180.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Ah yes, the good ol' days...[[note]] Clockwise: Kitty the Cat, Beans the Cat, WesternAnimation/PorkyPig, and Oliver Owl. [[ChuckCunninghamSyndrome Raise your hand if you know any of these guys besides the third]][[/note]]]]
3
4[[note]] The release dates on some of these shorts are wrong and need to be fixed. [[/note]]
5
6[[WMG:[[center:'''[[Recap/LooneyTunes Looney Tunes filmography]]'''\
7[-'''1929-1939''' | [[Recap/LooneyTunesInThe40s 1940-1949]] | [[Recap/LooneyTunesInThe50s 1950-1959]] | [[Recap/LooneyTunesInThe60s 1960-1969]] | [[Recap/LooneyTunesInThe70sAndOnward 1970-present]]-]]]]]
8
9The ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' series was started in 1929 when [[Creator/HarmanAndIsing Hugh Harman and Rudolph Ising]], fresh off of work on Creator/{{Disney}}'s ''WesternAnimation/OswaldTheLuckyRabbit'', attempted to sell their new character, WesternAnimation/BoskoTheTalkInkKid, to Leon Schlesinger, with a [[WesternAnimation/BoskoTheTalkInkKid1929 pilot film]] that was privately screened for him. While that aspect [[WesternAnimation/OutOfTheInkwell was nothing new to cartoons then]], they had another advantage in that it was one of the earliest cartoons to incorporate lip synch with sound in animation [[note]] but definitely not the first--Max Fleischer beat them to it with 1927's "By The Light of the Silvery Moon"[[/note]]--while synchronized sound cartoons were already on the rise thanks to ''WesternAnimation/SteamboatWillie'' and [[Creator/MaxAndDaveFleischer Fleischer Studios]]' ''Song Car-Tunes'' and ''WesternAnimation/{{Talkartoons}}'', Harman and Ising's experiment successfully earned them Leon's distribution for their cartoon studio.
10
11''Looney Tunes'' officially debuted in 1930 with ''WesternAnimation/SinkinInTheBathtub'', acting as a competitor to Creator/WaltDisney's WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and WesternAnimation/SillySymphonies cartoons, relying on Bosko and friends as recurring characters and thus allowing it to rely on low budgets. '''''Merrie Melodies''''' debuted in 1931 with ''WesternAnimation/LadyPlayYourMandolin'', being a series of [[AnimatedMusicVideo Animated Music Videos]] made to promote the Warner Bros. music catalogue, and relied more on oneshot stories and characters due to its higher budgets, at least until the late 1930's. Looney Tunes would remain the lower budget series throughout the decade, while Merrie Melodies would eventually upgrade to color in 1934--something Looney Tunes would not have until 1942. These early shorts were directed by both Hugh Harman and Rudy Ising themselves.
12
13The earliest Looney Tunes are very interesting to watch, [[EarlyInstallmentWeirdness if just from a historical standpoint]]. Unlike the [[CastOfSnowflakes rich main cast and one-shot characters]] that the franchise eventually would be known and beloved for, the early Warner Bros. characters (particularly those created by Harman and Ising) tended to be [[FlatCharacter nondescript in personality]]. Bosko was a generic [[TheEveryman everyman]] character who made instruments out of anything he touched, Honey was a run-of-the-mill cutesy pie girl a la WesternAnimation/MinnieMouse, Bruno the dog was a WesternAnimation/PlutoThePup clone, and so forth. But what set Harman And Ising's shorts apart from Disney at first was just how un-Disney like they were. MickeyMousing aside, these early cartoons had very bawdy, raunchy humor that Disney was already moving on from on grounds of taste --crude humor like {{funny animal}}s [[WesternAnimation/LadyPlayYourMandolin having a beer party]], Honey being licked in the butt by Bruno the Dog in "Bosko's Holiday", Honey pulling in lingerie while taking a bath while Bosko is watching in "Sinkin' in the Bathtub", a palm tree with [[NonMammalMammaries coconuts for breasts]] in "Congo Jazz", and Bosko getting [[GroinAttack barbed wire dragged under his crotch]] in "Bosko's Store", just to name a few examples (it helped that most of these shorts were made during the pre-Code era of Hollywood movies, where a lot of movies were made that pushed the boundaries of what the Hays Code didn't allow at the time, mostly anything that was considered sexual, rude, or subversive). The early shorts were also unabashedly cartoony, with lots of broad slapstick and [[RandomEventsPlot freewheeling plots]] that Disney initially cherished, but was quickly becoming more restrained in. These early Looney Tunes also featured a self-contained world of funny animal characters, with human characters infrequently appearing, quite different from the Looney Tunes we remember today, which clearly take place on a caricatured Earth. And finally, being made when animation was still quite young as a medium, the shorts largely lack the post-modern, [[BreakingTheFourthWall fourth-wall busting]] comedy, satirical undertones and strong individual director quirks that would become hallmarks of the more famous Looney Tunes, although like the later shorts, references to pop culture of the time were still abundant.
14
15However, by the time Disney gained a significant hold in the animation industry by 1932 and 1933 with shorts like ''WesternAnimation/FlowersAndTrees'' and ''WesternAnimation/TheThreeLittlePigs'', their influence started increasing on the Looney Tunes shorts. By 1932, much of the cartoony animation was toned down considerably, the raunchy humor was neutered to the point of being almost nonexistent (though some shorts showed flashes of being risque, or at least had humor that would be considered risque to modern audiences), and plots became more anodyne. All of this was a deliberate effort by Hugh Harman to compete with Disney and their WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and WesternAnimation/SillySymphonies shorts, in spite of having vastly inferior budgets. By the time WesternAnimation/TheThreeLittlePigs made a splash, Harman began having squabbles with Leon Schlesinger over increasing their budgets, escalating to the point where he and Ising finally called it quits and left for [[Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer MGM]], along with many of their staffers, to work on their ill-fated ''WesternAnimation/HappyHarmonies'' series, taking the character and trademark rights to Bosko with them (in a wise move, they had made sure to own the rights to Bosko, so as not to repeat the ownership debacle their former boss Creator/WaltDisney had with Charles Mintz and WesternAnimation/OswaldTheLuckyRabbit).
16
17In a desperate effort to keep his cartoon studio afloat, Leon hired ex-Disney staff such as Jack King, Earl Duvall and Tom Palmer, believing he would be getting the same first rate talent that allowed Disney to create smash hits like ''...Pigs''. While they did have experience as animators and storymen while working at the larger-budget Disney studio, Leon unfortunately miscast Tom Palmer straight into the role of director, a position he had absolutely no experience with, and the results [[GoneHorriblyWrong were predictably disastrous]]--Palmer, with a team of animators, hastily cooked up a cartoon starring their replacement for Bosko: Buddy, an unappealing cartoon boy who was an even blander version of the already generic Bosko. The short, "Buddy's Day Out", was so sloppily done that upon screening, Warner Bros. rejected the cartoon. His studio in danger of falling apart, Leon called upon the help of Creator/FrizFreleng; while he had left with Harman and Ising, Friz returned just in time to edit "Buddy's Day Out" so it could be accepted. This saved the studio for the time, and Leon promptly fired Palmer, who would end up jumping over to the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] as co-director alongside former Disney alumni (and former ''Three Little Pigs'' director) Burt Gillett, and later on to the relocated Creator/FleischerStudios in Miami before vanishing from the industry.
18
19Despite this brief victory, the studio was still riddled with problems; in light of studios like [[WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts Disney]], [[Creator/FleischerStudios Fleischer]], and soon [[WesternAnimation/HappyHarmonies MGM]] stepping up the game for their cartoons, the Schlesinger studio fell far behind the other studios on a technical level, featuring low budget animation that was barely any different from the older Harman-Ising era shorts they worked on, and hopelessly dated looking compared to the competition. Even when they upgraded the Merrie Melodies to color, the cartoons production values absolutely paled in comparison to the other studios efforts. On top of that, they were still unable to shake off the pseudo-Disney influence that clung to the later Harman and Ising cartoons, instead magnifying the influence to even more unbearable, cloying levels. Worst of all, they were still stuck with the worthless character of Buddy as their mascot.
20
21Creator/FrizFreleng, in an attempt to give the studio the kick in the pants it needed (and to replace the reviled Buddy character), assembled a Merrie Melodies short that would introduce an all-new cast of characters, deriving inspiration from the ''Film/OurGang'' shorts and Friz's own childhood memories. "I Haven't Got A Hat", while not particularly different from the studio's usual product, notably introduced the series' first major star character, WesternAnimation/PorkyPig, successfully creating a likable StraightMan character, even managing to provide a distinctive stuttering voice to him, in contrast to the stock falsetto used by so many other Mickey Mouse clones. Ironically, the star role was supposed to go to Beans, the mischievous prankster cat who debuted in the same cartoon, with Porky as his sidekick, but Porky ultimately won out as the studio's mascot. But as Friz was getting by, Jack King and Earl Duvall were of no help to the studio's situation--King, like Palmer before him, was a former animator who was forced to hit the ground running as director at Schlesinger's studio, and while his cartoons were definitely a step up from Palmer's disastrous tenure, they were ultimately rather bland gag cartoons. He also unwittingly contributed to the early demise of Beans the Cat, directing him as a feline take on the bland as wheat Buddy, as opposed to Friz's trickster interpretation of the cat, which ultimately contributed to Porky becoming the studio's headlining star. Earl Duvall, despite getting to direct the studio's first color cartoon, was no better a director than King, and his very brief tenure would end in disaster when he stormed drunk into Leon's office (he was said to be a facsimile of Edward VIII--sophisticated, but often living beyond his means and with a foul behavior), demanding a raise, which prompted Leon to give him the boot. King returned to Disney, where he ironically became one of the studio's leading directors, while Duvall vanished from the industry forever (he died in 1969, the year the last original WB cartoon was made). Despite finding a new mascot, it seemed that the studio was doomed to remain a third rate Disney wannabe...
22
23That is, until a new guy, fresh from the Creator/WalterLantz cartoon studio arrived in late 1935 to take shots at directing, an animator named [[Creator/TexAvery Fred Avery]]. Having spent years animating under the great Creator/BillNolan and even occasionally directing a cartoon in the latter's steed, and having no love for the mawkish influence Disney was perpetuating throughout the cartoon industry, Tex hit the ground running with ''Gold Diggers of 49'' and began moving the studio away from its Disney roots--he allowed the animators more leeway in what they could get away with in a cartoon, and most of all, brought back the cartoony attitude of the earlier shorts, while beginning to establish his own strong comedic point of view in the shorts. The epitome of this would be the landmark short ''WesternAnimation/PorkysDuckHunt'' (the debut film of their newest star, WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck), arguably the bridge between the old and new WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes, codifying the ZanyCartoon and thus establishing a true identity for the Warner Bros. cartoon studio (which would eventually crystallize with the short ''WesternAnimation/AWildHare'' in 1940). Another crucial addition to the studio was bringing in composer Carl Stalling, whose emotional, energetic musical scores breathed a new life into the cartoons that were lacking from previous composers in the series, as well as fresh new voice talent Creator/MelBlanc.
24
25This would only be increased when director Creator/BobClampett, fresh off of animating for Avery, began directing in the B&W unit; while he was equipped with the lowest budgets (a paltry $3,000 per cartoon) and weakest animators in the studio, and only allowed to make B&W WesternAnimation/PorkyPig cartoons while dealing with strict deadlines of four weeks to slam together each cartoon, he succeeded in bringing surreal, newspaper comic-like designs, and a manic pacing mixed with cinematic sensibility, not to mention his very raw sense of comedy, into his shorts--Clampett is also notable for helping crystallize the personality of WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck in shorts like ''Wise Quacks'' and ''Porky and Daffy'', after Avery abandoned Daffy after three shorts. Director Creator/FrankTashlin, who previously had experience as an animator, gag man and newspaper cartoonist (notably running his own strip, Van Boring, for a few years), also began experimenting with his shorts with a somewhat brief run on the series, attempting more interesting camera angles, lighting and cutting techniques in the vein of live action movies--not to mention bringing much more cartoony speed, and thus faster timing, into play in his shorts, also helped by his more sardonic, earthy sense of humor, which shows in cartoons like ''Case of the Stuttering Pig'' and ''Porky's Romance'', as well as several shorts featuring celebrity caricatures, such as ''The Woods are Full of Cuckoos'' and ''WesternAnimation/HaveYouGotAnyCastles''.
26
27After Tashlin left in 1938, [[Creator/ChuckJones Charles M. Jones]], who was previously an animator for Avery and Clampett, acquired his unit and began cutting his directorial teeth, occasionally making the odd gag cartoon, but ironically still clinging to a strong Disney influence, as evident in his early cartoons with characters such as Sniffles the Mouse, a contrast from the progress the other directors were making, and also a contrast from the more esteemed shorts Jones would direct later on. Creator/FrizFreleng, the senior member of the staff who had taken over most directing duties after Harman-Ising left, stuck to making standard issue cartoons in the vein of the mid 30's shorts; a mix of gag cartoons and sentimental storytelling, until he briefly left the studio to have an ill-fated tenure on MGM's ''[[ComicStrip/TheKatzenjammerKids The Captain and the Kids]]'' series. In that time period, Ben Hardaway and Cal Dalton acquired his unit and directed several enjoyable, but otherwise unremarkable cartoons, until Friz returned in 1940.
28
29But the best had yet to come...
30
31A total of 271 shorts were released during this time, of which 163 were character-driven and 108 were one-shots.
32----
33[[folder: Milestone Shorts of This Era]]
34* [[WesternAnimation/BoskoTheTalkInkKid1929 Bosko, The Talk-Ink Kid]] (1929): Pilot for the entire franchise.
35* WesternAnimation/SinkinInTheBathtub (1930): First officially released WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes short.
36* WesternAnimation/LadyPlayYourMandolin (1931): First [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Merrie Melodies]] short.
37* WesternAnimation/HittinTheTrailForHallelujahLand (1931): One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
38* [[WesternAnimation/ItsGotMeAgain Its Got Me Again!]] (1932): First Warner Bros. short to be nominated for an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward.
39* WesternAnimation/RideHimBosko (1932): Earliest Warner Bros. short still under copyright. Also notable for a very post-modernistic ending gag.
40* WesternAnimation/BuddysDayOut (1933): First Looney Tunes short produced by the post-Creator/HarmanAndIsing studio. Debut of Buddy.
41* WesternAnimation/IveGotToSingATorchSong (1933): First Merrie Melodies short produced by the post-Creator/HarmanAndIsing studio.
42* WesternAnimation/BuddysBeerGarden (1933): Earl Duvall's directorial debut.
43* WesternAnimation/BuddyTheGob (1934): Friz Freleng's credited directorial debut at Warners.
44* WesternAnimation/HoneymoonHotel1934: First Merrie Melodies short in color.
45* WesternAnimation/BuddysBearcats (1934): Jack King's directorial debut.
46* WesternAnimation/BuddysAdventures (1934): Ben Hardaway's directorial debut.
47* WesternAnimation/IHaventGotAHat (1935): Debut of WesternAnimation/PorkyPig and Beans the Cat.
48* WesternAnimation/GoldDiggersOf49 (1935): First short that Creator/TexAvery directed at Warners.
49* WesternAnimation/PageMissGlory (1936)
50* WesternAnimation/ILoveToSinga (1936)
51* WesternAnimation/SundayGoToMeetinTime (1936): One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
52* WesternAnimation/PorkysPoultryPlant (1936): Directorial debut of Frank Tashlin, and first to have Carl Stalling composing the music.
53* WesternAnimation/{{Pigs Is Pigs|1937}} (1937): Simpsons creator Matt Groening's all time favorite cartoon.
54* WesternAnimation/PicadorPorky (1937): First short with Creator/MelBlanc providing voice work.
55* WesternAnimation/PorkysRomance (1937): Debut of Petunia Pig.
56* WesternAnimation/PorkysDuckHunt (1937): Debut of WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck.
57* WesternAnimation/CleanPastures (1937): One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
58* WesternAnimation/UncleTomsBungalow (1937): One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
59* WesternAnimation/PorkysBadtimeStory (1937): Directorial debut of Creator/BobClampett.
60* WesternAnimation/DaffyDuckAndEgghead (1938): First solo WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck short, and his first short in color.
61* WesternAnimation/JungleJitters (1938): One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven.
62* WesternAnimation/PorkysParty (1938)
63* WesternAnimation/PorkysPhonyExpress (1938): First short directed by Cal Howard and Cal Dalton.
64* WesternAnimation/PorkysHareHunt (1938): Debut of the WesternAnimation/BugsBunny prototype.
65* WesternAnimation/TheIsleOfPingoPongo (1938): One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven. First of Avery's travelogue parodies.
66
67* Katnip Kollege (MM) 6-11: Cal Howard, Cal Dalton: First time both directors would co-direct a short together.
68
69* [[WesternAnimation/PorkyAndDaffy Porky & Daffy]] (1938): First team-up of the duo.
70* WesternAnimation/CinderellaMeetsFella (1938): An Egghead short.
71* WesternAnimation/WhollySmoke (1938)
72* WesternAnimation/PorkyInWackyland (1938)
73* WesternAnimation/TheNightWatchman (1938): Directorial debut of Creator/ChuckJones.
74* WesternAnimation/PrestoChangeo (1939): Second appearance of the Proto-Bugs.
75* WesternAnimation/DaffyDuckAndTheDinosaur (1939): First Creator/ChuckJones-directed WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck short.
76* WesternAnimation/ThugsWithDirtyMugs (1939)
77* WesternAnimation/NaughtyButMice (1939): Debut of Sniffles the Mouse.
78* WesternAnimation/OldGlory (1939)
79* [[WesternAnimation/HareUmScareUm Hare-Um Scare-Um]] (1939): Third appearance of the WesternAnimation/BugsBunny prototype.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder: Characters Debuting in This Era]]
83* WesternAnimation/BoskoTheTalkInkKid (Debut; "Bosko, The Talk-Ink Kid", 1929) Appears in 40 shorts total.
84* Foxy (Debut; "Lady Play Your Mandolin", 1931) Appears in 3 shorts.
85* Piggy (Debut; "You Don't Know What Your Doin'!", 1931) Appears in 2 shorts.
86* Goopy Geer (Debut; "Goopy Geer", 1932) Appears in 4 shorts.
87* Buddy (Debut; "Buddy's Day Out", 1933) Appears in 23 shorts.
88* WesternAnimation/PorkyPig (Debut; "I Haven't Got A Hat", 1935) Appears in 69 shorts, five of which are shared with Daffy Duck.
89* Beans the Cat (Debut; "I Haven't Got A Hat", 1935) Appears in 8 shorts, some of which are shared with Porky Pig and Ham and Ex.
90* Ham and Ex The Pups (Debut; "I Haven't Got A Hat", 1935) Appears in four shorts, one entirely to themselves, three with Beans and/or Porky.
91* Kitty Cat (Debut; "I Haven't Got A Hat", 1935) Appears in 5 shorts, all shared with Porky Pig and/or Beans The Cat.
92* Gabby Goat (Debut; "Porky And Gabby", 1937) Appears in three shorts, all shared with Porky Pig.
93* WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck (Debut; "Porky's Duck Hunt, 1937) Appears in 10 shorts during this period, five of which are shared with Porky.
94* Egghead (Debut; "Egghead Rides Again", 1937) An odd recurring character of Avery's cartoons, considered by some to be a prototype of Elmer Fudd. He appeared in 12 shorts total.
95* Happy Hare/Proto-Bugs/Bugs' Bunny (Debut; "Porky's Hare Hunt", 1938) Appears in 3 shorts.
96* The Curious Pups (Debut; "Dog Gone Modern", 1939)
97* Sniffles The Mouse (Debut; "Naughty But Mice", 1939) Appeared in three shorts during 1939.
98* Inki (Debut; "Little Lion Hunter", 1939) Appeared in one short during this period.
99
100[[/folder]]
101----
102
103!1929
104[[index]]
105* [[WesternAnimation/BoskoTheTalkInkKid1929 Bosko, The Talk-Ink Kid]] (LT): The original pilot for the WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes series. While it never saw a theatrical release, it is still an imporant part of the series history. It is also notable for being one of the earliest cartoon to have synchronized ''speech''.
106
107!1930: All entries are WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes. All cartoons are directed by Creator/HarmanAndIsing.
108
109* WesternAnimation/SinkinInTheBathtub (LT) 4-19-1930: The first Looney Tunes short to ever be released in theaters. Public Domain.
110[[/index]]
111* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xh8xb387-yc Congo Jazz]] (LT) 9-XX-1930: PublicDomain.
112* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-ghTd-n6Fs Hold Anything]] (LT) 10-XX-1930: Features music from the lost sound film "Hold Everything". PublicDomain.
113* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSt0YZZEQXg The Booze Hangs High]] (LT) 11-XX-1930: PublicDomain
114* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x6aoEo3d5BM&feature=fvwrel Box Car Blues]] (LT) 12-XX-1930: PublicDomain.
115
116!1931: All cartoons before "Lady, Play Your Mandolin!" are directed by Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising. All Merrie Melodies cartoons are directed by Rudolf Ising, and all Looney Tunes cartoons after "The Tree's Knees" are directed by Hugh Harman.
117
118* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4z73MBcObs Big Man From the North]] (LT) 1-XX-1931: PublicDomain.
119* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtMSHA6yV94 Ain't Nature Grand]] (LT) 3-XX-1931: PublicDomain.
120* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnkJM_AU1ag Ups 'n Downs]] (LT) 3-XX-1931: Notable for having a completely different ending in its [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cz_Zg6M3s2I colorized version]]. PublicDomain.
121* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oe1cYboU6i4 Dumb Patrol]] (LT) 5-XX-1931: Same title as the 1964 WesternAnimation/BugsBunny short. PublicDomain.
122* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNP26EWHHio&playnext=1&list=PL9B5143C15FB8AE3D Yodeling Yokels]] (LT) 6-XX-31: PublicDomain.
123* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OoCLDgqWOyo Bosko's Holiday]] (LT) 7-XX-1931: PublicDomain.
124* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d36Vb-0unCY The Tree's Knees]] (LT) 7-XX-1931: PublicDomain.
125[[index]]
126* WesternAnimation/LadyPlayYourMandolin (MM) 8-XX-1931: The first of the [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Merrie Melodies]] series. Debut of Foxy. Public Domain.
127[[/index]]
128* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R78jw_Sk7hs Smile, Darn Ya, Smile]] (MM) 9-05-1931: Second appearance of Foxy. PublicDomain.
129* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bhvFh3AmCWk Bosko Shipwrecked]] (LT) 9-19-1931: PublicDomain.
130* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3rRJBkc6kQ One More Time]] (MM) 10-3-1931: Last appearance of Foxy, due to Creator/WaltDisney ordering Rudy Ising to stop using the [[CaptainErsatz blatantly plagaristic]] WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse clone. PublicDomain.
131* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCjMEUBEFFI Bosko the Doughboy]] (LT) 10-17-1931: PublicDomain.
132* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6YqZ3pDBUw You Don't Know What You're Doin']] (MM) 10-31-1931: Debut of Piggy. PublicDomain.
133* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ykscTA8H1Y Bosko's Soda Fountain]] (LT) 11-14-1931: PublicDomain.
134[[index]]
135* WesternAnimation/HittinTheTrailForHallelujahLand (MM) 11-28-1931: One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven (the first entry and possibly the least offensive of the eleven). Second and last appearance of Piggy. Public Domain.
136[[/index]]
137* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fffbPRXZ_k Bosko's Fox Hunt]] (LT) 12-12-1931: PublicDomain.
138* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bihkqWZrEwc Red-Headed Baby]] (MM) 12-26-1931: PublicDomain
139
140!1932: All Looney Tunes directed by Hugh Harman, all Merrie Melodies directed by Rudy Ising.
141
142* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSYX3TC1zjM Bosko at the Zoo]] (LT) 1-9-1932: PublicDomain.
143* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ap60539utnA Pagan Moon]] (MM) 1-23-1932: First Merrie Melodies to have [[AmbiguouslyHuman anything resembling human]] characters. PublicDomain.
144* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2EEdFgMjYU Battling Bosko]] (LT) 2-6-1932: PublicDomain.
145* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Ur4dKPW8js Freddy the Freshman]] (MM) 2-20-1932: PublicDomain.
146* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dspt1XPvWsE Big-Hearted Bosko]] (LT) 3-5-1932: PublicDomain.
147* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9GF6BuPhIU Crosby, Columbo, and Vallee]] (MM) 3-19-1932 PublicDomain.
148* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yp7cbHxtt5I Bosko's Party]] (LT) 4-2-1932: PublicDomain.
149* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luDOo5daqkk Goopy Geer]] (MM) 4-16-1932: Debut of Goopy Geer. PublicDomain.
150* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nph03gb3ZJw Bosko and Bruno]] (LT) 4-30-1932: PublicDomain.
151[[index]]
152* WesternAnimation/ItsGotMeAgain (MM) 5-14-1932: First WB cartoon to recieve an Oscar nomination. Public Domain.
153[[/index]]
154* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTHqvgUYdN4 Moonlight For Two]] (MM) 6-11-1932: Second appearance of Goopy Geer. PublicDomain.
155* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFgppNchGYU Bosko's Dog Race]] (LT) 6-25-1932: PublicDomain.
156* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIeW8sG4KbU The Queen Was in the Parlor]] (MM) 7-9-1932: Third appearance of Goopy Geer. PublicDomain.
157* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQQMAQL0GsM Bosko at the Beach]] (LT) 7-23-1932: PublicDomain.
158* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kpr682j5DA I Love a Parade]] (MM) 8-6-1932: PublicDomain.
159* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LD6Ynm3eZ0 Bosko's Store]] (LT) 8-13-1932: PublicDomain.
160* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocOgdxl21Pw Bosko the Lumberjack]] (LT) 9-3-1932: PublicDomain.
161* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YsTLJw_hTY You're Too Careless With Your Kisses]] (MM) 9-10-1932: PublicDomain.
162[[index]]
163* WesternAnimation/RideHimBosko (LT) 9-17-1932: Notable for an ending gag that would almost count as a foreshadowing of the humor that would appear in later WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes. It is also the earliest Warner Bros. cartoon still under copyright.
164[[/index]]
165* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=diugTJrzhCA I Wish I Had Wings]] (MM) 10-15-1932: PublicDomain.
166* Bosko the Drawback (LT) 10-22-1932
167* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvVQkEg2-vk A Great Big Bunch of You]] (MM) 11-12-1932: PublicDomain.
168* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DWcC5WPSJc Bosko's Dizzy Date]] (LT) 11-19-1932: Also exists under an alternate title, "Bosko and Honey". PublicDomain.
169* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3yXUh8Vaqo&playnext=1&list=PL496A1568DD645CB4&feature=results_video Three's a Crowd]] (MM) 12-10-1932: PublicDomain.
170* Bosko's Woodland Daze (LT) 12-17-1932
171
172!1933 All Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies prior to Buddy's Day Out are directed by Hugh Harman and Rudy Ising respectively.
173
174* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ZIMtBChvbI The Shanty Where Santy Claus Lives]] (MM) 1-7-33: PublicDomain.
175* Bosko in Dutch (LT) 1-14-33
176* One Step Ahead of My Shadow (MM) 2-4-33 Possibly PublicDomain
177* Bosko in Person (LT) 2-11-33
178* Young and Healthy (MM) 3-4-33 Earliest MM still under copyright.
179* Bosko the Speed King (LT) 3-11-33
180* The Organ Grinder (MM) 4-8-33
181* Bosko's Knight-Mare (LT) 4-29-33
182* Wake Up the Gypsy in Me (MM) 5-13-33
183* Bosko the Sheepherder (LT) 6-3-33
184* I Like Mountain Music (MM) 6-10-33
185* Beau Bosko (LT) 7-1-33
186* Shuffle Off to Buffalo (MM) 7-8-33
187* WesternAnimation/BoskosMechanicalMan (LT) 7-29-33
188* The Dish Ran Away With the Spoon (MM) 8-5-33
189* Bosko the Musketeer (LT) 8-12-33
190* We're in the Money (MM) 8-26-33
191* Bosko's Picture Show (LT) 8-26-33: Last appearance of Bosko in a Warner Bros. cartoon. Co-directed by Friz Freleng.
192[[index]]
193* WesternAnimation/BuddysDayOut (LT) 9-9-33: Debut of Buddy. First post-Harman And Ising Looney Tune. Directed by Tom Palmer.
194* WesternAnimation/IveGotToSingATorchSong (MM): 9-30-33 Palmer: First post-Harman And Ising Merrie Melody.
195* WesternAnimation/BuddysBeerGarden (LT) 11-18-33 Earl Duvall: Directorial debut of Earl Duvall.
196[[/index]]
197* Buddy's Show Boat (LT) 12-9-33 Earl Duvall
198* Sittin' On a Backyard Fence (MM) 12-16-33 Earl Duvall
199
200!1934
201[[index]]
202* WesternAnimation/BuddyTheGob (LT) 1-13-34: First Warner Bros. cartoon fully directed by Creator/FrizFreleng.
203* Pettin' in the Park (MM) 1-27-34 Bernard Brown.
204* WesternAnimation/HoneymoonHotel1934 (MM) 2-17-34 Earl Duvall: First WB cartoon in color (shot in Cinecolor).
205* Buddy and Towser (LT) 2-24-34 Freleng
206* Buddy's Garage (LT) 4-14-34 Earl Duvall: Last cartoon directed by Mr. Duvall before he was fired. Shot in Cinecolor.
207* [[WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast1934 Beauty and the Beast]] (MM) 4-14-34 Freleng
208* Those Were Wonderful Days (MM) 4-26-34 Bernard Brown.
209* Buddy's Trolley Troubles (LT) 5-5-34 Freleng
210* Goin' to Heaven on a Mule (MM) 5-19-34 Freleng
211* Buddy of the Apes (LT) 5-26-34 Ben Hardaway
212* How Do I Know It's Sunday (MM) 6-9-34 Freleng
213* WesternAnimation/BuddysBearcats (LT) 6-23-34: First WB cartoon directed by Jack King.
214* Why Do I Dream These Dreams (MM) 6-30-34 Freleng
215* Buddy's Circus (LT) 8-25-34 Jack King
216* The Miller's Daughter (MM) 9-8-34 Freleng
217* Buddy the Detective (LT) 9-15-34 Jack King
218* The Girl at the Ironing Board (MM) 9-15-34 Freleng
219* Viva Buddy (LT) 9-29-34 Jack King
220* Shake Your Powder Puff (MM) 9-29-34 Freleng
221* Buddy The Woodsman (LT) 10-20-34 Jack King
222* Rhythm in the Bow (MM) 10-20-34 Ben Hardaway: Last Merrie Melody in black-and-white.
223* Those Beautiful Dames (MM) 11-10-34 Freleng: First WB cartoon in Technicolor (2-strip).
224* WesternAnimation/BuddysAdventures (LT) 11-17-34 Hardaway
225* Pop Goes Your Heart (MM) 12-8-34 Freleng
226* Buddy the Dentist (LT) 12-15-34 Hardaway
227
228!1935
229
230* Mr. and Mrs. Is the Name (MM) 1-19 Freleng
231* The Country Boy (MM) 2-09 Freleng: A loose adaptation of Creator/BeatrixPotter's ''[[Literature/TheTaleOfPeterRabbit Peter Rabbit]]''
232* Buddy's Theatre (LT) 2-16 Hardaway
233* WesternAnimation/IHaventGotAHat (MM) 3-09: Debut of WesternAnimation/PorkyPig, Beans the Cat, Oliver Owl, Kitty, Ham and Ex. Freleng
234* Buddy's Pony Express (LT) 3-09 Hardaway
235* Along Flirtation Walk (MM) 4-06 Friz Freleng
236* Buddy of the Legion (LT) 4-06 Hardaway
237* My Green Fedora (MM) 5-04 Freleng
238* Buddy's Lost World (LT) 5-18 Jack King
239* Into Your Dance (MM) 6-08 Freleng
240* Buddy's Bug Hunt (LT) 6-22 Jack King
241* Buddy in Africa (LT) 7-06 Hardaway
242* The Country Mouse (MM) 7-13 Freleng
243* Buddy Steps Out (LT) 7-20 Jack King
244* The Merry Old Soul (MM) 8-17 Friz Freleng
245* Buddy the Gee Man (LT): Last appearance of Buddy. 8-24 Jack King
246* The Lady in Red (MM) 9-07 Freleng
247* A Cartoonist's Nightmare (LT) 9-21 Jack King
248* Hollywood Capers (LT) 10-19 King. Public Domain.
249* Little Dutch Plate (MM) 10-19 Freleng
250* WesternAnimation/GoldDiggersOf49 (LT) 11-02: First short directed by Creator/TexAvery, billed as a Beans the Cat cartoon. Porky Pig makes his second appearance here, curiously redesigned into a deep voiced, adult character.
251* Billboard Frolics (MM) 11-09: First use of "Merrily We Roll Along", the Merrie Melodies theme--but as the theme of the short, not the title. Freleng
252* Flowers For Madame (MM) 11-20 Freleng: First WB cartoon in 3-strip Technicolor.
253
254!1936
255
256* I Wanna Play House (MM) 1-11 First usage of the concentric ring intro that would become a ''Looney Tunes'' trademark. Freleng
257* Alpine Antics (LT) Jack King: One of the eight Beans the Cat cartoons.
258* The Cat Came Back (MM) Introduction of the zooming-in WB shield that would appear on all cartoons. Introduction of the ''Vitaphone Presents'' byline instead of ''Warner Bros. Present'' (this would be reverted in 1939). Freleng
259* The Phantom Ship (LT) Jack King
260* WesternAnimation/BoomBoom (LT): Third appearance of Porky Pig. Billed a Beans the Cat cartoon. Jack King. Public Domain.
261* The Fire Alarm (LT): Another Beans the Cat cartoon. Guest starring Ham and Ex the pups. Jack King
262* I'm A Big Shot Now (MM) 4-11 Freleng
263* WesternAnimation/TheBlowOut (LT) 4-24: Fourth appearance of Porky Pig. Avery
264* Westword Whoa (LT) 4-25 Jack King. Public Domain.
265* Plane Dippy (LT) 4-30 Tex Avery: Fifth appearance of Porky Pig. Avery
266* Let It Be Me (MM) 5-09 Freleng
267* Fish Tales (LT) 5-23 Jack King Final to use WARNER BROS. PRODUCTION CORP.
268* I'd Love to Take Orders From You (MM) 5-25 Avery
269[[/index]]
270* Bingo Crosbyana (MM) 5-30: Features a parody of Music/BingCrosby as a fly. Crosby did not take this well, suing the studio for this insulting caricature. Freleng
271[[index]]
272* WesternAnimation/PageMissGlory (MM) 6-09 Avery: One of Tex's non-comedic works. Notable for its art deco backgrounds, which were surprisingly modern looking for the time period. While the song may be in the public domain, the cartoon is still under copyright.
273* Shanghied Shipmates (LT) 6-20 King
274* When I Yoo Hoo (MM) 6-20 Freleng
275* Porky's Pet (LT) 7-11 King
276* WesternAnimation/ILoveToSinga (MM) 7-18 Avery: Semi-remake of "My Green Fedora", but more street smart in humor--a hallmark of Avery's shorts.
277* WesternAnimation/PorkyTheRainmaker (LT) 8-01 Avery
278* WesternAnimation/SundayGoToMeetinTime (MM) 8-08: One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven. Freleng
279* WesternAnimation/PorkysPoultryPlant (LT) 8-22: Directorial debut of Frank Tashlin. First Looney Tunes short to have Carl Stalling composing the music.
280* At Your Service Madame (MM) 8-29 Freleng
281* Porky's Moving Day (LT) 9-12 King: Last Warner Bros. cartoon directed by Jack King. Public Domain.
282* Toy Town Hall (MM) 9-19 Freleng
283* Boulevardier From the Bronx (MM) 10-10: Freleng. Notable for being the first ''Merrie Melodies'' cartoon to use "Merrily We Roll Along" as its theme tune.
284* Little Beau Porky (LT) 10-14 Tashlin
285* The Coo-Coo Nut Grove (MM) 11-28 Freleng. Notable for designs provided by Thorton "T" Hee, a famous caricaturist of the day.
286[[/index]]
287* The Village Smithy (LT) 12-05: Avery. First short to use an InteractiveNarrator--a technique that Creator/TexAvery later claimed was stolen by Disney for their WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} cartoons--the only gag that Disney stole from them, in fact!
288[[index]]
289* Porky in the North Woods (LT) 12-19 Tashlin First to use the Porky signature theme.
290* Milk and Money (LT) 12-28 Avery
291* Don't Look Now (MM) 12-30 Avery
292
293!1937
294
295* He Was Her Man (MM) 1-02 Freleng
296* Porky the Wrestler (LT) 1-09 Avery
297* WesternAnimation/{{Pigs Is Pigs|1937}} (MM) 1-09: Freleng. The first Merrie Melody to not feature a song. Said to be the favorite cartoon of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' creator Matt Groening (who used the force-feeding gag from this cartoon on the Halloween episode where Homer sells his soul to the Devil so he can get a doughnut). Has the same title as a [[WesternAnimation/PigsIsPigs1954 1950s Disney's short.]]
298* Porky's Road Race (LT) 2-07: Tashlin
299* WesternAnimation/PicadorPorky (LT) 2-27: Avery. First short to have Creator/MelBlanc doing voice work.
300* The Fella With the Fiddle (MM) 3-27: Freleng
301* WesternAnimation/PorkysRomance (LT) 4-03: Tashlin. First appearance of Petunia Pig
302* She Was an Acrobat's Daughter (MM) 4-10: Freleng
303* WesternAnimation/PorkysDuckHunt (LT) 4-17: Debut of WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck. Avery
304[[/index]]
305* WesternAnimation/PorkyAndGabby (LT) 5-15: First of the two outsourced Looney Tune shorts. Allegedly directed by Creator/UbIwerks, but Creator/ChuckJones claimed he and Clampett co-directed it.
306[[index]]
307* I Only Have Eyes For You (MM) 5-18: Avery
308* WesternAnimation/CleanPastures (MM) 5-22 Freleng: One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven. In a stunning example of ValuesDissonance, this cartoon was nearly banned by the Hays Office for making fun of religion by showing black people as heavenly beings. (These days, the black caricatures would cause a panic with censors. The religious references might still, but considering the "EverythingIsRacist" mentality of today's society, the references to religion and how humanity is losing its moral code are lost here.) [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean_Pastures#Production_and_distribution Read more about it here]].
309[[/index]]
310* WesternAnimation/PorkysBuilding (LT) 6-19: Tashin
311* Streamlined Greta Green (MM) 6-19: Freleng: This short would later be remade by Tex Avery at MGM as [[WesternAnimation/TexAveryMGMCartoons "One Cab's Family".]]
312* Sweet Sioux (MM) 6-26: Freleng
313* Porky's Super Service (LT) 7-03: Second of the two outsourced Looney Tunes. Allegedly directed by Creator/UbIwerks, but was apparently co-directed by Clampett and Jones.
314[[index]]
315* [[WesternAnimation/UncleTomsBungalow Uncle Tom's Bungalow]] (MM) 7-12: One of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven. Avery
316* WesternAnimation/EggheadRidesAgain (MM) 7-17: Debut of Egghead. First cartoon to have the WB shield animation accompanied by the distinctive "zoom" sound. Avery
317* WesternAnimation/PorkysBadtimeStory (LT) 7-24: Directorial debut of Creator/BobClampett. Second appearance of Gabby Goat. First to have Porky signature in the ending.
318* Plenty of Money and You (MM) 7-31: Freleng First to have Merrily We Roll Along in the ending.
319* Ain't We Got Fun (MM) 8-02: Avery
320* WesternAnimation/PorkysRailroad (LT) 8-07: Tashlin. Public Domain.
321* WesternAnimation/GetRichQuickPorky (LT) 8-28: Clampett: Public Domain. Third and final appearance of Gabby Goat.
322* Speaking of the Weather (MM) 9-04: Tashlin: First of Tashlin's three "Things Come To Life In a Bookstore" parodies.
323* WesternAnimation/PorkysGarden (LT) 9-11: Avery. Public Domain.
324* Dog Daze (MM) 9-18: Freleng
325* I Wanna Be a Sailor (MM)9-25: Avery: Public Domain.
326* WesternAnimation/RoversRival (LT) 10-09: Clampett: A Porky Pig short. First cartoon to use "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" as the official theme for the Looney Tunes series and the first cartoon to have the "Porky breaks out of the drum" ending card.
327* The Lyin' Mouse (MM) 10-16: Freleng
328* WesternAnimation/TheCaseOfTheStutteringPig (LT) 10-30: Tashlin: A Porky Pig short.
329* Porky's Double Trouble (LT) 11-13: Tashlin.
330* Egghead Rides Again (MM) 11-29: Avery. Debut of Egghead.
331* A Sunbonnet Blue (MM) 12-01 Avery
332* [[WesternAnimation/PorkysHeroAgency Porky's Hero Agency]] (LT) 12-04: Clampett
333* The Woods Are Full Of Cuckoos (MM) 12-04: Tashlin
334* September in the Rain (MM) 12-18: Freleng
335[[/index]]
336* Little Red Walking Hood (MM) 12-23: Avery. Guest-starring Egghead. Notable for the bulk of the animation being handled by later WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry animator Irv Spence.
337
338!1938
339[[index]]
340* WesternAnimation/DaffyDuckAndEgghead (MM) 1-01: Second appearance of WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck, first where he is named. Avery
341* WesternAnimation/PorkysPoppa (LT) 1-15: Clampett
342* My Little Buckeroo (MM) 1-29: Freleng
343* Porky at the Crocadero (LT) 2-05: Tashlin
344* WesternAnimation/JungleJitters (MM) 2-19: Part of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven. Freleng. Public Domain.
345* What Price Porky (LT) 2-26: Clampett
346* The Sneezing Weasel (MM) 3-12: Avery
347* WesternAnimation/PorkysPhonyExpress (LT) 3-19: Cal Howard, Cal Dalton: First short directed by Cal Howard and Cal Dalton.
348* A Star is Hatched (MM) 4-02: Freleng
349* WesternAnimation/PorkysFiveAndTen (LT) 4-16: Clampett
350* The Penguin Parade (MM) 4-23: Avery
351* WesternAnimation/PorkysHareHunt (LT) 4-30: Debut of the alleged WesternAnimation/BugsBunny prototype. The first cartoon directed by Ben Hardaway since 1935’s ''Buddy in Africa''.
352* Now That Summer is Gone (MM) 5-14: Tashlin
353* [[WesternAnimation/InjunTrouble1938 Injun Trouble]] (LT) 5-21: Same name as the 1969 Looney Tunes short.[[note]]That latter one being the last Looney Tunes cartoon ever[[/note]] Clampett
354* WesternAnimation/TheIsleOfPingoPongo (MM) 5-28: Part of the WesternAnimation/CensoredEleven. Avery
355* Porky the Fireman (LT) 6-04: Tashlin
356* Katnip Kollege (MM) 6-11: Cal Howard, Cal Dalton
357* WesternAnimation/HaveYouGotAnyCastles (MM) 6-25: Tashlin: The second of Tashlin's three parodies of the "Things come to life in a bookstore" cartoons. Notable for a once-lost scene containing Alexander Woolcott as a town crier, which was found and restored for the second Golden Collection. PublicDomain.
358* WesternAnimation/PorkysParty (LT) 6-25: Clampett
359* Love and Curses (MM) 7-09: Hardaway, Dalton
360* WesternAnimation/PorkysSpringPlanting (LT) 7-16: Tashlin
361* WesternAnimation/CinderellaMeetsFella (MM) 7-23: Avery
362* WesternAnimation/PorkyAndDaffy (LT) 8-06: Clampett: First team-up of the duo.
363* The Major Lied Till Dawn (MM) 8-13: Tashlin
364* A-Lad-In Bagdad (MM) 8-27: Cal Howard, Cal Dalton
365* WesternAnimation/WhollySmoke (LT) 8-27: Tashlin: A Porky Pig short.
366* Cracked Ice (MM) 9-10: Tashlin
367* A Feud There Was (MM) 9-24: Avery
368* WesternAnimation/PorkyInWackyland (LT) 9-24: Clampett.
369* Little Pancho Vanilla (MM) 10-08 Tashlin
370* WesternAnimation/PorkysNaughtyNephew (LT) 10-15: Clampett
371* Johnny Smith and Poker-Huntas (MM) 10-22: Avery
372* WesternAnimation/PorkyInEgypt (LT) 11-05: Clampett ([[Creator/JohnKricfalusi John K.]] has stated that this cartoon is where he got the idea for the scene in [[WesternAnimation/RenAndStimpy "The Royal Canadian Kilted Yaksmen"]] where one of the yaks goes crazy).
373* You're an Education (MM) 11-05: Tashlin: The third of his "Things come to life in a store" parodies.
374* WesternAnimation/TheNightWatchman (MM) 11-19: Creator/ChuckJones' directorial debut.
375* WesternAnimation/TheDaffyDoc (LT) 11-26: Clampett: Starring Daffy Duck and Porky Pig.
376* WesternAnimation/DaffyDuckInHollywood (MM) 12-03: Last WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck short that Tex Avery directed.
377* WesternAnimation/CountMeOut (MM) 12-17 Hardaway, Dalton
378* Porky the Gob (LT) 12-17 Hardaway, Dalton
379* WesternAnimation/TheMiceWillPlay (MM) 12-31 Avery
380
381!1939
382
383* WesternAnimation/TheLoneStrangerAndPorky (LT) 1-07: Clampett
384* Dog Gone Modern (MM) 1-14: Jones: First appearance of his Curious Puppies characters.
385* WesternAnimation/HamatuerNight (MM) 1-28: Avery. Public Domain.
386* It's an Ill Wind (LT) 1-28: Hardaway, Dalton
387* Robin Hood Makes Good (MM) 2-11: Jones. Public Domain.
388* Porky's Tire Trouble (LT) 2-18: Clampett
389* Gold Rush Daze (MM) 2-25: Hardaway, Dalton
390* WesternAnimation/ADayAtTheZoo (MM) 3-11: Avery. Public Domain.
391* WesternAnimation/PorkysMovieMystery (LT) 3-11: Clampett
392* Prest-o, Change-o (MM) 3-25: Second appearance of the so-called WesternAnimation/BugsBunny prototype, second appearance of the Curious Puppies. Jones. Public Domain.
393* Chicken Jitters (LT) 4-01: Clampett Public Domain.
394* Bars and Stripes Forever (MM) 4-08: Hardaway, Dalton. Public Domain.
395* WesternAnimation/DaffyDuckAndTheDinosaur (MM) 4-22: Jones: Chuck's first usage of Daffy Duck. Public Domain.
396* Porky and Teabiscuit (LT) 4-22: Tashlin
397* WesternAnimation/ThugsWithDirtyMugs (MM) 5-06: Avery: An ambitious spoof of Creator/WarnerBros gangster pictures. Public Domain.
398* Kristopher Kolombus Jr. (LT) 5-13: Clampett
399* WesternAnimation/NaughtyButMice (MM) 5-20: Debut of Sniffles The Mouse. Jones
400* Hobo Gadget Band (MM) 5-27: Hardaway, Dalton. Last Merrie Melody to be named after a song.
401* Polar Pals (LT) 6-03: Clampett
402* Scalp Trouble (LT) 6-24: Clampett: A Porky and Daffy short.
403* Believe it, or Else (MM) 6-25: Last appearance of Egghead. Avery
404* WesternAnimation/OldGlory (MM) 7-01: Jones: One of the most un-Creator/WarnerBros like cartoons ever made. Starring Porky Pig.
405* Dangerous Dan [=McFoo=] (MM) 7-15 Avery
406* Porky's Picnic (LT) 7-15 Clampett
407* Snowman's Land (MM) 7-29 Jones
408* Wise Quacks (LT) 8-05: Starring Porky and Daffy. Clampett.
409* [[WesternAnimation/HareUmScareUm Hare-Um Scare-Um]] (MM) 8-12: Third appearance of the WesternAnimation/BugsBunny prototype. Hardaway, Dalton. It was notable for having a lost ending, which was finally found and restored for "Looney Tunes Platinum Collection Vol. 2".
410* WesternAnimation/DetouringAmerica (MM) 8-26: Avery: One of several travelogue parodies that Avery did. Nominated for an Oscar.
411* Little Brother Rat (MM) 9-02: Jones: Second appearance of Sniffles the Mouse.
412* Porky's Hotel (LT) 9-02: Clampett
413* Sioux Me (MM) 9-09: Hardaway, Dalton
414* Jeepers Creepers (LT) 9-23: Clampett: A Porky Pig cartoon.
415* Land of the Midnight Fun (MM): 9-23: Avery
416* Little Lion Hunter (MM) 10-07: First appearance of Inki. Jones
417* Naughty Neighbors (LT) 10-07 Clampett
418* The Good Egg (MM) 10-21: Jones
419* Fresh Fish (MM) 11-04: Avery
420* Pied Piper Porky (LT) 11-04: Clampett
421* Fagin's Freshman (MM) 11-18: Hardaway, Dalton
422* Porky the Giant Killer (LT) 11-18: Clampett
423* Sniffles and the Bookworm (MM) 12-02: Jones: Third appearance of Sniffles the Mouse.
424* Screwball Football (MM) 12-16: Avery
425* The Film Fan (LT) 12-16: Clampett
426* The Curious Puppy (MM) 12-30 Jones: Third apperance of Jones' Curious Puppies characters.
427[[/index]]

Top