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Merrie Melodies: Aviation Vacation* (1941) | On this plane trip to Africa (via Ireland), airplanes fly like birds, sound like trains and dance to music. Shadows move like they have a mind of their own, Mount Rushmore gets a topical joke and even the sun and moon get in on the act. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Awful Orphan* (1949) | Porky Pig's quiet life in his high-rise apartment building is rudely disrupted when an obnoxious mutt sneaks in and refuses to leave. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Bunker Hill Bunny* (1949) | Set in 1776 at the Battle of Bagle Heights, the short pits Bugs, dressed as an American Minuteman defending a wooden fort against the red-coated Sam von Schamm, the Hessian. | |
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Merry Melodies: Bunny Hugged* (1951) | This adventure takes Bugs into the world of professional wrestling. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Canned Feud* (1951) | Sylvester Cat finds that his owner has gone on vacation and left him home alone with a large stash of canned food in a locked cupboard and a pesky mouse. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Caveman Inki* (1950) | Back in prehistoric times, a thundering earthquake splits a mountain wide open, and out hops the minah bird, to alternately bedevil, mystify and rescue Inki as he hunts dinosaurs. WARNING: May Contain racial stereotypes. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Confederate Honey* (1940) | Nett Cutler (Elmer Fudd) romances Crimson O'Hairoil in this send-up of Gone With the Wind. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes, offered only for its historical value. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Daffy Duck Hunt* (1949) | Porky Pig goes to a marsh on a hunting expedition, accompanied by his dog, and they bring home a live Daffy Duck. They put Daffy into a freezer to keep him fresh until cooking time, but Daffy keeps jumping out. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Dangerous Dan McFoo* (1939) | An arctic saloon. The tiny dog, Dan McFoo, is playing a pinball-like marble game in the back. His girlfriend, Sue, stands by. A stranger comes in with eyes for Sue and begins a boxing match with Dan. | |
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Merrie Melodies: A Day At The Zoo (1939) | Cartoon characters spend a silly day at the Kalama Zoo. Produced in 1939. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The Dish Ran Away With The Spoon* (1933) | Dishes and utensils wash, dry, and stack themselves. A duster plays a silverware box like a piano while a salt-pepper-and-sugar set sings. The spoon proposes to the dish, then plays percussion on some pans and jam jars. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The Early Worm Gets The Bird* (1940) | Mammy blackbird puts her three little ones to bed, but one of them stays up reading The Early Bird Catches the Worm. Mammy throws the book out and warns about the fox, which will surely get them if they try to be an early bird. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Falling Hare (1943) | Bugs Bunny goes to a military base where he meets up with a mischievous gremlin who gets the better of him. Animation by Rod Scribner, music by Carl W. Stalling. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Fifth Column Mouse* (1943) | The mice of a house prepare for war when their appeasement policy fails to end the menace of a cat. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Foney Fables* (1942) | A series of fractured fairy tales vignettes. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Fox Pop* (1942) | A fox believes the general demand for silver foxes relates to themselves as living creatures instead of their dead fur. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Gold Rush Daze* (1939) | A gentleman listens to a gas station attendant talk about his adventures panning for gold. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Goldilocks And The Jivin' Bears* (1944) | The Three Bears, a jazz trio, are enjoying a hot jam session when their instruments catch fire so they go for a walk to let the instruments cool off. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes and is being offered only for its historical value. | |
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Merry Melodies: Goopy Geer* (1932) | Goopy, a dog of no particular personality, but a crackerjack piano player, plays several songs on the stage of a nightclub. We spend a fair amount of time watching the patrons and staff of the nightclub. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Hamateur Night* (1939) | It's amateur night at the local theatre, and a procession of bad acts comes and goes: various musicians, a magician, and some actors. But they keep getting interrupted by Egghead singing She'll Be Comin' Round the Mountain. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Hare Do* (1949) | Elmer chases Bugs out of the woods, into the city, into a theatre. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Hare We Go* (1951) | In 1492, Bugs Bunny sails the ocean blue, as mascot for Christopher Columbus. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Have You Got Any Castles? (1938) | A night in a small library. The characters of famous books come to life, referring to movie versions of these books. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes and is being offered only for its historical value. It is in no way meant to offend. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The High And The Flighty* (1956) | The High And The Flighty: Salesman Daffy Duck comes upon a farm, the site of Foghorn Leghorn's ongoing feud with the barnyard dog, and proceeds to sell Foghorn and the dog contraptions to continue their violent, mutual heckling. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Hittin The Trail For Hallelujah Land (1931) | The cartoon stars the Mickey Mouse-esque Piggy, his girlfriend Fluffy, and a canine Uncle Tom. The film opens with a singing steamboat dancing down a river. On the deck, three blackface caricatures play the song for which the short is named. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Home Tweet Home* (1950) | Tweety is taking a bath in a city park's birdbath when Sylvester spots him. Thus begins a classic chase through the park and into the city. | |
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Merry Melodies: Homeless Hare* (1950) | A construction worker destroys Bugs' home with a steam shovel and refuses to repair the damage. | |
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Merry Melodies: A Hound For Trouble* (1951) | Kicked off the boat in Italy, Charlie forces himself upon a pizzeria owner. Donning his best Italian accent and garb, Charlie sets to work as a waiter, astonishing and horrifying the customers with his barefoot grape-stomping. | |
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Merrie Melodies: How Do I Know it's Sunday* (1934) | We know that it's Sunday because we see people going to church. Inside a general store, the products all come to life and happily sing the title song. An Eskimo falls for a cookie and has to come to the rescue when a swarm of flies invades. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The Hypo-Chondri-Cat* (1950) | Those crazy mice Hubie and Bertie are at it again with Claude. This time the mice see that Claude is seriously ill, so they give him an operation. | |
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Merrie Melodies: I Like Mountain Music* (1933) | The magazines and books in a drugstore come to life and sing the title song, among others. Some celebrities shown: Will Rogers, Sonja Henie, Kay Kyser; like most of this genre, there's an extended crime sequence, with bad guys breaking into the cash register. | |
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Merrie Melodies: I Love A Parade* (1932) | A circus parade, to the title tune. Next, a series of sideshow acts: the wild boy, the rubber man, siamese twin pigs, a tattooed man, a hula-dancing hippo, an Indian snake (or goat) charmer. | |
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Merrie Melodies: I Love To Singa* (1936) | A spoof of Al Jolson's The Jazz Singer, a strict piano teaching owl is cursed with a son who loves to singa, but only jazz. | |
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Merrie Melodies: I Wish I Had Wings* (1932) | An expectant father rooster fetches doctor stork, who comes out with a basket full of white chicks and one little black one, who gets crowded out of the food. | |
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Merrie Melodies: It's Got Me Again* (1932) | Late at night, the mice come out and sing and play to the title tune, among others. That is, until the cat arrives, but he's quickly sent packing. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Jungle Jitters (1938) | The cartoon features a number of racial stereotypes throughout the short (such as people in blackface), which prompted United Artists to withhold this cartoon from syndication in 1968, making it one of the Censored Eleven. | |
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Merry Melodies: Lady, Play Your Mandolin!* (1931) | Things are hopping at a certain Mexican cafe. And then Foxy walks in and the customers go really wild. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The Lion's Busy (1950) | In an African jungle, hungry Beaky Buzzard can't wait until Leo the Lion is decently deceased before trying to devour him. Leo takes a rocket to the Moon to try to escape Beaky, but finds Beaky already there waiting for him. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Little Brother Rat* (1939) | Sniffles the mouse has to get an owl's egg for a scavenger hunt, but once he's gotten it, the egg hatches and draws the attention of the mouse-eating father owl. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Moonlight For Two* (1932) | Two courting hillbilly dogs go to the big barn dance. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Mouse Wreckers* (1948) | Mice Hubie and Bertie try to remove Claude the Cat from his house by driving him insane. | |
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Merrie Melodies: One More Time* (1931) | Cop Foxy is trying to enforce the law in town, but dangerous drivers and gangsters who also kidnap his sweetheart are making this difficult. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Pigs In A Polka* (1943) | The story of the three little pigs and the big bad wolf, this time performed as pantomime to the Hungarian Dances of Johannes Brahms. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Prest-O Change-O* (1939) | On a dark and stormy night, the Two Curious Puppies wander into an old dark house, and fall victim to the tricks of a mischievous magician's rabbit. | |
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Merry Melodies: Putty Tat Trouble* (1951) | Tweety Bird is shoveling out his nest atop a city pole after a snowstorm and is spotted by Sylvester Cat and a one-eyed orange tabby, who fight over Tweety. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The Queen Was In The Parlor* (1932) | The king returns to his castle, and asks where the queen is; she's in the parlor, and won't be seen, according to the title song. He goes to his throne and summons his jester, Goopy Geer. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Rabbit Hood* (1949) | When Bugs tries to take a carrot from the King's field in Sherwood Forest he's caught in the act by the Sheriff of Nottingham. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Red-Headed Baby* (1931) | In a toy shop, a villainous spider threatens the happiness of a red-headed baby doll and her sweetheart, a toy soldier named Napoleon. | |
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Merry Melodies: The Scarlet Pumpernickel* (1950) | Daffy Duck pitches to J.L. Warner a starring role with himself in a ridiculously over the top swashbuckler film. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Shuffle Off To Buffalo* (1933) | A flock of storks is leaving with babies. An old man at a ledger book is dealing with phone calls and letters; a request for twins from Nanook of the North sends him to the refrigerator; the stork carries them in slings marked upper birth and lower birth. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Sittin' On A Backyard Fence* (1933) | After some singing by the kitty crowd and music from a jazz band of cats, the focus is on one particular male cat and his tough-guy rival for the affections of the one female. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Smile Darn Ya, Smile!* (1931) | A streetcar conductor has adventures with a would-be passenger hippo, a cow blocking the tracks, and a runaway train while he, his passengers, and some hobos sing the title song. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Strife With Father* (1950) | Two English sparrows adopt the homely hayseed, Beaky Buzzard. Later, his adoptive father tries to teach the dolt to catch chickens. | |
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Merrie Melodies: A Tale Of Two Kitties (1942) | Babbit and Catstello, take-offs on Bud Abbott and Lou Costello try to catch the little Tweety bird, using everything from stilts to dynamite. Trouble is, the tiny bird has a vicious streak in him. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Tin Pan Alley Cats* (1943) | A jazz cartoon involving a Fats Waller-like cat who leaves the Uncle Tomcat Mission for the local jazz club. | |
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Merry Melodies: Tokyo Jokio* (1943) | A captured Japanese newsreel. Civilian defense shows an aircraft spotter painting spots on aircraft and a fire prevention HQ that already burned down. Kitchen Hints shows the construction of a sandwich from bread and meat ration cards. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Uncle Tom's Bungalow* (1937) | The cartoon plays off of the Harriet Beecher Stowe novel portraying Uncle Tom as an old man. Quality is so-so but title is hard to find. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes and is being offered only for its historical value. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The Wabbit Who Came To Supper (1942) | Bugs Bunny exploits the situation when an uncle leaves Elmer Fudd three million dollars on the condition that he harm no animals, especially rabbits. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Wackiki Wabbit (1943) | On a tropical island a pair of castaways look to Bugs as a source of food. | |
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Merrie Melodies: The Wacky Wabbit* (1942) | Bugs arrives in the desert to find Elmer prospecting for gold. Fudd is finally driven to pull his own gold tooth. | |
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Merrie Melodies: We're In The Money* (1933) | After the last human has left the department store, the toys walk over to the music department where they start performing the Warren/Dubin song We're in the money. | |
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Merrie Melodies: What's Cookin' Doc?* (1944) | Bugs thinks that he deserves an award after losing to James Cagney, and he demands the viewers to see the work he's done for so many years. | |
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Merrie Melodies: Wise Quackers* (1949) | Daffy falls from the sky onto Elmer Fudd's farm, and rather than be shot, he begs Elmer to accept him as a personal slave. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes, offered only for its historical value. | |
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Merrie Melodies: You Don't Know What You're Doin'* (1931) | A conductor is leading a band consisting of animal musicians performing the title song. He is so energetic his pants fall off. | |
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Merrie Melodies: You're Too Careless With Your Kisses* (1932) | A bee returns home late after a night out having too much honey. His wife leaves him, but quickly ends up in the clutches of an evil ladybug. The whole hive turns out to fight the ladybug and get her back. |
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