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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Warner Brothers
EAN: 0085391167846
Format: Animated, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Original recording remastered, Restored, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Items: 3
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: February 12, 2008
Running Time: 323 minutes
Sales Rank: 9326
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: December 31, 1965
Editorial Review:
Product Description: The Best of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment ? Academy? Award Winning and Nominated theatrical animated shorts. Category: Best Animated Short Subjects. Franchises include Warner Bros. Hanna-Barbera MGM Max Fleischer etc. 41 of the most celebrated cartoons of their time including 15 award winners...plus over 60 minutes of special features! This collection has something for everyone with characters such as the Looney Tunes Tom & Jerry Droopy Superman Popeye Dot Line & Squiggle Tex Avery?s ?Little Johnny Jet? Chuck Jones? ?High Note? and Nelly?s Folly (the singing Giraffe) and Hubie Bertie & Cat Claude.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: CHILDREN/FAMILY UPC: 085391167846 Manufacturer No: 116784
Amazon.com: The Oscar for Animated Short Film has been a useful if not entirely accurate gauge of the state of American animation, as this three-disc set demonstrates. The Academy created the category in the early '30s to honor Walt Disney's contributions to the art form. But most of the films in the collection date from the '40s and '50s, when Warner Bros. and MGM artists won most of the Oscars for pushing the Hollywood cartoon in a new direction that was fast-paced, violent, and very, very funny. Many of these cartoons remain hilarious, decades after they were released: "Birds Anonymous," "For Scent-imental Reasons," "Blitz Wolf," and "High Note." Others have aged less gracefully. Changes in racial attitudes have reduced Speedy Gonzales and Mammy Two-Shoes in the Tom and Jerry shorts to uncomfortable reminders of a less respectful era in American history. The collection also demonstrates that the Academy voters' taste can be capricious at best. Many of the best Warners shorts--"A Mouse Divided," "What's Opera, Doc?" "Duck Amuck," "Rabbit of Seville" and "One Froggy Evening"--weren't even nominated. Tex Avery, who did more than any other director to move cartoons in that brash, funny direction, is represented only by "Blitz Wolf" and "Little Johnny Jet." Like Cary Grant and Marilyn Monroe, Avery never won an Oscar. Most of the transfers were made from first-rate prints, although a few are missing their credits and the framing of the Cinemascope films is problematic. The rarest item in the collection is "So Much for So Little," an animated documentary that earned Chuck Jones his first Academy Award. Extras include commentaries by animators and historians, and the interesting new documentary, Drawn for Glory. (Unrated, suitable for ages 5 and older: cartoon violence, ethnic stereotypes, alcohol and tobacco use) --Charles Solomon
(1. The Milky Way, 2. Yankee Doodle Mouse, 3. Mouse Trouble, 4. Quiet Please, 5. The Cat Concerto, 6. Tweetie Pie, 7. The Little Orphan, 8. For Scent-Imental Reasons, 9. So Much for So Little, 10. Two Mouseketeers, 11. Johann Mouse, 12. Speedy Gonzales, 13. Birds Anonymous, 14. Knighty-Knight Bugs, 15. The Dot and the Line, 16. Popeye the Sailor Meets Sinbad the Sailor, 17. Peace on Earth, 18. A Wild Hare, 19. Puss Gets the Boot, 20. Superman, 21. Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt, 22. Rhapsody In Rivets, 23. The Night Before Christmas, 24. Blitz Wolf, 25. Pigs in a Polka, 26. Swooner Crooner, 27. Walky Talky Hawky, 28. Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Mouse, 29. Mouse Wreckers, 30. Hatch Up Your Troubles, 31. Jerry's Cousin, 32. Little Johnny Jet, 33. Touché, Pussy Cat! 34. From A to Z-Z-Z-Z, 35. Sandy Claws, 36. Good Will To Men, 37. Tabasco Road, 38. One Droopy Knight, 39. High Note, 40. Nelly's Folly, 41. Now Hear This, 42. "Drawn for Glory: Animation's Triumph At The Oscars®," 43. What's Cookin' Doc?)
Average Rating: 
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Fast shipping & quality merchandise. My husband is a fan of shows from his childhood and this is something he'll enjoy.
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Video came on time and is in good condition. Given as a gift so I can't review content.
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This is a very interesting compilation. Academy Award winners and nominees from the golden age of cartoons. Popeye, Tom and Jerry, Superman, and Looney Tunes are all here, along with some rarely seen cartoons like "Nelly's Folly" and "High Note". This would be a good start if you wanted to teach your kids about "the stuff we watched on tv growing up". I enjoyed this very much. One of my favorite cartoons of all time, "The Dot and The Line" is here which with the other raritys here make it worth it ... Read More
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With the Academy Awards coming up soon, many moviegoers have been eagerly awaiting to see what film is the best of the best. Well, that also has been said with animated cartoons of the past. While Disney had won so many Oscar awards over the years, back in the 40's 50's and 60's, M.G.M., Hanna-Barbera and Warner Brothers all duked it out to see which company had the best in animation through Looney Tunes and classic gems in the spotlight. We've seen that appeal well with Tom & Jerry, and Sylvester ... Read More
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The Academy Awards Animation Collection is a great collection with some of the best cartoons ever made on it. The two best cartoons on this collection are Peace On Earth and the Remake Good Will to Men. Plus the Bugs Bunny Cartoon A Wild Hare with the original Title Cards. The Cartoons on the collection are Restored and Remastered very well.
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