Could you please upload Paul Terry’s Dinky Duck in that classic Gene Ditch/Bill Weiss cartoon in it’s original widescreen CinemaScope format with original classic theatrical titles “It’s A Living” his final cartoon and his only appearance in a new TerryToons cartoon without Paul Terry as the producer? Happy St. Patrick’s Day, Happy Easter and happy Springtime!
Thank goodness 😅! The very 1st Gene Deitch-TerryToons-Bill Weiss cartoon released by 20th Century Fox Film Corp. & CBS Television Films Inc. in widescreen CinemaScope Starring Mr. & Mrs. Doormat in their film 🎞 debut. Hooray!
Yes, after they made the short "Bone Ranger" (1957) they were made other Gene Deitch shorts, so, probably, it was made before they sold it to CBS or after they sold it to CBS, but, one thing is they also use some Connie Rasinski era sound effects, like the explosion, the fall impact, the electrocute, the book slap, the car stopping, the fall impact (second time but cymbal). And also, this is the first Cinemascope Terrytoons.
@@Klook6950Extras Most likely they were at post-production (editing, hence the Deitch era intro music) during the Deitch era but were likely written prior to that.
I really don't understand why they called him Doormat at first, in these two shorts made before his design got simplified he really isn't a doormat at all, he almost never listens to his wife.
At 6:38, serves him right. If he would listen to his wife and get some sleep. Reminds me of a cartoon where Elmer Fudd is trying to get some sleep, but morning comes and he starts crying.
It can be the aniground error (i call it animation-background error) because when a character stops moving they put a background, for the parts of the body, for example, the legs, the nose (like this one), the head, the eyes, mouth, etc. This also happens but with no error in "Gaston is Here"(1957), the second Terrytoon with Gene Deitch being the supervising director.
Actually, in my opinion the 1929-1957 Terrytoons is also good, BUT, i don't like that music that uses like saxophones, bass clarinets, etc era from Phil Scheib (1939-1957)
@@naiseboto4017 According to Gnee Deitch, Schieb was required, by Paul Terry, to use all the instrumentals because Terry did not want to pay for some memebers of an orchestra to not play at certain moements (like how a typical orchestra works), so all instruments played all at once.
Paul Terry who founded Terry tunes compared himself to Walt Disney by saying Disney was the Tiffany's in animation. Terry was the Woolworth's. True, because Terry tunes were a bit mediocre, until the late 1950's when CBS bought them. For a time some very promising material came out of the studio, but soon it went back to the same old, same old.
They alnost made Walter Lantz productions lose to be the second surviving animation studio, but, MGM Cartoons ended in 1966, WB Animation in 1969(owned by DFE), Terrytoons ended in 1971, Walter Lantz Productions, the next year, 1972, and DFE (Depatie-Freleng Animation Studios) 6 years later, in 1978.