Phantasies
Not to be confused with Phantastes, the novel by George MacDonald.
Phantasies is the name of a series of animated cartoons produced by the Screen Gems studio for Columbia Pictures from 1939 to 1946. The series, featuring characters such as Willoughby Wren and Superkatt, is notable as being the last theatrical animated series produced in black-and-white. Columbia did not move the Phantasies out of black-and-white until the end of 1946, when it went to all-Cinecolor production.[1]
Filmography
Title | Release date | Director | Character(s) | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Mouse Exterminator | 1940 | Ben Harrison and Manny Gould | Krazy Kat | The final theatrical Krazy Kat cartoon | |
Man of Tin | 1940 | (unknown) | |||
Fish Follies | 1940 | (unknown) | |||
News Oddities | 1940 | (unknown) | |||
School Boy Dreams | 1940 | (unknown) | |||
Happy Holidays | 1940 | (unknown) | |||
The Little Theater | 1941 | (unknown) | |||
There's Music in Your Hair | 1941 | (unknown) | |||
The Wallflower | 1941 | (unknown) | |||
The Cute Recruit | 1941 | Arthur Davis (uncredited) | |||
Dog Meets Dog | 1942 | Alec Geiss | Butch Bulldog | ||
The Wild and Woozy West | 1942 | Lou Lilly and Allen Rose | |||
A Battle for a Bottle | 1942 | Alec Geiss | |||
The Gullible Canary | 1942 | Alec Geiss | |||
The Dumbconscious Mind | 1942 | John Hubley and Paul Sommer | |||
Malice in Slumberland | 1942 | Alec Geiss | |||
Cholly Polly | 1942 | Alec Geiss | |||
The Vitamin G-Man | 1943 | John Hubley and Paul Sommer | |||
Kindly Scram | 1943 | Alec Geiss | |||
Willoughby's Magic Hat | 1943 | Bob Wickersham | Willoughby Wren | ||
Duty and the Beast | 1943 | Alec Geiss | |||
Mass Mouse Meeting | 1943 | Alec Geiss | |||
The Fly in the Ointment | 1943 | Paul Sommer | |||
Dizzy Newsreel | 1943 | Alec Geiss | |||
Nursery Crimes | 1943 | Alec Geiss | Professor J. Snuffington Snodgrass | ||
The Cocky Bantam | 1943 | Paul Sommer | |||
The Playful Pest | 1943 | Paul Sommer | |||
Polly Wants a Doctor | 1944 | Howard Swift | |||
Magic Strength | 1944 | Bob Wickersham | |||
Lionel Lion | 1944 | Paul Sommer | |||
Giddy-Yapping | 1944 | Howard Swift | |||
Tangled Travels | 1944 | Alec Geiss | |||
Mr. Fore by Fore | 1944 | Howard Swift | |||
The Case of the Screaming Bishop | 1944 | Howard Swift | |||
Mutt 'n' Bones | 1944 | Paul Sommer | |||
As the Fly Flies | 1944 | Howard Swift | |||
Goofy News Views | 1945 | Sid Marcus | |||
Booby Socks | 1945 | Howard Swift and Bob Wickersham | |||
Simple Siren | 1945 | Paul Sommer | |||
Snap Happy Traps | 1946 | Bob Wickersham | |||
The Schooner the Better | 1946 | Howard Swift | Last black-and-white cartoon from a major cartoon studio | ||
Fowl Brawl[2] | 1947 | Howard Swift | Produced in Cinecolor | ||
Uncultured Vulture | 1947 | Bob Wickersham | Produced in Cinecolor | ||
Leave Us Chase It | 1947 | Howard Swift | Superkatt | Produced in Cinecolor | |
Wacky Quacky | 1947 | Alex Lovy | Produced in Cinecolor | ||
Tooth or Consequences | 1947 | Howard Swift | Produced in Cinecolor | ||
Kitty Caddy | 1947 | Sid Marcus | Produced in Cinecolor | ||
Topsy Turkey | 1948 | Sid Marcus | Produced in Cinecolor | ||
Short Snorts on Sports | 1948 | Alex Lovy | Produced in Cinecolor | ||
The Coo-Coo Bird Dog | 1949 | Sid Marcus | Produced in Cinecolor |
See also
References
- ↑ Jeff Lenburg (2006). Who's Who in Animated Cartoons. ISBN 155783671X.
- ↑ Maltin, Leonard (1987). Of Mice and Magic (revised edition). pp. 418, 419. ISBN 0-452-25993-2.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 06, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.