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Caricature
BeAStooge:
--- Quote from: Jareth on December 17, 2005, 03:59:33 PM ---Can These Cartoons be found?
BON BON PARADE (Columbia Color Rhapsody 1935)
HOLLYWOOD PICNIC (Columbia Color Rhapsody 1937)
POOR LITTLE BUTTERFLY (Columbia Color Rhapsody 1939)
CINDERELLA GOES TO A PARTY (Columbia Color Rhapsody 1942)
A HOLLYWOOD DETOUR (Columbia Color Rhapsody 1942)
THE MILLER'S DAUGHTER (Merrie Melodies 1934)
BUDDY'S LOST WORLD (Looney Tunes 1935)
PORKY'S HERO AGENCY (Looney Tunes 1937)
WHOLLY SMOKE (Looney Tunes 1938)
PORKY IN WACKYLAND (Looney Tunes 1938)
HOLLYWOOD STEPS OUT (Merrie Melodies 1941)
DOUGH FOR THE DO-DO (Merrie Melodies 1949)
THE CAPTURE OF THE DREADED THREE-HEADED THREEP (Beany & Cecil TV cartoon 1961)
--- End quote ---
Sony has expressed no interest in its classic cartoon library, so the probability of the Color Rhapsodies on home video is unlikely. 16mm prints are around, but rare; I have a very nice print of HOLLYWOOD PICNIC (1937). Some Rhapsodies were marketed on 8mm (in b&w) in the 1960s, with BON BON PARADE (1935) turning up most often.
The Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 1 DVD set contains DOUGH FOR THE DO-DO (1949), and The Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 2 contains HOLLYWOOD STEPS OUT (1941) and PORKY IN WACKYLAND (1938), digitally transferred from remastered/restored Warner library negatives. The others will turn up on DVD some time in the future, as more of Warner Bros.' DVD sets are released... but it will be a slow process, since the studio is painstakingly restoring their negatives as close to original condition as possible at a cost of $millions, at a rate of about 60 cartoons per year (there are 1,100 Merrie Melodies/Looney Tunes cartoons). HOLLYWOOD STEPS OUT (1941) is public domain, so it is also very easy to find crappy copies on numerous bargain-label DVDs and VHS's.
The Golden Collection DVDs are listed in this site's Videography, http://threestooges.net/videography.php
A computer-colorized PORKY'S HERO AGENCY (1938) was on a VHS about ten years ago, Porky Pig Days of Swine and Roses. The original black & white was on a Laser Disc collection, Wince Upon a Time.
Except for THE MILLER'S DAUGHTER (1934) and BUDDY'S LOST WORLD (1935), all the Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes with Stooge caricatures are shown on Warner Bros.' cable channels Cartoon Network and Boomerang; the LT's are usually the computer-colorized versions.
The Beany & Cecil TV cartoon was released on Vol. 8 of Columbia's B&C VHS series in the late 1980s; it is not on DVD, or included in Cartoon Network's now-defunct THE BOB CLAMPETT SHOW.
BeAStooge:
--- Quote from: Giff me dat fill-em! on December 17, 2005, 08:20:10 PM ---My source, The Stoogephile Trivia Movie, states that this was the first color appearance of the boys where they didn't even have to show up. We all know that The Stooges' first color appearance is Nertsery Rhymes.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0033724/
--- End quote ---
All the Columbia Color Rhapsodies were naturally in color, and several pre-date HOLLYWOOD STEPS OUT (1941), with BON BON PARADE (1935) at six years.
In addition to NERTSERY RHYMES (1933), the missing HELLO POP (1933) was filmed in 2-strip Technicolor. Curly's solo ROAST-BEEF AND MOVIES (1934) and the missing Moe & Curly JAILBIRDS OF PARADISE (1934) were also 2-strip Technicolor.
Capt.KSB:
Dear Shemoley Fine,
Bugs Bunny was not in"Hollywood
Steps Out".
You're confusing"Slick Hair"which
featured Caractures of Sid Greenstreet,
Carmen Miranda,Frank Sinatra,Ray Milland,
Harpo Marx,Humphrey and Lauren Bacall
Bogart with "Hollywood Steps Out".
Bugs did imitations of Edward G.Robinson,
Jerry Colona and Bing Crosby in"What's Cooking
Doc".
And Bugs worked with caracatures of
EdwardG.Robinson and Peter Lorrie in
"Racketeer Rabbitt".
But?
He never did a Warner Brothers"Looney
Tunes"or "Merrie Melodies"movie cartoons
with caracatures of Cary Grant and Edward G.
Robinson in a Hollywood,Cal. nightclub setting.
Anyway,
Thanks For Remembering
Bugs Bunny's and Warner Brothers
animated parodies of the movies most
popular performers,
Capt.KSB. >:( ??? ;)
Dr. Belch:
In the modern era, there was the short "Pinky and the Brain...and Larry", in which the world-domination seeking lab mice are partnered with a third mouse who looks and sounds like Larry Fine. Naturally it throws off their dynamic, and the plan soon degenerates to Stoogeish slapstick. Billy West, who does a spot-on Larry Fine, voiced Larry the lab mouse. "I'm the one called Larry."
Another P&B episode showed a number of world leaders watching films by a comedy trio dubbed "The Three Morons" (presumably for copyright purposes) who were, of course, caricatures of [3stooges].
I myself have a comic book series in which I do a lot of Stooge homages. One story, "Nutzi Nazis", features caricatures Adolf Hitler, Martin Bormann, and SS doctor Ludwig Stumpfegger as Moe, Curly, and Larry respectively.
Which I guess just shows to go ya--always imitated, never duplicated.
stooge1029:
The best stooge caricatures Ive ever seen are actually done by John K and Spumco (Ren and Stimpy). They put out stooge figures and dolls in the mid 90s. I have the set and looking at their faces still makes me laugh. He got everything right. Anyone else have these?
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