The director, Bill Tytla, was one of Walt Disney's top animators (he animated Grumpy, Doc, Stromboli, and Dumbo) who left shortly after the strike, and never found work as satisfying as work at Disney again. He had worked for Paul Terry before coming to Disney, which is why he ended up back there directing this cartoon.
Naturally, NTA just covered up "Copyright 1948 by Paramount Pictures, Inc.", 'sygo'. If the notice had been one unbroken line, "All Rights Reserved" would have been eliminated as well. The narrator, incidentally, is radio announcer Charles Irving (he did a lot of ABC's New York shows at the time), who also narrated several "Screen Songs" as well.
Originally released by Paramount (you can barely see the studio logo before the "Noveltoon" title appears on screen at :16). Cecil{e} Roy, who was previously the voice of the studio's "Little Lulu", is "Tom's" voice here.
Thanks for posting this, brings back memories of my childhood cheap pub domain tapes. Bill Tytla's talents were really exploited at this time in his career. He was capable of so much more.
If you have it. Could you post the Tom thumb cartoon where he just lives with his dad in a wood cabin, and I think his dad is a lumberjacl, he looks like one(big with a small black beard. I think it's snowing in the episode.
The Warner Brothers cartoon Tom Thumb in Trouble was one of Chuck Jones' concious attempts to emulate the Disney style of story-yet it maintained the Warner bros. identity.I think Tom's voice in that one was Sara Berner-or whoever voiced the mouse Sniffles.
@RJRanke----Yes!!! I remember that cartoon too! Tom lived with his full-size, burly, and adoring lumberjack dad who had a beard. In the 'toon, Tom ran away (or something like that) and the dad thought he was dead. It was quite the dramatic tear-jerker, as I recall. I would LOVE to see that cartoon again. It made me very emotional as a kid... because Tom was sooo cute and the dad was so kind and loving.
I love this cartoon! Tom Thumb and His mouse circus!
Eszra 3 months ago
Half of the original titles! WHAAAAAAAAAAAA!
BetaArchiveCommunity 8 months ago
The director, Bill Tytla, was one of Walt Disney's top animators (he animated Grumpy, Doc, Stromboli, and Dumbo) who left shortly after the strike, and never found work as satisfying as work at Disney again. He had worked for Paul Terry before coming to Disney, which is why he ended up back there directing this cartoon.
katinaanimator 1 year ago
The first time I've seen an NTA release retaning the original color type!
lno2k6 2 years ago
@lno2k6
Actually, they didn't retain the original color process. They just forgot to remove the "Color by Technicolor" line.
ParamountCartoons 1 year ago
Naturally, NTA just covered up "Copyright 1948 by Paramount Pictures, Inc.", 'sygo'. If the notice had been one unbroken line, "All Rights Reserved" would have been eliminated as well. The narrator, incidentally, is radio announcer Charles Irving (he did a lot of ABC's New York shows at the time), who also narrated several "Screen Songs" as well.
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
Originally released by Paramount (you can barely see the studio logo before the "Noveltoon" title appears on screen at :16). Cecil{e} Roy, who was previously the voice of the studio's "Little Lulu", is "Tom's" voice here.
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
Thank you.
Awesome260 3 years ago
Thanks for posting this, brings back memories of my childhood cheap pub domain tapes. Bill Tytla's talents were really exploited at this time in his career. He was capable of so much more.
checkeredgeek 3 years ago
If you have it. Could you post the Tom thumb cartoon where he just lives with his dad in a wood cabin, and I think his dad is a lumberjacl, he looks like one(big with a small black beard. I think it's snowing in the episode.
sesoko123 3 years ago
You might be referring to the Chuck Jones Tom Thumb cartoon, if that helps at all. I'm not sure though, it's been a while since I've seen it.
checkeredgeek 3 years ago
Yeah, that's it!! If you have it or know where I can watch it, please let me know!! I would very much appreciate it.
sesoko123 3 years ago
The Warner Brothers cartoon Tom Thumb in Trouble was one of Chuck Jones' concious attempts to emulate the Disney style of story-yet it maintained the Warner bros. identity.I think Tom's voice in that one was Sara Berner-or whoever voiced the mouse Sniffles.
RJRanke 3 years ago
@RJRanke----Yes!!! I remember that cartoon too! Tom lived with his full-size, burly, and adoring lumberjack dad who had a beard. In the 'toon, Tom ran away (or something like that) and the dad thought he was dead. It was quite the dramatic tear-jerker, as I recall. I would LOVE to see that cartoon again. It made me very emotional as a kid... because Tom was sooo cute and the dad was so kind and loving.
videodoe 1 year ago
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videodoe 1 year ago
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videodoe 1 year ago