Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “OldHorseman”

A Day At The Zoo

Today’s classic cartoon is another Warner Brothers’ Merrie Melodies, directed by Tex Avery, and featuring Egghead, the forerunner to Elmer Fudd. Made in 1939, A Day At the Zoo is chalkful of corny puns and homespun humor that still works because it’s fast-paced and fairly breezy. Here, we’re entertained by two bucks (deer) and five scents (skunks)! The pack of camels are smoking, of course. Egghead tests his luck with a lion. More from the OldHorseman.

Joining Of The Knights

The BANANA SPLITS show was originally an hour of combined live-action and animated elements. Hard to say which was more cartoonish though. Hanna-Barbera hired the brothers Krofft to do the costumed and puppet segments, launching their Saturday Morning career that would produce many iconic series of their own.

One of the original animated segments was the ARABIAN KNIGHTS. A lighthearted adventure series in which a group of misfits with various powers join forces under a prince (voiced by DENNIS THE MENACE) and an unrelated princess (voiced by LAMBCHOP’s momma) to oppose an evil, usurper Sultan and his minions.

The series was unusual among HB’s action-adventure ‘toons in that it had a first episode origin story. This was generally avoided, since they knew the episodes would be rerun many times, and didn’t want obvious first (or last) episodes to make it so apparent.

The Arabian Knights’ eighteen episodes were featured in both network seasons of the Splits, even as other segments were swapped-out for bits recycled from earlier HB programs. Hard to keep track of how far they continued into the host show’s long syndicated run, as the nature of the show made it pretty easy to rotate all sorts of cartoons through.

Here’s another in our series of original Saturday Morning Cartoons. More from the OldHorseman.

OpSec In Post-Republic America

Loose lips sink ships, y’all. More from the OldHorseman.

A Feud There Was

We launch a new series today: Presenting a vintage cartoon every Saturday morning, just like in the good old days, before the dingbats took over the belfry! We open with a 1938 classic: Warner Brothers’ A Feud There Was, revisiting the celebrated hillbilly feuds in the Appalachian Mountains. There are McCoys here, only they aren’t battling the Hatfields, but the Weavers.

Elmer Fudd is trying, valiantly but unsuccessfully, to bring peace to the mountaintops. The great Tex Avery directed. Mel Blanc does many of the vocals, although that’s the Sons of the Pioneers as the uncredited singing group led by none other than Roy Rogers! More from the OldHorseman.

 

Daffy Duck & Egghead

Here is one of the early appearances by Daffy Duck in a Warner Brothers Merrie Melodies cartoon from 1938. Besides Daffy Duck 1.0, we also meet his nemesis — Egghead — who would later evolve into Elmer Fudd. It’s a little bit talky, but there’s lots of great sight gags, plus a scene-stealing turtle who stretches ambidexterity into multiple new dimensions. Tex Avery directs. More from the OldHorseman.

 

Egghead Rides Again

Here’s a 1937 Merrie Melodies cartoon from Warner Brothers that introduced Egghead, sort of a forerunner to Elmer Fudd. Tex Avery (listed in the credits as Fred Avery) directed the short, with an uncredited Mel Blanc supplying the vocals for Egghead. Blanc had already done the vocals for Porky Pig but hadn’t yet brought us Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck or Barney Rubble. The cowpokes out in Wahoo, Wyoming, are actually played by the singing group: Sons of the Pioneers. More from the OldHorseman.

A Claymation Christmas Special

The California Raisins along with assorted other stop-action characters sing Christmas music, hosted by Siskel & Ebert dinosaurs. The ’80s were kinda’ weird, man.

This special originally aired on CBS in 1987. Directed by Will Vinton, who also did the claymation in The Return to Oz. Thanks to the OldHorseman on Bitchute.

 

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