Outro 1. Rover’s Rival (1937) - Injun Trouble (1938) Outro 2. Porky’s Hotel (1939) - The Haunted Mouse (1941) Outro 3. The Hep Cat (1942) - Buckaroo Bugs (1944)
@@jcclark7788"Injun Trouble" (Looney Tunes) was a black and white Porky Pig cartoon from 1938; while "Injun Trouble" (the final theatrical Warner Bros cartoon until 1987) was a Cool Cat cartoon from 1969.
The line was first used in 1930's Sinkin' In The Bathtub, where Bosko, the first Looney Tune Star, would say it after the short ended, by walking around from behind a billboard and saying "That's All, Folks!". The line continued to be used by the main stars of the series, from Buddy to Beans, but was briefly retired from a vocal part in the ending of the shorts after Gold Diggers Of 49, after which the line was written on the background. In 1937, the line once again was spoken by the main star, namely Porky. At the ending of the Looney Tunes from Rover's Rival to Injun Trouble(38), Porky in a hybrid of Robert Clampett's and Frank Tashlin's design would burst from a bass drum and utter the line to signal the end of the episode. The bass drum was reused from the Harman-Ising days of the Merrie Melodies, where the star of the short would walk around it and say "So long, Folks!". The ending was updated with the beginning of the 1939 season, where the Clampett design was solidified as the main design of Porky. For the color Looney Tunes starting with The Hep Cat, the theatre background was removed, leaving a red backdrop and the drum. It was changed once more with the selling of Leon Schlesinger Studios to Warner Brothers, renaming it to Warner Bros. Cartoons. The final cartoon to use the bass drum ending was 1946's Hush My Mouse, also the final Sniffles short in the Golden Age. From then on, with the exception of 3 cartoons from the 1930-64 era, all Looney Tunes used the ending with the script written on the concentric rings, first introduced in 1940.
@@davidhileman8567the eyes. During his brief tenure working with Ub Iwerks on some Looney Tunes, Clampett directed his first cartoon, Porky’s Badtime Story. In all three cartoons made there, Porky was in what we now call his modern design, and the one used in the 1939 update.