Product Tag - wb short

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    Billboard Frolics (1935)

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    Billboard Frolics (1935)

    Billboards come to life. Eddie Camphor and his “wioleen” player Rub-Him-Off do a song and dance to “Merrily We Roll Along” with new lyrics…

    $25.00
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    All Girl Revue (1940)

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    All Girl Revue (1940)

    Women are put in charge of the city government for a day, and the mayor must go to the train station to greet an opera singer.

    $25.00
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    Plane Daffy (1944)

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    Plane Daffy (1944)

    Daffy Duck is a message courier bird delivering a military secret that a femme fatale Nazi spy is determined to get.

    $25.00
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    Easter Yeggs (1947)

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    Easter Yeggs (1947)

    Bugs gets roped into delivering the Easter Rabbit’s eggs for him.

    $25.00
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    Gorilla My Dreams (1948)

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    Gorilla My Dreams (1948)

    Bugs is sailing the South Seas when a gorilla mother, desperate for a child, hijacks his barrel and presents Bugs to her husband. Bugs decides to play along, but quickly discovers his new “father” plays a bit rough.

    $25.00
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    Going! Going! Gosh! (1952)

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    Going! Going! Gosh! (1952)

    Wile E. Coyote tries to catch the Road Runner

    $25.00
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    Bunny Hugged (1951)

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    Bunny Hugged (1951)

    Bunny Hugged is a 1950 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies (a Blue Ribbon re-issue) short, directed by Chuck Jones and written by Michael Maltese. Released in 1951, the short is essentially a re-working of Jones’ 1948 short Rabbit Punch, substituting wrestling for boxing.ew found.

    $25.00
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    Walky Talky Hawky (1946)

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    Walky Talky Hawky (1946)

    Young Henery Hawk’s father regretfully admits their family’s shame: they hunt and eat chickens. Henery set off to find one, and comes across Foghorn Leghorn, where the loudmouth rooster is engaged in his favorite pastime, playing tricks on a grumpy dog.

    $25.00
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    Hollywood Capers (1935)

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    Hollywood Capers (1935)

    W.C.Fields enters the Warmer Bros. Studio. Beans tries to drive in, but the guard throws him and his car against a tree. Charlie Chaplin drives in, followed by Oliver Hardy on foot – but we see that it’s really Beans in disguise. Oliver Owl is directing a picture; Beans sneaks onto the stage. He’s watching from a catwalk when someone knocks him off, into the middle of the scene. Beans is thrown off the set, right into the set of a Frankenstein movie. He accidentally brings the robotic monster to life, and it crashes into the original studio, eating the camera. Beans tries to stop the monster, but is sent flying. He lands against a wind machine. which chops up the monster.

    $25.00
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    Three Little Bops (1957)

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    Three Little Bops (1957)

    Three hip, Little Pigs are travelling entertainers, moving from straw to wood, to brick nightclubs, playing swinging tunes for high-class, “with it” crowds, but an uncool Big Bad Wolf keeps intruding on their act with with his “corny horn” and uses it to blow their nightclubs down when they throw him out- until they are playing in their brick club and the Wolf tries a more drastic, explosive method for destroying the “House of Bricks”.

    $25.00
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    Tweety Pie (1947)

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    Tweety Pie (1947)

    Thomas the cat finds Tweety in the snow, warming himself by a cigar butt. Thomas’s mistress rescues the little yellow bird before her cat can devour him, but Thomas doesn’t give up.

    $25.00
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    A Corny Concerto (1943)

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    A Corny Concerto (1943)

    A Corny Concerto is an American animated cartoon short produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions and distributed by Warner Bros. It was directed by Bob Clampett, written by Frank Tashlin, animated by Robert McKimson and released as part of the Merrie Melodies series on September 25, 1943. A parody of Disney’s 1940 feature Fantasia, the film uses two of Johann Strauss’ best known waltzes, Tales from the Vienna Woods and The Blue Danube, adapted by the cartoon unit’s music director, Carl Stalling and orchestrated by its arranger and later, Stalling’s successor, Milt Franklyn. Long considered a classic for its sly humor and impeccable timing with the music, it was voted #47 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field in 1994

    $25.00
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