DaffyDonaldQW93
Member
Allthough this is usually geared toward buffs of the Golden Age Of Animation, maybe you can do some stuff that's bizzare like you normally do, Martianinvader. Some of the suggestions ranges from suprisingly normal to downright bizzare.
I have some suggestions.....
1. The "Old MacDonald Had A Farm" UAV (United American Video and foriegn langauge dub opening conspiracy- (some rhetorical questions that can be answered as soon as the answers could be unfolded) Did the musical sing-along gag anthnology adaption of the children's song open and close with the majestic ol' Star-Crested Smoky associated with Paramount Pictures, or did later prints of the PD tape from UAV and the restored French print from Lobster Films cut out the logo for legal reasons? If so, what did it look like? Was it the correct opening logo? That, and does it still exist on the original negative even when Paramount's sitting on the cartoon for home video? A shining example of PD tapes, slicing/dicing and original titles, even in the most mundane of cartoons.
2. "Casper's First Christmas"- I don't know if it ever will make it to the Warner Archive store, but is a holiday crossover with the H-B character that is surely entertaining for a kid. Given that Casper and Yogi Bear got terrible movies. Also, compare it to the 1952 short True Boo- the original Casper Christmas cartoon.
3. The Brief Encylcopedia of Paramount characters- If you've never heard of Little Lulu, Little Audrey, Jasper (from George Pal's Puppetoons), Buzzy, Gabby, Hunky & Spunky, and Baby Huey, this is the site other than video-sharing and Google to profile these characters, especially if you're going to the dollar store and the characters are billed. Also could come in handy for Jerry Beck's next DVD proposal with Paramount Home Entertainment.
4. The original titles not seen on Jerry Beck's "Cartoon Research" web page
5. Chew Chew Baby- should I say more? Really?
6. The Cable Networks That Showed the UM&M/NTA-packaged Paramount cartoons in the 80's and 90's- They were- A&E, AMC, and yes, Cartoon Network and Disney Channel. You could show some proof, Martianinvader
7. Buzzy Boop- the lost black-and-white Fleischer character
8. How Herman and Katnip influenced Itchy and Scratchy (it wasn't just Tom & Jerry)
9. 16mm and 35mm original prints with orignal titles on eBay. How collectors are bidding on reels that should have been in the hands of archives and even the studios that own the cartoons.
So, whaddya think?
I have some suggestions.....
1. The "Old MacDonald Had A Farm" UAV (United American Video and foriegn langauge dub opening conspiracy- (some rhetorical questions that can be answered as soon as the answers could be unfolded) Did the musical sing-along gag anthnology adaption of the children's song open and close with the majestic ol' Star-Crested Smoky associated with Paramount Pictures, or did later prints of the PD tape from UAV and the restored French print from Lobster Films cut out the logo for legal reasons? If so, what did it look like? Was it the correct opening logo? That, and does it still exist on the original negative even when Paramount's sitting on the cartoon for home video? A shining example of PD tapes, slicing/dicing and original titles, even in the most mundane of cartoons.
2. "Casper's First Christmas"- I don't know if it ever will make it to the Warner Archive store, but is a holiday crossover with the H-B character that is surely entertaining for a kid. Given that Casper and Yogi Bear got terrible movies. Also, compare it to the 1952 short True Boo- the original Casper Christmas cartoon.
3. The Brief Encylcopedia of Paramount characters- If you've never heard of Little Lulu, Little Audrey, Jasper (from George Pal's Puppetoons), Buzzy, Gabby, Hunky & Spunky, and Baby Huey, this is the site other than video-sharing and Google to profile these characters, especially if you're going to the dollar store and the characters are billed. Also could come in handy for Jerry Beck's next DVD proposal with Paramount Home Entertainment.
4. The original titles not seen on Jerry Beck's "Cartoon Research" web page
5. Chew Chew Baby- should I say more? Really?
6. The Cable Networks That Showed the UM&M/NTA-packaged Paramount cartoons in the 80's and 90's- They were- A&E, AMC, and yes, Cartoon Network and Disney Channel. You could show some proof, Martianinvader
7. Buzzy Boop- the lost black-and-white Fleischer character
8. How Herman and Katnip influenced Itchy and Scratchy (it wasn't just Tom & Jerry)
9. 16mm and 35mm original prints with orignal titles on eBay. How collectors are bidding on reels that should have been in the hands of archives and even the studios that own the cartoons.
So, whaddya think?