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[[quoteright:331:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/a3ae1935dee0f88f0681f8246e985fc7.jpg]]

The original Creator/OttoMessmer cartoons that started it all, these are the original [[UsefulNotes/TheSilentAgeOfAnimation Silent Age]] and [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation Golden Age cartoons]] that jumpstarted the famous ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'' cartoon series.

Unlike Joe Oriolo's [[WesternAnimation/FelixTheCatJoeOriolo softer take on the character]], the original Felix the Cat cartoons were geared more towards an adult audience, and are unmistakably set in a surreal, comedic caricature of 1920's urban culture, with some fairy tale and fantasy elements sandwiched in. Felix is portrayed as a nomadic AntiHero who acts on his own in the bulk of these cartoons, with recurring side characters being kept minimal and only sporadically appearing. The newspaper comics and comic books are all derived from this era, but there is an overlapping period between them and the Oriolo Felix due to Joe Oriolo taking over the art and writing chores for them around 1954 and running them up to the early 60's.

Creator/{{Paramount}} distributed the earliest cartoons from 1919 to 1921, while Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 up to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. In 1928, Educational ended distribution and several shorts were reissued by Creator/FirstNationalPictures. Copley Pictures distributed the sound cartoons from 1929 to 1931.

In 1936, a few years after the original Pat Sullivan studio that produced the cartoons had folded, a very brief three short revival of the series was made by the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] and distributed by RKO as part of Van Beuren's ''Rainbow Parade'' cartoon series. Being helmed by ex-Disney director Burt Gillett, they have very little in common with the Otto Messmer cartoons, completely throwing out the comic like art style and surrealistic tone in favor of pure fairy tale style cartoons, with Felix himself being revamped into a more child like character. Three shorts were made for this revival, and evidence has surfaced that at least two more were planned, but the Van Beuren studio abruptly went belly-up in 1936 before anything beyond story and design work had been done.

While the cartoons were put on ice, the classic Felix series managed to find new life in the form of various newspaper comics and comic books, with the former running all the way up to the series transition into the Creator/JoeOriolo era. The newspaper comics often carried a topper page centered on a parrot named Laura and her owners, and the comic books often had an anthology format that featured side stories of oneshot or bit-player characters alongside the main Felix stories. Creator/OttoMessmer drew the lion's share of the comic books up to his retirement around 1954, with Joe Oriolo and Creator/JimTyer sometimes moonlighting artwork in them. Oriolo himself took over art duties of the comic once Otto left, and would eventually end up running the iconic made-for-TV revival of the series.

Although the majority of these cartoons have become PublicDomain material, the ancillary rights to all of the original cartoons, including the remaining original film elements, merchandising/licensing rights and the copyrights to the few cartoons that didn't lapse into the public domain, are owned by Creator/{{Universal}} Studios, the parent company of Felix the Cat owner Creator/DreamWorksAnimation. Universal gained ownership of the cartoons and the character in August 2016 after acquiring [=DreamWorks=], who had bought the character and related material in question from Don Oriolo in 2014. So far, there has never been an official home video release of the surviving cartoons, due to a combination of the deteriorating film elements and the slew of public domain releases in the market. It may take a while before Universal decides to do anything with the cartoons.

A recap page for these cartoons can be found [[Recap/FelixTheCatClassic here]].

! Tropes Related To The Silent and Golden Age Felix Cartoons and Comics

* AnimationBump: The series got much more refined in its animation as time went on. The early cartoons were very stiff and rather crudely made. But come the 1922-1924 period, when Messmer starting hiring more animators, including the esteemed Bill Nolan, the animation got much more rubbery, fluid and appealing.
** The three Creator/VanBeurenStudios Felix shorts are fairly well animated and feature lavish color and backgrounds, and as such are a considerable animation upgrade from the original cartoons--no surprise, considering their director, Burt Gillett, was a former Disney animator and director.
** For a more specific example, "WesternAnimation/BoldKingCole", the third and last of the Van Beuren shorts, has an impressively animated staircase scene that moves in perspective.
* AnthologyComic: Typical of 40's and 50's comics, the Felix comic books had multiple stories, some of which were centered on characters unrelated to Felix. Issue #53 had side stories of characters like Uncle Minus, Don Poco, Joe Blow, a boy named Danny, and a two page prose story about a child named Tod.
* AnthropomorphicShift: In his very earliest incarnation (as "Master Tom" in 1919's "Feline Follies"), Felix is shown as being a regular house cat. By the 1920s, he walks upright and talks, even though he's still the pet of humans. In the handful of Felix cartoons made in the 1930s, he's shown living in a society of anthropomorphic animals, and [[FurryConfusion actually keeps pets]].
* ArtisticLicensePhysics: In "Eskimotive", Felix and an (unnamed) little kitten are playing around and blowing bubbles. Eventually, the kid gets trapped in a giant bubble and is sent flying all the way up to the North Pole, where the bubble freezes in mid-air and safely drifts to the ground without popping. In real life, while it technically ''is'' possible to freeze a bubble, a bubble that large would have popped well before its moisture could've been frozen, especially if it was hanging in mid-air.
* BankruptcyBarrel: In "WesternAnimation/FelixInTheSwim", after Felix and the kid's clothes get eaten by a goat, they go home in barrels. It's pretty odd, since [[FridgeLogic they had both been in swim trunks when their clothes got eaten, and Felix hadn't been wearing clothing to begin with]].
* BaseballEpisode: "WesternAnimation/FelixSavesTheDay", which has the bulk of the cartoon centered on a baseball game.
* BedsheetGhost: In ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheGhostBreaker'', the "ghost" (actually a traveling salesman in disguise) takes on this appearance.
* BigBudgetBeefUp: The Van Beuren era Felix shorts had much higher budgets than any of the Silent era shorts, and thus have very fluid animation, vivid backgrounds and colors and have a level of polish to them that sometimes borders on Disney quality animation.
* CatConcerto: In "Forty Winks", Felix conducts his friends in a chorus outside a guy's house.
* CatsHaveNineLives: In ''WesternAnimation/FelixDoublesForDarwin'', Felix is pacing around hungrily in the opening, and remarks “I'd give eight of my lives for a square meal!”
* CharlieChaplinShoutOut: Felix meets and imitates Chaplin in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''.
* ChasteToons: Perhaps the earliest example, as the kittens Inky and Dinky (the latter renamed Winky in the Joe Oriolo comics) were introduced as Felix's sons in 1926, then suddenly [[RetCon retconned]] as nephews in 1930. A few pre-1930 comics were even reprinted with the familial relationship changed.
* ChekhovsGunman: In "Felix the Ghost Breaker", the ghost scares off a donkey from the farmers barnhouse. In the ending, when its revealed the ghost is [[ScoobyDooHoax really a salesman in disguise,]] the agitated farmer whistles for his donkey, who returns on the spot and proceeds the kick the salesman into the air, sending him flying to the moon.
* CheesyMoon: Present for a gag in a 1920's Felix sunday strip. Felix decides to help out a struggling cheese vendor by climbing a tower and pulling the moon directly out of the sky like its a wheel of cheese, which the shopowner gratefully chops up and begins selling. Unfortunately, he is arrested shortly afterward--the crime being that he's selling Moonshine!
* ConstantlyCurious: Otto Messmer described boylike curiosity as being a major trait of Felix's personality, which often ends up getting him into one adventure after another.
-->'''Otto Messmer''': "I used an extreme amount of eye motion, wriggling eyes and turning his whiskers, and this seemed to be what hit the public - expressions! I think instead of just having him chase a lot of things around and bumpin' each other, which might be funny, I made him act as a little boy would wonder... how high is that star, how deep is the ocean, what makes the wind blow? I used all those things for a theme."
* CuteLittleFangs: Felix is sometimes drawn with these.
* DastardlyWhiplash: In "Uncle Tom's Crabbin", Felix faces off against the original whiplash, [[Literature/UncleTomsCabin Simon Legree]], who is the villain of the cartoon.
* DemotedToExtra: In the comic "Felix And His Friends #3" (1954), the story "Felix and the Merry Midgets" has the story mostly focus on three little dwarfs who help plan a surprise birthday part for Felix, who doesn't show up until late in the story.
* DerangedAnimation: One of the oldest examples. Shorts like "Felix Woos Whoopee" and the climax of ''WesternAnimation/FelixDinesAndPines'' are as weird and surreal as anything Creator/FleischerStudios ever did.
* DigitalDestruction: The 1990's reprint of the old Felix comics, ''Felix Keeps on Walkin'', deliberately altered the original artwork, redoing all of the colors digitally and adding gradients that weren't in the original art, and its linenotes even brag about how they ''removed'' bits of the original artwork, such as the expressive cartoon spark lines that pop up around Felix's head.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The nightmarish climax of "Felix Dines and Pines", where Felix eats way too much stuff, topping it off with a shoe and gets a stomachache induced nightmare from it, including being chased by a monster, encountering SantaClaus (who turns ''into'' a monster), running down a spiral tunnel, and then getting chased by a giant chicken that turns into an old man, a mouse, a bandito, a giant boot, and then a fish as the ground turns into an ocean!
* DisproportionateRetribution: In the comic story "A Fishy Official" (Felix The Cat #54), Felix gets a job at a Census Bureau to count how many fish are in the ocean. He uses a submarine and film to estimate a count of 2,000,000,000 fish and reports the info back to his boss--who has just come back from fishing with six hanging from his hand. His boss immediately fires Felix for inefficiency.
* DisneySchoolOfActingAndMime: Felix is one of the earliest examples of using this in animation, and it's justified, since almost all of the original B&W films were silent cartoons. Creator/OttoMessmer had studied actor Creator/CharlieChaplin extensively (even working on a cartoon series based on him prior to creating Felix) and realized how important it was to get this kind of expressive acting into drawings. While the cartoons do employ speech balloons for the characters to talk, a lot of the personality is conveyed through the broad, hammy poses and animation.
* DownerEnding: Felix's first theatrical short ends with [[spoiler:him sucking on a gas pipe after he gets kicked out of his home and finds out his girlfriend already has kittens.]]
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Feline Follies'' is so different from the rest of the series, that one would be surprised to believe its the debut of Felix, who is a relatively normal housecat named Master Tom in the cartoon. Heck, the silent cartoons are so drastically different from the rest of the Felix series in tone and style that the only thing that ties them together is that they all star Felix. Also, there was no Magic Bag of Tricks in this era—that iconic element of the series [[IconicSequelCharacter wasn't introduced until the Joe Oriolo era, when the series was 40 years into its life]]. There are also very few major or recurring characters aside from Felix himself and Kitty Kat, and no recurring antagonists—-often, there wasn't any real antagonist at all in the original films. The pure fantasy elements of the later Felix cartoons were also not as ubiquitous in the silent cartoons.
* FunnyOctopus: "Neptune Nonsense" features an octopus working as a traffic cop on the sea floor. This octopus tickles Felix for bumping into him.
* GrievousHarmWithABody: Inverted in "Gym Gems", where a boxer ties up Felix and uses him as a punching bag, knocking him around hard enough that he flies right out of the building.
* HaveAGayOldTime: The opening of "Bold King Cole" had Felix singing the lyric "We laugh and play, it keeps us gay, nature and me!". In the 1930's, the word Gay had a different connotation than today, meaning "happy, carefree, joyful".
* HauntedCastle: The castle in "Bold King Cole", which is inhabited by ghosts of King Cole's ancestors.
* HypnoFool: In the opening of ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheHypnotist'', a hypnotist tries out hypnosis on Felix and a mouse, which allows a mouse to beat up Felix. Felix, despite his defeat, is intrigued by this and steals the mans book on hypnosis to learn how to do it himself.
* IdeaBulb: Quite often seen in the silent cartoons.
* ImpactSilhouette: In "Felix Goes West", this happens when Felix is thrown through a door by an angry house owner.
* InNameOnly: The Van Beuren era shorts have virtually nothing to do with the original cartoons save for starring Felix himself, who is characterized fairly different than in the past.
* ItsBeenDone: Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''; Felix invents what he thinks is a new act, but in reality has already been done by Creator/CharlieChaplin, who indignantly scorns Felix for allegedly stealing his act. This also doubles as a MythologyGag, since Otto Messmer had worked on a series of silent Charlie Chaplin cartoons in the past, and Felix was initially inspired by Charlie Chaplin.
* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: In "Felix the Ghost Breaker", when the ghost is attacking Felix in the dark, it stops to get very close to the camera point its finger directly at the audience, implying that [[TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou he's going after them next]] once he's through with Felix.
* LightningCanDoAnything: In a Sunday comic, Felix is harassed by a rather nasty lightning bolt that actively follows him, even vaporizing a house he tries to seek shelter in (save for the doorknob he was holding in his hand). Felix turns the tables on it by attracting the bolt to a mousetrap, which allows him to harness it as a power source and sell it.
** In "Bold King Cole", it can slice through a cloud like a knife, turn Felix's head into a lightbulb, play a piano, and even destroy ghosts!
* LighterAndSofter: The Van Beuren shorts have none of the urban tone, dark or vulgar gags or surreal nature of the original silent cartoons.
* LiteralAssKicking: In the ending of "Felix the Ghost Breaker", the ghost is trapped at gunpoint by Felix and is revealed by the farmer to be a salesman trying to [[ScoobyDooHoax scare him into buying something from him.]] The farmer summons his donkey ([[ChekhovsGunman who had been scared off earlier by the "ghost"]]), and the donkey kicks the salesman the butt, sending him flying into the moon in the end.
* MediumBlending: "Felix Saves The Day" has still photographs for backgrounds in some shots, and it even has live action footage at some parts (but the animation and live action do not interact).
* MilesGloriosus: In "Bold King Cole", Felix encounters Old King Cole, who brags about his supposed heroics but then runs an hides from anything he perceives as a threat. Eventually, the spirits of past kings get tired of his bragging and proceed kidnap him, strapping him to a machine to "knock the wind out of the old windbag", and Felix has to face his own fears to rescue him.
* MoodWhiplash: The opening of "Bold King Cole", where after the first few seconds of Felix singing a very upbeat song, backed up by some very colorful scenery, suddenly cuts straight into a nasty storm scene.
* MrViceGuy: The Silent era Felix is unmistakably the hero of the cartoons, but he's not without his vices--he's not above pulling strings to get what he wants, such as his first newspaper comic involving bribing some mice to invade a man's house so that he can get a job and food from him in exchange for catching the mice, and even in cartoons where he has a wife and kids (such as in "Flim Flam Films"), he has no shame in flirting with another kitten nearby.
* NoAntagonist: The bulk of the Silent/Golden Age cartoons had very few if any clear cut villains for Felix to deal with. They're mostly centered in Felix being a cat trying to survive and find food in a selfish, rough n tumble world.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Felix is heavily based off of Creator/CharlieChaplin, and The Tramp himself appears in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''.
* OverlyPrepreparedGag: The punch line in ''Felix Doubles For Darwin'' takes several minutes to set up.
* PaintingTheMedium: A few of the old strips had gags involving Felix's speech balloon, be it him literally eating his own words or using his speech balloon for a...well, literal balloon.
** In another early newspaper comic, Felix is searching for a monkey that escaped from a zoo. Felix ponders where it is, failing to notice that the primate is right behind him, and is resting it's hand on his speech balloon!
** In "Eskimotive", when two Inuits are revealed to be kissing under the moonlight, they want their privacy, so one of them ''pulls down the skyline like a sheet of black paper''.
* PepperSneeze: In ''Felix Pinches The Pole'', Felix is searching for food and comes across a house where a man is about to eat a chicken dinner. Felix tries to reach for it, but the man shoos him off by throwing a pepper shaker at him. Felix notices the label on it and decides to sprinkle it all back at him, making the man sneeze his chicken right out the window and into Felix's clutches.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: In "Uncle Tom's Crabbin", Felix travels into the deep south and meets [[Literature/UncleTomsCabin Uncle Tom]]. Not long after, Felix faces off against [[DastardlyWhiplash Simon Legree]], who was angered at Tom's music waking up him, promptly [[KickTheDog whipping him (off-screen) and smashing his banjo apart]]. Felix is on Tom's side the whole cartoon, [[PetTheDog quickly improvising a new banjo for him]], and when Simon's wrath is incured again, Felix has Legree chase after him. When Legree fails to catch Felix, he sicks a hunting dog on Felix, which the cat proceeds to beat to a pulp.
* PragmaticHero: Felix sometimes falls into this in the silent cartoons and comics. He is unquestionably the protagonist, but he's not above doing something shady to get what he needs to survive, especially since he's often homeless and has to scavenge for food. In his newspaper comic debut, he tries to get a job as a mouse catcher, but is given the boot by a houseowner. Felix is so indignant, that he figures out a plan--he steals a wheel of cheese from a truck nearby, and bribes some local mice with it to terrorize the owner of the house. The fearful owner offers Felix a job and food on the spot.
* PublicDomainAnimation: Many of the silent cartoons are public domain.
* PunBasedTitle:
** ''WesternAnimation/AprilMaze'' is a play on the months April and May being close together, and the phrase "April showers bring May flowers", given a lot of the episode switches between stormy weather and sunny weather.
** ''WesternAnimation/SkullsAndSculls'' is also a punny title, as the film starts with nightmarish imagery but ends up becoming a fraternity boat race ("Sculls" is a word for a pair of small oars used by a single rower).
* RidiculouslyCuteCritter: Felix's simple, round design set the standard for cute cartoon animals ever since.
* ScoobyDooHoax: "Felix the Ghost Breaker" is centered on Felix trying to save a farmers house from a pesky ghost who is haunting it. It turns out that it's a traveling salesman who is trying to scare the farmer into buying something from him.
* SeadogPegLeg: Captain Kidd steals "The Goose That Laid The Golden Egg" in the 1936 cartoon. He duels ably with Felix at first, until his peg gets stuck in a knothole on the pirate ship's deck.
* ShaggyDogStory: In ''WesternAnimation/FelixOutOfLuck'', the whole conflict is set into action because Felix's owner put up a fake sign to trick bill collectors, which Felix thinks is a real sign that she's left town.
* ShowWithinAShow: In "Flim Flam Films", Felix and his sons sneak into a movie theater in the back, and the film they watch in the theater turns out to be a Felix the Cat cartoon! His nephews think its the real Felix about to be eaten by a lion in the cartoon though, and they ruin the screening by leaping into and tearing up the film screen. After getting thrown out of the theater, Felix gets them to stop crying by suggesting they all make their own movie instead!
* StrappedToAnOperatingTable: Happens to King Cole when he's kidnapped by an army of ghosts in ''Bold King Cole''.
* StockAnimalDiet: Subverted in "Neptune Nonsense", when King Neptune accuses Felix (who was trying to find a friend for his pet goldfish) of trying to kidnap fish so he can cook and eat them. Felix exasperatedly explains to him that he doesn't eat fish.
* StockAnimalName: This cat is called Felix, one of the most generic names to give to a cat.
* SuddenNameChange: In his first two shorts, Felix's name was Master Tom. The third short, ''Adventures of Felix'', gave him the name that would stick with him forever.
* SuperNotDrowningSkills: Felix is apparently able to breathe underwater in "Neptune Nonsense", per RuleOfFunny.
* TalkingAnimal: Felix himself, and many other characters in the series.
* ThatsNoMoon: In ''Felix Doubles for Darwin'', Felix arrives in South Africa and tries climbing up what he thinks is a tree—but it quickly turns out its the thick leg of a giant bird, which quickly reveals its presence and chases after him.
* TotemPoleTrench: Felix and his sons use this kind of disguise to sneak into a movie (Felix had the money, but the theater wouldn't allow cats in it) in "Flim Flam Films". Felix accidentally blows the disguise inside the theater, so they're forced to run back outside, and then sneak into the theater by squeezing through a wire near the back door.
* TravelingPipeBulge: The "Felix Doubles for Darwin" short has a whole scene of Felix traveling through the entire transatlantic cable and then back again, pursued by apes.
* VisualPun: In a 1920's Felix Sunday strip, Felix decides to help out a struggling cheese vendor by climbing a tower and pulling the moon directly out of the sky like its a wheel of cheese, which the shopowner gratefully chops up and begins selling. Unfortunately, he is arrested shortly afterward--the crime being that he's selling Moonshine!
* VillainSong: "You Talk Too Much, You Never Shut Up" from ''WesternAnimation/BoldKingCole''.
** Captain Kidd and the rest of the pirates in ''WesternAnimation/TheGooseThatLaidTheGoldenEgg'' get a particularly good one:
---> ''Oh, we take what we want and we want what we take''
---> ''For we’re pirates out hunting for treasure!''
---> ''If we need any gold, we steal it away,''
---> ''Robbing widows and orphans of pleasure!''
---> ''We fight with our hands, we cuss and shoot,''
---> ''We’re mean and we’re bad from our hats to our boots.''
---> ''We take what we want and we want what we take''
---> ''For we’re pirates out hunting for treasure!''
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: In "Bold King Cole", whatever happened to those guests that the King was boasting to?
* YankTheDogsChain: In "Felix Pinches the Pole", Felix is on the search for good and successfully snags a piece of chicken from a local. But just when he sets down to eat, a giant snake comes rolling along and gobbles the thing whole, leaving Felix destitute.
----

to:

[[quoteright:331:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/a3ae1935dee0f88f0681f8246e985fc7.jpg]]

The original Creator/OttoMessmer cartoons that started it all, these are the original [[UsefulNotes/TheSilentAgeOfAnimation Silent Age]] and [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation Golden Age cartoons]] that jumpstarted the famous ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'' cartoon series.

Unlike Joe Oriolo's [[WesternAnimation/FelixTheCatJoeOriolo softer take on the character]], the original Felix the Cat cartoons were geared more towards an adult audience, and are unmistakably set in a surreal, comedic caricature of 1920's urban culture, with some fairy tale and fantasy elements sandwiched in. Felix is portrayed as a nomadic AntiHero who acts on his own in the bulk of these cartoons, with recurring side characters being kept minimal and only sporadically appearing. The newspaper comics and comic books are all derived from this era, but there is an overlapping period between them and the Oriolo Felix due to Joe Oriolo taking over the art and writing chores for them around 1954 and running them up to the early 60's.

Creator/{{Paramount}} distributed the earliest cartoons from 1919 to 1921, while Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 up to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. In 1928, Educational ended distribution and several shorts were reissued by Creator/FirstNationalPictures. Copley Pictures distributed the sound cartoons from 1929 to 1931.

In 1936, a few years after the original Pat Sullivan studio that produced the cartoons had folded, a very brief three short revival of the series was made by the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] and distributed by RKO as part of Van Beuren's ''Rainbow Parade'' cartoon series. Being helmed by ex-Disney director Burt Gillett, they have very little in common with the Otto Messmer cartoons, completely throwing out the comic like art style and surrealistic tone in favor of pure fairy tale style cartoons, with Felix himself being revamped into a more child like character. Three shorts were made for this revival, and evidence has surfaced that at least two more were planned, but the Van Beuren studio abruptly went belly-up in 1936 before anything beyond story and design work had been done.

While the cartoons were put on ice, the classic Felix series managed to find new life in the form of various newspaper comics and comic books, with the former running all the way up to the series transition into the Creator/JoeOriolo era. The newspaper comics often carried a topper page centered on a parrot named Laura and her owners, and the comic books often had an anthology format that featured side stories of oneshot or bit-player characters alongside the main Felix stories. Creator/OttoMessmer drew the lion's share of the comic books up to his retirement around 1954, with Joe Oriolo and Creator/JimTyer sometimes moonlighting artwork in them. Oriolo himself took over art duties of the comic once Otto left, and would eventually end up running the iconic made-for-TV revival of the series.

Although the majority of these cartoons have become PublicDomain material, the ancillary rights to all of the original cartoons, including the remaining original film elements, merchandising/licensing rights and the copyrights to the few cartoons that didn't lapse into the public domain, are owned by Creator/{{Universal}} Studios, the parent company of Felix the Cat owner Creator/DreamWorksAnimation. Universal gained ownership of the cartoons and the character in August 2016 after acquiring [=DreamWorks=], who had bought the character and related material in question from Don Oriolo in 2014. So far, there has never been an official home video release of the surviving cartoons, due to a combination of the deteriorating film elements and the slew of public domain releases in the market. It may take a while before Universal decides to do anything with the cartoons.

A recap page for these cartoons can be found [[Recap/FelixTheCatClassic here]].

! Tropes Related To The Silent and Golden Age Felix Cartoons and Comics

* AnimationBump: The series got much more refined in its animation as time went on. The early cartoons were very stiff and rather crudely made. But come the 1922-1924 period, when Messmer starting hiring more animators, including the esteemed Bill Nolan, the animation got much more rubbery, fluid and appealing.
** The three Creator/VanBeurenStudios Felix shorts are fairly well animated and feature lavish color and backgrounds, and as such are a considerable animation upgrade from the original cartoons--no surprise, considering their director, Burt Gillett, was a former Disney animator and director.
** For a more specific example, "WesternAnimation/BoldKingCole", the third and last of the Van Beuren shorts, has an impressively animated staircase scene that moves in perspective.
* AnthologyComic: Typical of 40's and 50's comics, the Felix comic books had multiple stories, some of which were centered on characters unrelated to Felix. Issue #53 had side stories of characters like Uncle Minus, Don Poco, Joe Blow, a boy named Danny, and a two page prose story about a child named Tod.
* AnthropomorphicShift: In his very earliest incarnation (as "Master Tom" in 1919's "Feline Follies"), Felix is shown as being a regular house cat. By the 1920s, he walks upright and talks, even though he's still the pet of humans. In the handful of Felix cartoons made in the 1930s, he's shown living in a society of anthropomorphic animals, and [[FurryConfusion actually keeps pets]].
* ArtisticLicensePhysics: In "Eskimotive", Felix and an (unnamed) little kitten are playing around and blowing bubbles. Eventually, the kid gets trapped in a giant bubble and is sent flying all the way up to the North Pole, where the bubble freezes in mid-air and safely drifts to the ground without popping. In real life, while it technically ''is'' possible to freeze a bubble, a bubble that large would have popped well before its moisture could've been frozen, especially if it was hanging in mid-air.
* BankruptcyBarrel: In "WesternAnimation/FelixInTheSwim", after Felix and the kid's clothes get eaten by a goat, they go home in barrels. It's pretty odd, since [[FridgeLogic they had both been in swim trunks when their clothes got eaten, and Felix hadn't been wearing clothing to begin with]].
* BaseballEpisode: "WesternAnimation/FelixSavesTheDay", which has the bulk of the cartoon centered on a baseball game.
* BedsheetGhost: In ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheGhostBreaker'', the "ghost" (actually a traveling salesman in disguise) takes on this appearance.
* BigBudgetBeefUp: The Van Beuren era Felix shorts had much higher budgets than any of the Silent era shorts, and thus have very fluid animation, vivid backgrounds and colors and have a level of polish to them that sometimes borders on Disney quality animation.
* CatConcerto: In "Forty Winks", Felix conducts his friends in a chorus outside a guy's house.
* CatsHaveNineLives: In ''WesternAnimation/FelixDoublesForDarwin'', Felix is pacing around hungrily in the opening, and remarks “I'd give eight of my lives for a square meal!”
* CharlieChaplinShoutOut: Felix meets and imitates Chaplin in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''.
* ChasteToons: Perhaps the earliest example, as the kittens Inky and Dinky (the latter renamed Winky in the Joe Oriolo comics) were introduced as Felix's sons in 1926, then suddenly [[RetCon retconned]] as nephews in 1930. A few pre-1930 comics were even reprinted with the familial relationship changed.
* ChekhovsGunman: In "Felix the Ghost Breaker", the ghost scares off a donkey from the farmers barnhouse. In the ending, when its revealed the ghost is [[ScoobyDooHoax really a salesman in disguise,]] the agitated farmer whistles for his donkey, who returns on the spot and proceeds the kick the salesman into the air, sending him flying to the moon.
* CheesyMoon: Present for a gag in a 1920's Felix sunday strip. Felix decides to help out a struggling cheese vendor by climbing a tower and pulling the moon directly out of the sky like its a wheel of cheese, which the shopowner gratefully chops up and begins selling. Unfortunately, he is arrested shortly afterward--the crime being that he's selling Moonshine!
* ConstantlyCurious: Otto Messmer described boylike curiosity as being a major trait of Felix's personality, which often ends up getting him into one adventure after another.
-->'''Otto Messmer''': "I used an extreme amount of eye motion, wriggling eyes and turning his whiskers, and this seemed to be what hit the public - expressions! I think instead of just having him chase a lot of things around and bumpin' each other, which might be funny, I made him act as a little boy would wonder... how high is that star, how deep is the ocean, what makes the wind blow? I used all those things for a theme."
* CuteLittleFangs: Felix is sometimes drawn with these.
* DastardlyWhiplash: In "Uncle Tom's Crabbin", Felix faces off against the original whiplash, [[Literature/UncleTomsCabin Simon Legree]], who is the villain of the cartoon.
* DemotedToExtra: In the comic "Felix And His Friends #3" (1954), the story "Felix and the Merry Midgets" has the story mostly focus on three little dwarfs who help plan a surprise birthday part for Felix, who doesn't show up until late in the story.
* DerangedAnimation: One of the oldest examples. Shorts like "Felix Woos Whoopee" and the climax of ''WesternAnimation/FelixDinesAndPines'' are as weird and surreal as anything Creator/FleischerStudios ever did.
* DigitalDestruction: The 1990's reprint of the old Felix comics, ''Felix Keeps on Walkin'', deliberately altered the original artwork, redoing all of the colors digitally and adding gradients that weren't in the original art, and its linenotes even brag about how they ''removed'' bits of the original artwork, such as the expressive cartoon spark lines that pop up around Felix's head.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The nightmarish climax of "Felix Dines and Pines", where Felix eats way too much stuff, topping it off with a shoe and gets a stomachache induced nightmare from it, including being chased by a monster, encountering SantaClaus (who turns ''into'' a monster), running down a spiral tunnel, and then getting chased by a giant chicken that turns into an old man, a mouse, a bandito, a giant boot, and then a fish as the ground turns into an ocean!
* DisproportionateRetribution: In the comic story "A Fishy Official" (Felix The Cat #54), Felix gets a job at a Census Bureau to count how many fish are in the ocean. He uses a submarine and film to estimate a count of 2,000,000,000 fish and reports the info back to his boss--who has just come back from fishing with six hanging from his hand. His boss immediately fires Felix for inefficiency.
* DisneySchoolOfActingAndMime: Felix is one of the earliest examples of using this in animation, and it's justified, since almost all of the original B&W films were silent cartoons. Creator/OttoMessmer had studied actor Creator/CharlieChaplin extensively (even working on a cartoon series based on him prior to creating Felix) and realized how important it was to get this kind of expressive acting into drawings. While the cartoons do employ speech balloons for the characters to talk, a lot of the personality is conveyed through the broad, hammy poses and animation.
* DownerEnding: Felix's first theatrical short ends with [[spoiler:him sucking on a gas pipe after he gets kicked out of his home and finds out his girlfriend already has kittens.]]
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Feline Follies'' is so different from the rest of the series, that one would be surprised to believe its the debut of Felix, who is a relatively normal housecat named Master Tom in the cartoon. Heck, the silent cartoons are so drastically different from the rest of the Felix series in tone and style that the only thing that ties them together is that they all star Felix. Also, there was no Magic Bag of Tricks in this era—that iconic element of the series [[IconicSequelCharacter wasn't introduced until the Joe Oriolo era, when the series was 40 years into its life]]. There are also very few major or recurring characters aside from Felix himself and Kitty Kat, and no recurring antagonists—-often, there wasn't any real antagonist at all in the original films. The pure fantasy elements of the later Felix cartoons were also not as ubiquitous in the silent cartoons.
* FunnyOctopus: "Neptune Nonsense" features an octopus working as a traffic cop on the sea floor. This octopus tickles Felix for bumping into him.
* GrievousHarmWithABody: Inverted in "Gym Gems", where a boxer ties up Felix and uses him as a punching bag, knocking him around hard enough that he flies right out of the building.
* HaveAGayOldTime: The opening of "Bold King Cole" had Felix singing the lyric "We laugh and play, it keeps us gay, nature and me!". In the 1930's, the word Gay had a different connotation than today, meaning "happy, carefree, joyful".
* HauntedCastle: The castle in "Bold King Cole", which is inhabited by ghosts of King Cole's ancestors.
* HypnoFool: In the opening of ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheHypnotist'', a hypnotist tries out hypnosis on Felix and a mouse, which allows a mouse to beat up Felix. Felix, despite his defeat, is intrigued by this and steals the mans book on hypnosis to learn how to do it himself.
* IdeaBulb: Quite often seen in the silent cartoons.
* ImpactSilhouette: In "Felix Goes West", this happens when Felix is thrown through a door by an angry house owner.
* InNameOnly: The Van Beuren era shorts have virtually nothing to do with the original cartoons save for starring Felix himself, who is characterized fairly different than in the past.
* ItsBeenDone: Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''; Felix invents what he thinks is a new act, but in reality has already been done by Creator/CharlieChaplin, who indignantly scorns Felix for allegedly stealing his act. This also doubles as a MythologyGag, since Otto Messmer had worked on a series of silent Charlie Chaplin cartoons in the past, and Felix was initially inspired by Charlie Chaplin.
* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: In "Felix the Ghost Breaker", when the ghost is attacking Felix in the dark, it stops to get very close to the camera point its finger directly at the audience, implying that [[TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou he's going after them next]] once he's through with Felix.
* LightningCanDoAnything: In a Sunday comic, Felix is harassed by a rather nasty lightning bolt that actively follows him, even vaporizing a house he tries to seek shelter in (save for the doorknob he was holding in his hand). Felix turns the tables on it by attracting the bolt to a mousetrap, which allows him to harness it as a power source and sell it.
** In "Bold King Cole", it can slice through a cloud like a knife, turn Felix's head into a lightbulb, play a piano, and even destroy ghosts!
* LighterAndSofter: The Van Beuren shorts have none of the urban tone, dark or vulgar gags or surreal nature of the original silent cartoons.
* LiteralAssKicking: In the ending of "Felix the Ghost Breaker", the ghost is trapped at gunpoint by Felix and is revealed by the farmer to be a salesman trying to [[ScoobyDooHoax scare him into buying something from him.]] The farmer summons his donkey ([[ChekhovsGunman who had been scared off earlier by the "ghost"]]), and the donkey kicks the salesman the butt, sending him flying into the moon in the end.
* MediumBlending: "Felix Saves The Day" has still photographs for backgrounds in some shots, and it even has live action footage at some parts (but the animation and live action do not interact).
* MilesGloriosus: In "Bold King Cole", Felix encounters Old King Cole, who brags about his supposed heroics but then runs an hides from anything he perceives as a threat. Eventually, the spirits of past kings get tired of his bragging and proceed kidnap him, strapping him to a machine to "knock the wind out of the old windbag", and Felix has to face his own fears to rescue him.
* MoodWhiplash: The opening of "Bold King Cole", where after the first few seconds of Felix singing a very upbeat song, backed up by some very colorful scenery, suddenly cuts straight into a nasty storm scene.
* MrViceGuy: The Silent era Felix is unmistakably the hero of the cartoons, but he's not without his vices--he's not above pulling strings to get what he wants, such as his first newspaper comic involving bribing some mice to invade a man's house so that he can get a job and food from him in exchange for catching the mice, and even in cartoons where he has a wife and kids (such as in "Flim Flam Films"), he has no shame in flirting with another kitten nearby.
* NoAntagonist: The bulk of the Silent/Golden Age cartoons had very few if any clear cut villains for Felix to deal with. They're mostly centered in Felix being a cat trying to survive and find food in a selfish, rough n tumble world.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Felix is heavily based off of Creator/CharlieChaplin, and The Tramp himself appears in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''.
* OverlyPrepreparedGag: The punch line in ''Felix Doubles For Darwin'' takes several minutes to set up.
* PaintingTheMedium: A few of the old strips had gags involving Felix's speech balloon, be it him literally eating his own words or using his speech balloon for a...well, literal balloon.
** In another early newspaper comic, Felix is searching for a monkey that escaped from a zoo. Felix ponders where it is, failing to notice that the primate is right behind him, and is resting it's hand on his speech balloon!
** In "Eskimotive", when two Inuits are revealed to be kissing under the moonlight, they want their privacy, so one of them ''pulls down the skyline like a sheet of black paper''.
* PepperSneeze: In ''Felix Pinches The Pole'', Felix is searching for food and comes across a house where a man is about to eat a chicken dinner. Felix tries to reach for it, but the man shoos him off by throwing a pepper shaker at him. Felix notices the label on it and decides to sprinkle it all back at him, making the man sneeze his chicken right out the window and into Felix's clutches.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: In "Uncle Tom's Crabbin", Felix travels into the deep south and meets [[Literature/UncleTomsCabin Uncle Tom]]. Not long after, Felix faces off against [[DastardlyWhiplash Simon Legree]], who was angered at Tom's music waking up him, promptly [[KickTheDog whipping him (off-screen) and smashing his banjo apart]]. Felix is on Tom's side the whole cartoon, [[PetTheDog quickly improvising a new banjo for him]], and when Simon's wrath is incured again, Felix has Legree chase after him. When Legree fails to catch Felix, he sicks a hunting dog on Felix, which the cat proceeds to beat to a pulp.
* PragmaticHero: Felix sometimes falls into this in the silent cartoons and comics. He is unquestionably the protagonist, but he's not above doing something shady to get what he needs to survive, especially since he's often homeless and has to scavenge for food. In his newspaper comic debut, he tries to get a job as a mouse catcher, but is given the boot by a houseowner. Felix is so indignant, that he figures out a plan--he steals a wheel of cheese from a truck nearby, and bribes some local mice with it to terrorize the owner of the house. The fearful owner offers Felix a job and food on the spot.
* PublicDomainAnimation: Many of the silent cartoons are public domain.
* PunBasedTitle:
** ''WesternAnimation/AprilMaze'' is a play on the months April and May being close together, and the phrase "April showers bring May flowers", given a lot of the episode switches between stormy weather and sunny weather.
** ''WesternAnimation/SkullsAndSculls'' is also a punny title, as the film starts with nightmarish imagery but ends up becoming a fraternity boat race ("Sculls" is a word for a pair of small oars used by a single rower).
* RidiculouslyCuteCritter: Felix's simple, round design set the standard for cute cartoon animals ever since.
* ScoobyDooHoax: "Felix the Ghost Breaker" is centered on Felix trying to save a farmers house from a pesky ghost who is haunting it. It turns out that it's a traveling salesman who is trying to scare the farmer into buying something from him.
* SeadogPegLeg: Captain Kidd steals "The Goose That Laid The Golden Egg" in the 1936 cartoon. He duels ably with Felix at first, until his peg gets stuck in a knothole on the pirate ship's deck.
* ShaggyDogStory: In ''WesternAnimation/FelixOutOfLuck'', the whole conflict is set into action because Felix's owner put up a fake sign to trick bill collectors, which Felix thinks is a real sign that she's left town.
* ShowWithinAShow: In "Flim Flam Films", Felix and his sons sneak into a movie theater in the back, and the film they watch in the theater turns out to be a Felix the Cat cartoon! His nephews think its the real Felix about to be eaten by a lion in the cartoon though, and they ruin the screening by leaping into and tearing up the film screen. After getting thrown out of the theater, Felix gets them to stop crying by suggesting they all make their own movie instead!
* StrappedToAnOperatingTable: Happens to King Cole when he's kidnapped by an army of ghosts in ''Bold King Cole''.
* StockAnimalDiet: Subverted in "Neptune Nonsense", when King Neptune accuses Felix (who was trying to find a friend for his pet goldfish) of trying to kidnap fish so he can cook and eat them. Felix exasperatedly explains to him that he doesn't eat fish.
* StockAnimalName: This cat is called Felix, one of the most generic names to give to a cat.
* SuddenNameChange: In his first two shorts, Felix's name was Master Tom. The third short, ''Adventures of Felix'', gave him the name that would stick with him forever.
* SuperNotDrowningSkills: Felix is apparently able to breathe underwater in "Neptune Nonsense", per RuleOfFunny.
* TalkingAnimal: Felix himself, and many other characters in the series.
* ThatsNoMoon: In ''Felix Doubles for Darwin'', Felix arrives in South Africa and tries climbing up what he thinks is a tree—but it quickly turns out its the thick leg of a giant bird, which quickly reveals its presence and chases after him.
* TotemPoleTrench: Felix and his sons use this kind of disguise to sneak into a movie (Felix had the money, but the theater wouldn't allow cats in it) in "Flim Flam Films". Felix accidentally blows the disguise inside the theater, so they're forced to run back outside, and then sneak into the theater by squeezing through a wire near the back door.
* TravelingPipeBulge: The "Felix Doubles for Darwin" short has a whole scene of Felix traveling through the entire transatlantic cable and then back again, pursued by apes.
* VisualPun: In a 1920's Felix Sunday strip, Felix decides to help out a struggling cheese vendor by climbing a tower and pulling the moon directly out of the sky like its a wheel of cheese, which the shopowner gratefully chops up and begins selling. Unfortunately, he is arrested shortly afterward--the crime being that he's selling Moonshine!
* VillainSong: "You Talk Too Much, You Never Shut Up" from ''WesternAnimation/BoldKingCole''.
** Captain Kidd and the rest of the pirates in ''WesternAnimation/TheGooseThatLaidTheGoldenEgg'' get a particularly good one:
---> ''Oh, we take what we want and we want what we take''
---> ''For we’re pirates out hunting for treasure!''
---> ''If we need any gold, we steal it away,''
---> ''Robbing widows and orphans of pleasure!''
---> ''We fight with our hands, we cuss and shoot,''
---> ''We’re mean and we’re bad from our hats to our boots.''
---> ''We take what we want and we want what we take''
---> ''For we’re pirates out hunting for treasure!''
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: In "Bold King Cole", whatever happened to those guests that the King was boasting to?
* YankTheDogsChain: In "Felix Pinches the Pole", Felix is on the search for good and successfully snags a piece of chicken from a local. But just when he sets down to eat, a giant snake comes rolling along and gobbles the thing whole, leaving Felix destitute.
----
[[redirect:WesternAnimation/FelixTheCatOttoMessmer]]
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The original Creator/OttoMessmer cartoons that started it all, these are the original [[UsefulNotes/TheSilentAgeOfAnimation Silent Age]] and [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation Golden Age cartoons]] that jumpstarted the famous WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat cartoon series.

Unlike Joe Oriolo's [[WesternAnimation/JoeOrioloFelixTheCat softer take on the character]], the original Felix the Cat cartoons were geared more towards an adult audience, and are unmistakably set in a surreal, comedic caricature of 1920's urban culture, with some fairy tale and fantasy elements sandwiched in. Felix is portrayed as a nomadic AntiHero who acts on his own in the bulk of these cartoons, with recurring side characters being kept minimal and only sporadically appearing. The newspaper comics and comic books are all derived from this era, but there is an overlapping period between them and the Oriolo Felix due to Joe Oriolo taking over the art and writing chores for them around 1954 and running them up to the early 60's.

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The original Creator/OttoMessmer cartoons that started it all, these are the original [[UsefulNotes/TheSilentAgeOfAnimation Silent Age]] and [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation Golden Age cartoons]] that jumpstarted the famous WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'' cartoon series.

Unlike Joe Oriolo's [[WesternAnimation/JoeOrioloFelixTheCat [[WesternAnimation/FelixTheCatJoeOriolo softer take on the character]], the original Felix the Cat cartoons were geared more towards an adult audience, and are unmistakably set in a surreal, comedic caricature of 1920's urban culture, with some fairy tale and fantasy elements sandwiched in. Felix is portrayed as a nomadic AntiHero who acts on his own in the bulk of these cartoons, with recurring side characters being kept minimal and only sporadically appearing. The newspaper comics and comic books are all derived from this era, but there is an overlapping period between them and the Oriolo Felix due to Joe Oriolo taking over the art and writing chores for them around 1954 and running them up to the early 60's.
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* EverythingsBetterWithMonkeys: The ending of "Felix Doubles For Darwin".
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* FatGirl: Felix helps one lose weight in "Felix Wins Out", and he tries to rescue one in ''WesternAnimation/FelixLendsAHand''.
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{{Paramount}} distributed the earliest cartoons from 1919 to 1921, while Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 up to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. In 1928, Educational ended distribution and several shorts were reissued by Creator/FirstNationalPictures. Copley Pictures distributed the sound cartoons from 1929 to 1931.

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{{Paramount}} Creator/{{Paramount}} distributed the earliest cartoons from 1919 to 1921, while Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 up to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. In 1928, Educational ended distribution and several shorts were reissued by Creator/FirstNationalPictures. Copley Pictures distributed the sound cartoons from 1929 to 1931.
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Paramount Pictures distributed the earliest cartoons from 1919 to 1921, while Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 up to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. In 1928, Educational ended distribution and several shorts were reissued by First National Pictures. Copley Pictures distributed the sound cartoons from 1929 to 1931.

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Paramount Pictures {{Paramount}} distributed the earliest cartoons from 1919 to 1921, while Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 up to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. In 1928, Educational ended distribution and several shorts were reissued by First National Pictures.Creator/FirstNationalPictures. Copley Pictures distributed the sound cartoons from 1929 to 1931.
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While the cartoons were put on ice, the classic Felix series managed to find new life in the form of various newspaper comics and comic books, with the former running all the way up to the series transition into the Creator/JoeOriolo era. The newspaper comics often carried a topper page centered on a parrot named Laura and her owners, and the comic books often had an anthology format that featured side stories of oneshot or bit-player characters alongside the main Felix stories. Creator/OttoMessmer drew the lions share of the comic books up to his retirement around 1954, with Joe Oriolo and Creator/JimTyer sometimes moonlighting artwork in them. Oriolo himself took over art duties of the comic once Otto left, and would eventually end up running the iconic made-for-TV revival of the series.

to:

While the cartoons were put on ice, the classic Felix series managed to find new life in the form of various newspaper comics and comic books, with the former running all the way up to the series transition into the Creator/JoeOriolo era. The newspaper comics often carried a topper page centered on a parrot named Laura and her owners, and the comic books often had an anthology format that featured side stories of oneshot or bit-player characters alongside the main Felix stories. Creator/OttoMessmer drew the lions lion's share of the comic books up to his retirement around 1954, with Joe Oriolo and Creator/JimTyer sometimes moonlighting artwork in them. Oriolo himself took over art duties of the comic once Otto left, and would eventually end up running the iconic made-for-TV revival of the series.
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While the cartoons were put on ice, the classic Felix series managed to find new life in the form of various newspaper comics and comic books, with the former running all the way up to the series transition into the Creator/JoeOriolo era. Creator/OttoMessmer drew the lions share of the comic books up to his retirement around 1954, with Joe Oriolo and Creator/JimTyer sometimes moonlighting artwork in them. Oriolo himself took over art duties of the comic once Otto left, and would eventually end up running the iconic made-for-TV revival of the series.

to:

While the cartoons were put on ice, the classic Felix series managed to find new life in the form of various newspaper comics and comic books, with the former running all the way up to the series transition into the Creator/JoeOriolo era. The newspaper comics often carried a topper page centered on a parrot named Laura and her owners, and the comic books often had an anthology format that featured side stories of oneshot or bit-player characters alongside the main Felix stories. Creator/OttoMessmer drew the lions share of the comic books up to his retirement around 1954, with Joe Oriolo and Creator/JimTyer sometimes moonlighting artwork in them. Oriolo himself took over art duties of the comic once Otto left, and would eventually end up running the iconic made-for-TV revival of the series.
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* AnthologyComic: Typical of 40's and 50's comics, the Felix comic books had multiple stories, some of which were centered on characters unrelated to Felix. Issue #53 had side stories of characters like Uncle Minus, Don Poco, Joe Blow, a boy named Danny, and a two page prose story about a child named Tod.
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While the cartoons were put on ice, the classic Felix series managed to find new life in the form of various newspaper comics and comic books, with the former running all the way up to the series transition into the Creator/JoeOriolo era. Creator/OttoMessmer drew the lions share of the comic books up to his retirement around 1954, with Joe Oriolo and Creator/JimTyer sometimes moonlighting artwork in them. Oriolo himself took over art duties of the comic once Otto left, and would eventually end up running the iconic made-for-TV revival of the series.


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* DisproportionateRetribution: In the comic story "A Fishy Official" (Felix The Cat #54), Felix gets a job at a Census Bureau to count how many fish are in the ocean. He uses a submarine and film to estimate a count of 2,000,000,000 fish and reports the info back to his boss--who has just come back from fishing with six hanging from his hand. His boss immediately fires Felix for inefficiency.
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* DemotedToExtra: In the comic "Felix And His Friends #3" (1954), the story "Felix and the Merry Midgets" has the story mostly focus on three little dwarfs who help plan a surprise birthday part for Felix, who doesn't show up until late in the story.
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* VillainSong: "You Talk Too Much, You Never Shut Up" from "Bold King Cole".
** Captain Kidd and the rest of the pirates in "The Goose That Laid The Golden Eggs" get a particularly good one:

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* VillainSong: "You Talk Too Much, You Never Shut Up" from "Bold King Cole".
''WesternAnimation/BoldKingCole''.
** Captain Kidd and the rest of the pirates in "The Goose That Laid The Golden Eggs" ''WesternAnimation/TheGooseThatLaidTheGoldenEgg'' get a particularly good one:
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* DigitalDestruction: The 1990's reprint of the old Felix comics, ''Felix Keeps on Walkin'', deliberately altered the original artwork, redoing all of the colors digitally and adding gradients that weren't in the original art, and its linenotes even brag about how they ''removed'' bits of the original artwork, such as the expressive cartoon spark lines that pop up around Felix's head.
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* FunnyOctopus: "Neptune Nonsense" features an octopus working as a traffic cop on the sea floor. This octopus tickles Felix for bumping into him.
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Although the majority of these cartoons have become PublicDomain material, the ancillary rights to all of the original cartoons, including the remaining original film elements, merchandising/licensing rights and the copyrights to the few cartoons that didn't lapse into the public domain, are owned by Creator/{{Universal}} Studios, the parent company of Felix the Cat owner Creator/DreamWorksAnimation. Universal gained ownership of the cartoons and the character in August 2016 after acquiring [=DreamWorks=], who had bought the character and related material in question from Don Oriolo in 2014. So far, there has never been an official home video release of the surviving cartoons, due to a combination of the deteriorating film elements and the slew of public domain releases in the market. It may take a while before Universal decides to do anything with the cartoons.
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* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Feline Follies'' is so different from the rest of the series, that one would be surprised to believe its the debut of Felix, who is a relatively normal housecat named Master Tom in the cartoon. Heck, the silent cartoons are so drastically different from the rest of the Felix series in tone and style that the only thing that ties them together is that they all star Felix. Also, there was no Magic Bag of Tricks at first—that iconic element of the series [[IconicSequelCharacter wasn't introduced until the Joe Oriolo era, when the series was 40 years into its life]]. There are also very few major or recurring characters aside from Felix himself and Kitty Kat, and no recurring antagonists—often, there wasn't any real antagonist at all in the original films. The pure fantasy elements of the later Felix cartoons were also not as ubiquitous in the silent cartoons.

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* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Feline Follies'' is so different from the rest of the series, that one would be surprised to believe its the debut of Felix, who is a relatively normal housecat named Master Tom in the cartoon. Heck, the silent cartoons are so drastically different from the rest of the Felix series in tone and style that the only thing that ties them together is that they all star Felix. Also, there was no Magic Bag of Tricks at first—that in this era—that iconic element of the series [[IconicSequelCharacter wasn't introduced until the Joe Oriolo era, when the series was 40 years into its life]]. There are also very few major or recurring characters aside from Felix himself and Kitty Kat, and no recurring antagonists—often, antagonists—-often, there wasn't any real antagonist at all in the original films. The pure fantasy elements of the later Felix cartoons were also not as ubiquitous in the silent cartoons.
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* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Feline Follies'' is so different from the rest of the series, that one would be surprised to believe its the debut of Felix, who is a relatively normal housecat named Master Tom in the cartoon. Heck, the silent cartoons are so drastically different from the rest of the Felix series in tone and style that the only thing that ties them together is that they all star Felix. Also, there was no Magic Bag of Tricks at first—that iconic element of the series [[IconicSequelCharacter wasn't introduced until the Joe Oriolo era, when the series was 40 years into its life]]. There are also very few major or recurring characters aside from Felix himself and Kitty Kat, and no recurring antagonists—often, there wasn't any real antagonist at all in the original films. The pure fantasy elements of the later Felix cartoons were also not as ubiquitous in the silent cartoons.
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* SuddenNameChange: In his first two shorts, Felix's name was Master Tom. The third short, ''Adventures of Felix'', gave him the name that would stick with him forever.

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** For a more specific example, "Bold King Cole", the third and last of the Van Beuren shorts, has an impressively animated staircase scene that moves in perspective.

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** For a more specific example, "Bold King Cole", "WesternAnimation/BoldKingCole", the third and last of the Van Beuren shorts, has an impressively animated staircase scene that moves in perspective.



* BankruptcyBarrel: In "Felix in the Swim", after Felix and the kid's clothes get eaten by a goat, they go home in barrels. It's pretty odd, since [[FridgeLogic they had both been in swim trunks when their clothes got eaten, and Felix hadn't been wearing clothing to begin with]].
* BaseballEpisode: "Felix Saves The Day", which has the bulk of the cartoon centered on a baseball game.
* * BedsheetGhost: In ''Felix the Ghost Breaker'', the "ghost" (actually a traveling salesman in disguise) takes on this appearance.

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* BankruptcyBarrel: In "Felix in the Swim", "WesternAnimation/FelixInTheSwim", after Felix and the kid's clothes get eaten by a goat, they go home in barrels. It's pretty odd, since [[FridgeLogic they had both been in swim trunks when their clothes got eaten, and Felix hadn't been wearing clothing to begin with]].
* BaseballEpisode: "Felix Saves The Day", "WesternAnimation/FelixSavesTheDay", which has the bulk of the cartoon centered on a baseball game.
* * BedsheetGhost: In ''Felix the Ghost Breaker'', ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheGhostBreaker'', the "ghost" (actually a traveling salesman in disguise) takes on this appearance.



* CatsHaveNineLives: In “Felix Doubles for Darwin”, Felix is pacing around hungrily in the opening, and remarks “I'd give eight of my lives for a square meal!”

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* CatsHaveNineLives: In “Felix Doubles for Darwin”, ''WesternAnimation/FelixDoublesForDarwin'', Felix is pacing around hungrily in the opening, and remarks “I'd give eight of my lives for a square meal!”



* DerangedAnimation: One of the oldest examples. Shorts like "Felix Woos Whoopee" and the climax of "Felix Dines and Pines" are as weird and surreal as anything Creator/FleischerStudios ever did.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The nightmarish climax of "Felix Dines and Pines", where Felix eats way too much stuff, topping it off with a shoe and gets a stomachache induced nightmare from it, including being chased by a monster, encountering Santa Claus (who turns ''into'' a monster), running down a spiral tunnel, and then getting chased by a giant chicken that turns into an old man, a mouse, a bandito, a giant boot, and then a fish as the ground turns into an ocean!

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* DerangedAnimation: One of the oldest examples. Shorts like "Felix Woos Whoopee" and the climax of "Felix Dines and Pines" ''WesternAnimation/FelixDinesAndPines'' are as weird and surreal as anything Creator/FleischerStudios ever did.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The nightmarish climax of "Felix Dines and Pines", where Felix eats way too much stuff, topping it off with a shoe and gets a stomachache induced nightmare from it, including being chased by a monster, encountering Santa Claus SantaClaus (who turns ''into'' a monster), running down a spiral tunnel, and then getting chased by a giant chicken that turns into an old man, a mouse, a bandito, a giant boot, and then a fish as the ground turns into an ocean!



* FatGirl: Felix helps one lose weight in "Felix Wins Out", and he tries to rescue one in "Felix Lends a Hand".

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* FatGirl: Felix helps one lose weight in "Felix Wins Out", and he tries to rescue one in "Felix Lends a Hand".''WesternAnimation/FelixLendsAHand''.



* HypnoFool: In the opening of ''Felix the Hypnotist'', a hypnotist tries out hypnosis on Felix and a mouse, which allows a mouse to beat up Felix. Felix, despite his defeat, is intrigued by this and steals the mans book on hypnosis to learn how to do it himself.

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* HypnoFool: In the opening of ''Felix the Hypnotist'', ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheHypnotist'', a hypnotist tries out hypnosis on Felix and a mouse, which allows a mouse to beat up Felix. Felix, despite his defeat, is intrigued by this and steals the mans book on hypnosis to learn how to do it himself.



* ItsBeenDone: Parodied in "Felix In Hollywood", Felix invents what he thinks is a new act, but in reality has already been done by Creator/CharlieChaplin, who indignantly scorns Felix for allegedly stealing his act. This also doubles as a MythologyGag, since Otto Messmer had worked on a series of silent Charlie Chaplin cartoons in the past, and Felix was initially inspired by Charlie Chaplin.

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* ItsBeenDone: Parodied in "Felix In Hollywood", ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''; Felix invents what he thinks is a new act, but in reality has already been done by Creator/CharlieChaplin, who indignantly scorns Felix for allegedly stealing his act. This also doubles as a MythologyGag, since Otto Messmer had worked on a series of silent Charlie Chaplin cartoons in the past, and Felix was initially inspired by Charlie Chaplin.



* OverlyPrepreparedGag: Punch line from ''Felix The Cat- Felix Doubles For Darwin'' takes several minutes to set up.

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* OverlyPrepreparedGag: Punch The punch line from in ''Felix The Cat- Felix Doubles For Darwin'' takes several minutes to set up.



* PepperSneeze: In "Felix Pinches The Pole", Felix is searching for food and comes across a house where a man is about to eat a chicken dinner. Felix tries to reach for it, but the man shoos him off by throwing a pepper shaker at him. Felix notices the label on it and decides to sprinkle it all back at him, making the man sneeze his chicken right out the window and into Felix's clutches.

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* PepperSneeze: In "Felix ''Felix Pinches The Pole", Pole'', Felix is searching for food and comes across a house where a man is about to eat a chicken dinner. Felix tries to reach for it, but the man shoos him off by throwing a pepper shaker at him. Felix notices the label on it and decides to sprinkle it all back at him, making the man sneeze his chicken right out the window and into Felix's clutches.



* PunBasedTitle: "April Maze" is a play on the months April and May being close together, and the phrase "April showers bring May flowers", given a lot of the episode switches between stormy weather and sunny weather.

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* PunBasedTitle: "April Maze" PunBasedTitle:
** ''WesternAnimation/AprilMaze''
is a play on the months April and May being close together, and the phrase "April showers bring May flowers", given a lot of the episode switches between stormy weather and sunny weather.weather.
** ''WesternAnimation/SkullsAndSculls'' is also a punny title, as the film starts with nightmarish imagery but ends up becoming a fraternity boat race ("Sculls" is a word for a pair of small oars used by a single rower).
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In 1936, a few years after the original Pat Sullivan studio that produced the cartoons had folded, a very brief three short revival of the series was made by the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] and distributed by RKO as part of Van Beuren's ''Rainbow Parade'' cartoon series. At least two more shorts had been planned, but the studio went belly-up before anything beyond story and design work had been done.

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In 1936, a few years after the original Pat Sullivan studio that produced the cartoons had folded, a very brief three short revival of the series was made by the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] and distributed by RKO as part of Van Beuren's ''Rainbow Parade'' cartoon series. At Being helmed by ex-Disney director Burt Gillett, they have very little in common with the Otto Messmer cartoons, completely throwing out the comic like art style and surrealistic tone in favor of pure fairy tale style cartoons, with Felix himself being revamped into a more child like character. Three shorts were made for this revival, and evidence has surfaced that at least two more shorts had been were planned, but the Van Beuren studio abruptly went belly-up in 1936 before anything beyond story and design work had been done.
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Unlike Joe Oriolo's [[WesternAnimation/JoeOrioloFelixTheCat softer take on the character]], the original Felix the Cat cartoons were geared more towards an adult audience, and are unmistakably set in a surreal, comedic caricature of 1920's urban culture, with some fairy tale and fantasy elements sandwiched in. Felix is portrayed as a nomadic AntiHero who acts on his own in the bulk of these cartoons, with recurring side characters being kept minimal and only sporadically appearing. The newspaper comics and comic books are all derived from this era, but there is an overlapping period between them and the Oriolo Felix due to Joe Oriolo taking over the art and writing chores for them around 1954 and running them up to the early 60's.
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[[/folder]]

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[[/folder]]----
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A recap page for these cartoons can be found here.

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A recap page for these cartoons can be found here.
[[Recap/FelixTheCatClassic here]].
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In 1936, a few years after the original Pat Sullivan studio that produced the cartoons had folded, a very brief three short revival of the series was made by the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] and distributed by RKO as part of Van Beuren's ''Rainbow Parade'' cartoon series.

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In 1936, a few years after the original Pat Sullivan studio that produced the cartoons had folded, a very brief three short revival of the series was made by the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] and distributed by RKO as part of Van Beuren's ''Rainbow Parade'' cartoon series.
series. At least two more shorts had been planned, but the studio went belly-up before anything beyond story and design work had been done.

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! Tropes Related To The Silent and Golden Age Felix Cartoons and Comics]]

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A recap page for these cartoons can be found here.

! Tropes Related To The Silent and Golden Age Felix Cartoons and Comics]]
Comics
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[[quoteright:331:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/a3ae1935dee0f88f0681f8246e985fc7.jpg]]
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[[folder:Tropes Related To The Silent and Golden Age Felix Cartoons and Comics]]

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[[folder:Tropes ! Tropes Related To The Silent and Golden Age Felix Cartoons and Comics]]
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The original Creator/OttoMessmer cartoons that started it all, these are the original [[UsefulNotes/TheSilentAgeOfAnimation Silent Age]] and [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation Golden Age cartoons]] that jumpstarted the famous WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat cartoon series.

Paramount Pictures distributed the earliest cartoons from 1919 to 1921, while Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 up to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. In 1928, Educational ended distribution and several shorts were reissued by First National Pictures. Copley Pictures distributed the sound cartoons from 1929 to 1931.

In 1936, a few years after the original Pat Sullivan studio that produced the cartoons had folded, a very brief three short revival of the series was made by the [[Creator/VanBeurenStudios Van Beuren cartoon studio]] and distributed by RKO as part of Van Beuren's ''Rainbow Parade'' cartoon series.

[[folder:Tropes Related To The Silent and Golden Age Felix Cartoons and Comics]]

* AnimationBump: The series got much more refined in its animation as time went on. The early cartoons were very stiff and rather crudely made. But come the 1922-1924 period, when Messmer starting hiring more animators, including the esteemed Bill Nolan, the animation got much more rubbery, fluid and appealing.
** The three Creator/VanBeurenStudios Felix shorts are fairly well animated and feature lavish color and backgrounds, and as such are a considerable animation upgrade from the original cartoons--no surprise, considering their director, Burt Gillett, was a former Disney animator and director.
** For a more specific example, "Bold King Cole", the third and last of the Van Beuren shorts, has an impressively animated staircase scene that moves in perspective.
* AnthropomorphicShift: In his very earliest incarnation (as "Master Tom" in 1919's "Feline Follies"), Felix is shown as being a regular house cat. By the 1920s, he walks upright and talks, even though he's still the pet of humans. In the handful of Felix cartoons made in the 1930s, he's shown living in a society of anthropomorphic animals, and [[FurryConfusion actually keeps pets]].
* ArtisticLicensePhysics: In "Eskimotive", Felix and an (unnamed) little kitten are playing around and blowing bubbles. Eventually, the kid gets trapped in a giant bubble and is sent flying all the way up to the North Pole, where the bubble freezes in mid-air and safely drifts to the ground without popping. In real life, while it technically ''is'' possible to freeze a bubble, a bubble that large would have popped well before its moisture could've been frozen, especially if it was hanging in mid-air.
* BankruptcyBarrel: In "Felix in the Swim", after Felix and the kid's clothes get eaten by a goat, they go home in barrels. It's pretty odd, since [[FridgeLogic they had both been in swim trunks when their clothes got eaten, and Felix hadn't been wearing clothing to begin with]].
* BaseballEpisode: "Felix Saves The Day", which has the bulk of the cartoon centered on a baseball game.
* * BedsheetGhost: In ''Felix the Ghost Breaker'', the "ghost" (actually a traveling salesman in disguise) takes on this appearance.
* BigBudgetBeefUp: The Van Beuren era Felix shorts had much higher budgets than any of the Silent era shorts, and thus have very fluid animation, vivid backgrounds and colors and have a level of polish to them that sometimes borders on Disney quality animation.
* CatConcerto: In "Forty Winks", Felix conducts his friends in a chorus outside a guy's house.
* CatsHaveNineLives: In “Felix Doubles for Darwin”, Felix is pacing around hungrily in the opening, and remarks “I'd give eight of my lives for a square meal!”
* CharlieChaplinShoutOut: Felix meets and imitates Chaplin in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''.
* ChasteToons: Perhaps the earliest example, as the kittens Inky and Dinky (the latter renamed Winky in the Joe Oriolo comics) were introduced as Felix's sons in 1926, then suddenly [[RetCon retconned]] as nephews in 1930. A few pre-1930 comics were even reprinted with the familial relationship changed.
* ChekhovsGunman: In "Felix the Ghost Breaker", the ghost scares off a donkey from the farmers barnhouse. In the ending, when its revealed the ghost is [[ScoobyDooHoax really a salesman in disguise,]] the agitated farmer whistles for his donkey, who returns on the spot and proceeds the kick the salesman into the air, sending him flying to the moon.
* CheesyMoon: Present for a gag in a 1920's Felix sunday strip. Felix decides to help out a struggling cheese vendor by climbing a tower and pulling the moon directly out of the sky like its a wheel of cheese, which the shopowner gratefully chops up and begins selling. Unfortunately, he is arrested shortly afterward--the crime being that he's selling Moonshine!
* ConstantlyCurious: Otto Messmer described boylike curiosity as being a major trait of Felix's personality, which often ends up getting him into one adventure after another.
-->'''Otto Messmer''': "I used an extreme amount of eye motion, wriggling eyes and turning his whiskers, and this seemed to be what hit the public - expressions! I think instead of just having him chase a lot of things around and bumpin' each other, which might be funny, I made him act as a little boy would wonder... how high is that star, how deep is the ocean, what makes the wind blow? I used all those things for a theme."
* CuteLittleFangs: Felix is sometimes drawn with these.
* DastardlyWhiplash: In "Uncle Tom's Crabbin", Felix faces off against the original whiplash, [[Literature/UncleTomsCabin Simon Legree]], who is the villain of the cartoon.
* DerangedAnimation: One of the oldest examples. Shorts like "Felix Woos Whoopee" and the climax of "Felix Dines and Pines" are as weird and surreal as anything Creator/FleischerStudios ever did.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The nightmarish climax of "Felix Dines and Pines", where Felix eats way too much stuff, topping it off with a shoe and gets a stomachache induced nightmare from it, including being chased by a monster, encountering Santa Claus (who turns ''into'' a monster), running down a spiral tunnel, and then getting chased by a giant chicken that turns into an old man, a mouse, a bandito, a giant boot, and then a fish as the ground turns into an ocean!
* DisneySchoolOfActingAndMime: Felix is one of the earliest examples of using this in animation, and it's justified, since almost all of the original B&W films were silent cartoons. Creator/OttoMessmer had studied actor Creator/CharlieChaplin extensively (even working on a cartoon series based on him prior to creating Felix) and realized how important it was to get this kind of expressive acting into drawings. While the cartoons do employ speech balloons for the characters to talk, a lot of the personality is conveyed through the broad, hammy poses and animation.
* DownerEnding: Felix's first theatrical short ends with [[spoiler:him sucking on a gas pipe after he gets kicked out of his home and finds out his girlfriend already has kittens.]]
* EverythingsBetterWithMonkeys: The ending of "Felix Doubles For Darwin".
* FatGirl: Felix helps one lose weight in "Felix Wins Out", and he tries to rescue one in "Felix Lends a Hand".
* GrievousHarmWithABody: Inverted in "Gym Gems", where a boxer ties up Felix and uses him as a punching bag, knocking him around hard enough that he flies right out of the building.
* HaveAGayOldTime: The opening of "Bold King Cole" had Felix singing the lyric "We laugh and play, it keeps us gay, nature and me!". In the 1930's, the word Gay had a different connotation than today, meaning "happy, carefree, joyful".
* HauntedCastle: The castle in "Bold King Cole", which is inhabited by ghosts of King Cole's ancestors.
* HypnoFool: In the opening of ''Felix the Hypnotist'', a hypnotist tries out hypnosis on Felix and a mouse, which allows a mouse to beat up Felix. Felix, despite his defeat, is intrigued by this and steals the mans book on hypnosis to learn how to do it himself.
* IdeaBulb: Quite often seen in the silent cartoons.
* ImpactSilhouette: In "Felix Goes West", this happens when Felix is thrown through a door by an angry house owner.
* InNameOnly: The Van Beuren era shorts have virtually nothing to do with the original cartoons save for starring Felix himself, who is characterized fairly different than in the past.
* ItsBeenDone: Parodied in "Felix In Hollywood", Felix invents what he thinks is a new act, but in reality has already been done by Creator/CharlieChaplin, who indignantly scorns Felix for allegedly stealing his act. This also doubles as a MythologyGag, since Otto Messmer had worked on a series of silent Charlie Chaplin cartoons in the past, and Felix was initially inspired by Charlie Chaplin.
* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: In "Felix the Ghost Breaker", when the ghost is attacking Felix in the dark, it stops to get very close to the camera point its finger directly at the audience, implying that [[TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou he's going after them next]] once he's through with Felix.
* LightningCanDoAnything: In a Sunday comic, Felix is harassed by a rather nasty lightning bolt that actively follows him, even vaporizing a house he tries to seek shelter in (save for the doorknob he was holding in his hand). Felix turns the tables on it by attracting the bolt to a mousetrap, which allows him to harness it as a power source and sell it.
** In "Bold King Cole", it can slice through a cloud like a knife, turn Felix's head into a lightbulb, play a piano, and even destroy ghosts!
* LighterAndSofter: The Van Beuren shorts have none of the urban tone, dark or vulgar gags or surreal nature of the original silent cartoons.
* LiteralAssKicking: In the ending of "Felix the Ghost Breaker", the ghost is trapped at gunpoint by Felix and is revealed by the farmer to be a salesman trying to [[ScoobyDooHoax scare him into buying something from him.]] The farmer summons his donkey ([[ChekhovsGunman who had been scared off earlier by the "ghost"]]), and the donkey kicks the salesman the butt, sending him flying into the moon in the end.
* MediumBlending: "Felix Saves The Day" has still photographs for backgrounds in some shots, and it even has live action footage at some parts (but the animation and live action do not interact).
* MilesGloriosus: In "Bold King Cole", Felix encounters Old King Cole, who brags about his supposed heroics but then runs an hides from anything he perceives as a threat. Eventually, the spirits of past kings get tired of his bragging and proceed kidnap him, strapping him to a machine to "knock the wind out of the old windbag", and Felix has to face his own fears to rescue him.
* MoodWhiplash: The opening of "Bold King Cole", where after the first few seconds of Felix singing a very upbeat song, backed up by some very colorful scenery, suddenly cuts straight into a nasty storm scene.
* MrViceGuy: The Silent era Felix is unmistakably the hero of the cartoons, but he's not without his vices--he's not above pulling strings to get what he wants, such as his first newspaper comic involving bribing some mice to invade a man's house so that he can get a job and food from him in exchange for catching the mice, and even in cartoons where he has a wife and kids (such as in "Flim Flam Films"), he has no shame in flirting with another kitten nearby.
* NoAntagonist: The bulk of the Silent/Golden Age cartoons had very few if any clear cut villains for Felix to deal with. They're mostly centered in Felix being a cat trying to survive and find food in a selfish, rough n tumble world.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Felix is heavily based off of Creator/CharlieChaplin, and The Tramp himself appears in ''WesternAnimation/FelixInHollywood''.
* OverlyPrepreparedGag: Punch line from ''Felix The Cat- Felix Doubles For Darwin'' takes several minutes to set up.
* PaintingTheMedium: A few of the old strips had gags involving Felix's speech balloon, be it him literally eating his own words or using his speech balloon for a...well, literal balloon.
** In another early newspaper comic, Felix is searching for a monkey that escaped from a zoo. Felix ponders where it is, failing to notice that the primate is right behind him, and is resting it's hand on his speech balloon!
** In "Eskimotive", when two Inuits are revealed to be kissing under the moonlight, they want their privacy, so one of them ''pulls down the skyline like a sheet of black paper''.
* PepperSneeze: In "Felix Pinches The Pole", Felix is searching for food and comes across a house where a man is about to eat a chicken dinner. Felix tries to reach for it, but the man shoos him off by throwing a pepper shaker at him. Felix notices the label on it and decides to sprinkle it all back at him, making the man sneeze his chicken right out the window and into Felix's clutches.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: In "Uncle Tom's Crabbin", Felix travels into the deep south and meets [[Literature/UncleTomsCabin Uncle Tom]]. Not long after, Felix faces off against [[DastardlyWhiplash Simon Legree]], who was angered at Tom's music waking up him, promptly [[KickTheDog whipping him (off-screen) and smashing his banjo apart]]. Felix is on Tom's side the whole cartoon, [[PetTheDog quickly improvising a new banjo for him]], and when Simon's wrath is incured again, Felix has Legree chase after him. When Legree fails to catch Felix, he sicks a hunting dog on Felix, which the cat proceeds to beat to a pulp.
* PragmaticHero: Felix sometimes falls into this in the silent cartoons and comics. He is unquestionably the protagonist, but he's not above doing something shady to get what he needs to survive, especially since he's often homeless and has to scavenge for food. In his newspaper comic debut, he tries to get a job as a mouse catcher, but is given the boot by a houseowner. Felix is so indignant, that he figures out a plan--he steals a wheel of cheese from a truck nearby, and bribes some local mice with it to terrorize the owner of the house. The fearful owner offers Felix a job and food on the spot.
* PublicDomainAnimation: Many of the silent cartoons are public domain.
* PunBasedTitle: "April Maze" is a play on the months April and May being close together, and the phrase "April showers bring May flowers", given a lot of the episode switches between stormy weather and sunny weather.
* RidiculouslyCuteCritter: Felix's simple, round design set the standard for cute cartoon animals ever since.
* ScoobyDooHoax: "Felix the Ghost Breaker" is centered on Felix trying to save a farmers house from a pesky ghost who is haunting it. It turns out that it's a traveling salesman who is trying to scare the farmer into buying something from him.
* SeadogPegLeg: Captain Kidd steals "The Goose That Laid The Golden Egg" in the 1936 cartoon. He duels ably with Felix at first, until his peg gets stuck in a knothole on the pirate ship's deck.
* ShaggyDogStory: In ''WesternAnimation/FelixOutOfLuck'', the whole conflict is set into action because Felix's owner put up a fake sign to trick bill collectors, which Felix thinks is a real sign that she's left town.
* ShowWithinAShow: In "Flim Flam Films", Felix and his sons sneak into a movie theater in the back, and the film they watch in the theater turns out to be a Felix the Cat cartoon! His nephews think its the real Felix about to be eaten by a lion in the cartoon though, and they ruin the screening by leaping into and tearing up the film screen. After getting thrown out of the theater, Felix gets them to stop crying by suggesting they all make their own movie instead!
* StrappedToAnOperatingTable: Happens to King Cole when he's kidnapped by an army of ghosts in ''Bold King Cole''.
* StockAnimalDiet: Subverted in "Neptune Nonsense", when King Neptune accuses Felix (who was trying to find a friend for his pet goldfish) of trying to kidnap fish so he can cook and eat them. Felix exasperatedly explains to him that he doesn't eat fish.
* StockAnimalName: This cat is called Felix, one of the most generic names to give to a cat.
* SuperNotDrowningSkills: Felix is apparently able to breathe underwater in "Neptune Nonsense", per RuleOfFunny.
* TalkingAnimal: Felix himself, and many other characters in the series.
* ThatsNoMoon: In ''Felix Doubles for Darwin'', Felix arrives in South Africa and tries climbing up what he thinks is a tree—but it quickly turns out its the thick leg of a giant bird, which quickly reveals its presence and chases after him.
* TotemPoleTrench: Felix and his sons use this kind of disguise to sneak into a movie (Felix had the money, but the theater wouldn't allow cats in it) in "Flim Flam Films". Felix accidentally blows the disguise inside the theater, so they're forced to run back outside, and then sneak into the theater by squeezing through a wire near the back door.
* TravelingPipeBulge: The "Felix Doubles for Darwin" short has a whole scene of Felix traveling through the entire transatlantic cable and then back again, pursued by apes.
* VisualPun: In a 1920's Felix Sunday strip, Felix decides to help out a struggling cheese vendor by climbing a tower and pulling the moon directly out of the sky like its a wheel of cheese, which the shopowner gratefully chops up and begins selling. Unfortunately, he is arrested shortly afterward--the crime being that he's selling Moonshine!
* VillainSong: "You Talk Too Much, You Never Shut Up" from "Bold King Cole".
** Captain Kidd and the rest of the pirates in "The Goose That Laid The Golden Eggs" get a particularly good one:
---> ''Oh, we take what we want and we want what we take''
---> ''For we’re pirates out hunting for treasure!''
---> ''If we need any gold, we steal it away,''
---> ''Robbing widows and orphans of pleasure!''
---> ''We fight with our hands, we cuss and shoot,''
---> ''We’re mean and we’re bad from our hats to our boots.''
---> ''We take what we want and we want what we take''
---> ''For we’re pirates out hunting for treasure!''
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: In "Bold King Cole", whatever happened to those guests that the King was boasting to?
* YankTheDogsChain: In "Felix Pinches the Pole", Felix is on the search for good and successfully snags a piece of chicken from a local. But just when he sets down to eat, a giant snake comes rolling along and gobbles the thing whole, leaving Felix destitute.
[[/folder]]

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