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Fleischer Studios (/ˈflaɪʃər/) was an American animation studio founded in 1929 by brothers Max and Dave Fleischer, who ran the pioneering company from its inception until its acquisition by Paramount Pictures, the parent company and the distributor of its films. In its prime, Fleischer Studios was a premier producer of animated cartoons for theaters, with Walt Disney Productions being its chief competitor in the 1930s.
Industry | Motion pictures |
---|---|
Predecessor | Bray Productions Out of the Inkwell Studios |
Founded | 1929 |
Founder | Max Fleischer Dave Fleischer |
Defunct | July 3, 1942 |
Fate | Renamed and reorganized as Famous Studios after its acquisition by Paramount Pictures and the resignation of its founders. |
Successors | Studio: Famous Studios (fully-owned subsidiary of Paramount Pictures, renamed to Paramount Cartoon Studios in 1956) Paramount Animation Library: Paramount Pictures (through Melange Pictures) Warner Bros. (through Turner Entertainment Co. and DC Entertainment) (Popeye the Sailor and Superman only) |
Headquarters | Broadway, New York City, New York, U.S. (1929–1938)
Miami, Florida, U.S. (1938–1942) |
Products | Animated short subjects and feature films |
Owner | Paramount Pictures Inc. (1941–42) |
Number of employees | Approx. 800 by 1939 |
Website | fleischerstudios |
Fleischer Studios included Out of the Inkwell and Talkartoons characters like, Koko the Clown, Betty Boop, Bimbo, Popeye the Sailor, and the comic character Superman. Unlike other studios, whose characters were anthropomorphic animals, the Fleischers' most successful characters were humans (with the exception of Bimbo, a black-and-white cartoon dog). The cartoons of the Fleischer Studio were very different from those of Disney, both in concept and in execution. As a result, they were rough rather than refined and consciously artistic rather than commercial, but in their unique way, their artistry was expressed through a culmination of the arts and sciences.[1] This approach focused on surrealism, dark humor, adult psychological elements, and sexuality. Furthermore, the environments were grittier and urban, often set in squalid surroundings, reflecting the Great Depression as well as German Expressionism.
History
editThe Silent Era
editThe Fleischer Studio was built on Max Fleischer's novelty film series Out of the Inkwell (1918–1927). The novelty was based largely on the results of the "rotoscope", invented by Fleischer to produce realistic animation. The first Out of the Inkwell films were produced through The Bray Studio. They featured Fleischer's first character, "The Clown", which became known as Ko-Ko the Clown in 1924.
In 1921, The Bray Studio ran afoul of legal issues, having contracted for more films than it could deliver to its distributor, Goldwyn Pictures. The Fleischer Brothers left and began their own studio Out of the Inkwell Films with Dave Fleischer as director and production supervisor, and Max as producer, at 129 East 45th Street, later to 1600 Broadway, Midtown Manhattan, New York City.[2][3][4][5] In 1924, animator, Dick Huemer came to the Out of the Inkwell Films studio and redesigned "The Clown" for more efficient animation. Huemer's new design and experience as an animator moved them away from their dependency on the rotoscope for fluid animation. In addition to defining the clown, Huemer established the Fleischer style with its distinctive thick and thin ink lines. In addition, Huemer created Ko-Ko's companion, Fitz the Dog, who would evolve into Bimbo in 1930.
Throughout the 1920s, Fleischer was one of the leading producers of animation with clever moments and numerous innovations. These innovations include the "Rotograph", an early "Aerial Image" photographic process for compositing animation with live action backgrounds. Other innovations included Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes and sing-along shorts (featuring the famous "bouncing ball"), a precursor to karaoke.
In 1924, distributor Edwin Miles Fadiman and Hugo Riesenfeld formed the Red Seal Pictures Corporation. Riesenfeld was the theatrical manager of the Strand, Rivoli, and Rialto theaters on Broadway. Because the Out of the Inkwell films were a major part of the program in Riesenfeld's theaters, the Fleischers were invited to become partners. The Red Seal Company committed to an ambitious release schedule of 26 films with The Inkwell Studio as the primary supplier. The following year, Red Seal released 141 films that included documentaries, short comedy subjects, and live-action serials. Carrie of the Chorus, also known as Backstage Comedies, was one of the Red Seal series that featured Max's daughter, Ruth, in a supporting role. Ray Bolger made his screen debut in this series and dated Ruth for a short time.
Red Seal released cartoon novelty series such as The Animated Hair cartoons by cartoonist "Marcus", and Inklings. The Animated Hair series resembled the on-screen hand drawing gimmick established in Out of the Inkwell. In this case, "Marcus" produced high-quality ink line portraits of celebrities and political figures. Then through stop motion animation techniques, the lines and forms would break away to entertainingly re-form the portrait into another. Inklings was similar in concept to the Animated Hair films, but was more of a visual puzzle novelty using a variety of progressive scratch-off/reveal techniques and rearranged animated cutouts to change the images.
It was during this time that Lee de Forest started filming his Phonofilms experiments featuring several of the major Broadway headliners. The Red Seal company began acquiring more theaters outside of New York and equipped them with sound equipment produced by Lee de Forest, displaying "talkies" three years before the sound revolution began. Because of Max's interest in technology, Riesenfeld introduced him to de Forest. It was through this partnership that Max produced a number of the Ko-Ko Song Car-tunes as sound releases. Of the 36 song films produced between 1924 and 1927, 12 were produced as sound films beginning in 1926 with standard silent versions as well. The first sound release was Mother Pin a Rose on Me. Other sound releases included Darling Nellie Gray, Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?, When the Midnight Choo-Choo Leaves for Alabam', Coming Through the Rye, My Wife's Gone to the Country, Margie, Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning, Sweet Adeline, Old Black Joe, Come Take A Trip in My Airship, and By the Light of the Silvery Moon.
Red Seal owned 56 theaters, extending as far west as Cleveland, Ohio. But after only two years of operation, Red Seal was broke. Max Fleischer sought an appointment of receiver in bankruptcy in October 1926. Just as the situation looked hopeless, Alfred Weiss appeared from the horizon with a Paramount contact.[6]
The Paramount deal provided financing and distribution, but due to legal complications of the bankruptcy, the title to Out of the Inkwell was changed to The Inkwell Imps (1927–1929) and the studio was renamed Inkwell Studios. One year into the relationship, the Fleischer Brothers discovered mismanagement under Weiss and left before the end of the Imps contract. Out of the Inkwell Films, Inc. filed bankruptcy in January 1929. In March, Max formed Fleischer Studios with Dave as his partner. Operations were first set up at the Carpenter-Goldman Laboratories in Queens. With a skeleton staff, Fleischer Studios started out doing industrial films, most notably, Finding His Voice, a technical demonstration film explaining Western Electric's Variable Density recording and reproduction system. Max Fleischer secured a new contract with Paramount to produce a revival of the "Bouncing Ball" song films, re-branded as Screen Songs, with The Sidewalks of New York as the first release on February 5, 1929.
Sound films
editThe early experiments with sound synchronization gave Fleischer Studios experience in perfecting the post-production method of recording, aided by several inventions by founder, Max Fleischer. With the conversion to sound, Paramount needed more sound films, and cartoons could be produced faster than feature films. As the Screen Songs returned Fleischer to the established song film format, a new sound series, Talkartoons replaced the silent Inkwell Imps, the first being Noah's Lark released on October 25, 1929. Earlier entries in the series were one-shot cartoons, until the appearance of Bimbo as of the fourth entry. Bimbo evolved through several redesigns in each cartoon for the first year. While the intent was to develop him as the star of the series, it was the cameo appearance of a Helen Kane caricature in the seventh entry, Dizzy Dishes that took center stage. Audience reactions to the New York preview were so great that Paramount encouraged the continued development of the most famous character to come from the Fleischer Studio by that time, Betty Boop. While originated as a hybrid human/canine character, Betty Boop was transformed into the human character she is known as by 1932. Having become the main attraction of the Talkartoons, she was given her own series, which ran until 1939.
The "Jazz Baby" Flapper character, Betty Boop lifted the spirits of Depression Era audiences with her paradoxical mixture of childlike innocence and sexual allure. Being a musical novelty character, she was a natural for theatrical entertainment. Several of her early cartoons were developed as promotional vehicles for some of the top Black Jazz performers of the day including Louis Armstrong (I'll Be Glad When You're Dead You Rascal, You), Don Redman (I Heard), and most notably, the three cartoons made with Cab Calloway, Minnie the Moocher, Snow White, and The Old Man of the Mountain. This was considered a bold action in light of the Jim Crow policies active in the South where such films would not be shown.
In 1934, the Hays Code resulted in severe censorship for films. This affected the content of all of Paramount's films as well, which tended to reflect a more "mature" tone in the features of the Marx Brothers, W.C. Fields, and most of all, Mae West. As a result, each of these stars was released as Paramount changed the content of its films to reflect a more "general audience" in order to comply with the new Code and stay in business. Paramount had also gone through three reorganizations from bankruptcy between 1931 and 1936. The new management under Barney Balaban set out to make more general audience films of the type made at MGM, but for lower budgets. This change in content policy affected the content of cartoons that Fleischer was to produce for Paramount, which urged emulation of the Walt Disney product.
While Paramount was a large organization with a network of theaters, its fiscal consciousness was largely responsible for preventing Fleischer Studios from acquiring the three-strip Technicolor process, leaving it available for a four-year exclusivity with Walt Disney, who created a new market for color cartoons, established by Academy Award winner, Flowers and Trees (1932).
Paramount acquiesced to the release of the Color Classics series starting in 1934, but with the exclusivity of the three-color process still held by Disney, Fleischer Studios used the available two-color processes, Cinecolor, a two-emulsion red and blue process, and Two-color Technicolor, using red and green. By 1936, the Disney exclusivity had expired, and Fleischer Studios used the three-color process in its color cartoons beginning with Somewhere in Dreamland and continued using it for the remainder of its active years.
The Fleischer Studio's greatest success came with the licensing of E.C. Segar's comic strip character Popeye the Sailor beginning in 1933. Popeye eventually became the most popular series the studio ever produced, and its success surpassed Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse cartoons, documented by popularity polls. With the availability of full spectrum color, the Fleischer Studios produced three two-reel Popeye featurettes, Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor (1936), Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves (1937), and Popeye the Sailor Meets Aladdin's Wonderful Lamp (1939). This series of longer-format cartoons were an indication of the emergence of the animated feature film as a commercially viable project beginning with Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937).
The Fleischer Studios had reached its zenith by 1936, with four series and 52 annual releases. Due to the phenomenal success of the Popeye cartoons, Paramount demanded more, and the Fleischer Studio experienced rapid expansion in order to balance out the increased workload. The crowded conditions, production speedups, drawing quotas, and internal management problems resulted in a labor strike beginning in May 1937 which lasted for five months. This strike was a test case, the first launched in the motion picture industry, and produced a nationwide boycott of Fleischer cartoons for the duration.
Max Fleischer had been petitioning Paramount for three years about producing an animated feature. Paramount vetoed his proposals until the proven success of Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Paramount now wanted an animated feature for a 1939 Christmas release. This request came at the time of preparations for relocating to Miami, Florida. While the relocation had been a consideration for some time, its final motivation was made a reality due to lower corporate tax structures and an alleged escape from the remaining hostility from the strike.
The new Fleischer Studio opened in October 1938, and production on its first feature, Gulliver's Travels (1939), went from the development stage begun in New York to active production in Miami. The score was by Paramount staff composer, Victor Young and recorded at the Paramount west coast facilities. While limited to only 60 theaters in a one-month release, Gulliver's Travels earned more than $3 million, in spite of exceeding its original $500,000 estimated cost. Accordingly, a second feature was ordered for the Christmas period, Mr. Bug Goes to Town (1941).
Fall of Fleischer
editThe personal relationship between Max and Dave Fleischer deteriorated during the Miami period due to complications associated with the pressures of finishing the studio's first feature film and Dave's very public adulterous affair with his secretary, Mae Schwartz. Max and Dave stopped speaking to each other altogether by the end of 1939, communicating solely by memo.[7]
Dave gained total control of production in 1940, relegating Max to business affairs and research. The studio was in need of new products going into the new decade, but the new shorts series that debuted in 1939 and 1940, Gabby, Stone Age Cartoons, and Animated Antics, were unsuccessful. Theater operators complained, with the Popeye cartoons having the only value.
Paramount acquired the rights to comic book superhero Superman in 1941, and the Fleischers were assigned to work on a series of animated Superman shorts.[8] The first entry, Superman, had a budget of $50,000,[8] the highest ever for a Fleischer theatrical short, and was nominated for an Academy Award.
The animated Superman series, with its action-adventure and science fiction fantasy content, was a huge success, but that did not help the studio out of its financial trouble. It was penalized $350,000 for going over budget on Gulliver's Travels, and the revenues earned from the rentals of the Popeye cartoons had to be used to offset the loss of $250,000 incurred by the rejection of cartoons in 1940.
Acquisition by Paramount
editWhile profits dwindled, Paramount continued to advance money to Fleischer Studios to continue the production of cartoons with its focus mainly on Popeye, Superman, and Mr. Bug Goes to Town, a new feature film for the 1941 Christmas season. On May 24, 1941, Paramount demanded reimbursement on the penalties still owed after 18 months and assumed full ownership of Fleischer Studios, Inc.[9] The Fleischers remained in control of production until that November. Mr. Bug Goes to Town, intended for release in December 1941, was not released until February 1942, and never recouped its costs.
In spite of living up to his contractual obligations and delivering the film, Max Fleischer was asked to resign. Dave Fleischer had resigned the month before, and Paramount finished out the last five months of the Fleischer contract without the Fleischer brothers. The last cartoon produced at the credited Fleischer Studios was the Superman cartoon Terror on the Midway.[9] Paramount formed a new company, Famous Studios, as a successor to Fleischer Studios effective on July 3, 1942.
Television
editWith the exception of the Superman and Popeye cartoons, Paramount's cartoon library of releases prior to October 1950 was originally sold to U.M. & M. TV Corporation in 1955. A condition of the purchase required the removal of the Paramount logos and copyright lines from the main titles.[10]
As soon as the Fleischer library was sold to television, Max Fleischer noticed that some of the cartoons were being shown without his name in the credits, which was a violation of his original contracts. On June 17, 1956, Max Fleischer filed suit against Paramount and its TV distribution partners, seeking $2,750,000 in damages. The infringement on his name was corrected on all subsequent prints exhibited on television.[11]
Before U.M.& M. had finished the title alterations, the company was bought by National Telefilm Associates. NTA placed their logo at the heads and tails of the films and blacked out references to Paramount, Technicolor, Cinecolor and Polacolor. The majority of the Fleischer cartoons were off the air by the mid 60s when the original copyrights were due for renewal. NTA failed to renew the copyrights, which placed the majority of the Fleischer film library (including the Color Classics series, the Screen Songs series, and Gulliver's Travels) into the public domain. Mr. Bug Goes to Town, various Betty Boop cartoons, and the 1938 Color Classic, The Tears of an Onion, are among the few films that remain under copyright to Melange Pictures, LLC.
In the mid-1970s, NTA converted 85 black and white Betty Boop cartoons to color through Fred Ladd's Color Systems company. The process was done by having the cartoons traced and re-colored by Korean animators. These were packaged in 1976 under the title Betty Boop for President. This was refashioned as a compilation feature, Hooray for Betty Boop, and ran on HBO in 1980.
Paramount has reacquired ownership of the original Fleischer film library (through their acquisition of Republic Pictures) since 1996 and continues to own the theatrical rights.
Popeye and Superman
editThe Popeye series, a property licensed from King Features Syndicate, was acquired by Associated Artists Productions (a.a.p.), which later became part of United Artists (for info on the Popeye retitling, see the a.a.p. article) and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Turner Entertainment Co., after briefly owning MGM outright, settled for ownership of the library, including the Popeye cartoons, in 1986. A small number of Popeye cartoons have also entered the public domain.
Superman, the other series based on licensing, reverted to National Comics after Paramount's rights to the character expired. TV syndication rights were initially licensed to Flamingo Films, distributors of the 1950s Adventures of Superman TV series. All 17 entries in this series entered the public domain in the late 1960s, when National failed to renew their copyrights.[citation needed]
Nevertheless, the Superman and Popeye cartoons are now under the ownership of Warner Bros., a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery; Warner bought the original film elements to the Superman series in 1969, after becoming a sibling (and later the parent) to DC Comics.[citation needed]
Home video
editMost of the Fleischer color titles have been widely available on video since the 1980s, often on inexpensive videotapes sold in supermarkets and discount stores. Animation fans, the UCLA Film and Television Archive, and more recently the Max Fleischer estate and Paramount Pictures (via the Republic/Melange library) have worked to release high-quality restored editions of the Fleischer cartoons. These have also been made available on pay-cable, home video, DVD, and online on YouTube.[12] Many of these restored versions now include the original front-and-end Paramount titles.
Most of the silent Fleischer titles from the Out of the Inkwell/Inkwell Imps series have entered the public domain.
An official Betty Boop VHS set, Betty Boop Confidential, was released by Republic Pictures in 1995, included several black-and-white Betty Boop cartoons as well as Betty's only color appearance, Poor Cinderella.
There have been several video releases for the Superman series. These include a 1991 VHS set produced by Bosko Video, titled The Complete Superman Collection: Golden Anniversary Edition – The Paramount Cartoon Classics of Max & Dave Fleischer released as two volumes which featured transfers from 35mm prints. It was reissued on DVD as The Complete Superman Cartoons — Diamond Anniversary Edition in 2000 by Image Entertainment, and Superman Adventures in 2004 by Platinum Disc Corporation.
A third (and more "official") compilation using restored and remastered materials was released in November 2006 by Warner Home Video as part of their DVD box set of Superman films. In 2009, Warner gave these Superman shorts their own stand-alone 2-disc DVD release, Max Fleischer's Superman: 1941–1942.
Olive Films, under exclusive license from Melange/Viacom, acquired the rights to the 66 non-public domain Betty Boop cartoons, and released four volumes of Betty Boop DVDs and Blu-rays.[13]
Warner Home Video has released all of the Fleischer Popeye cartoons in three volumes as part of the Popeye the Sailor DVD collection.
VCI Entertainment/Kit Parker Films' DVD compilation of all the Color Classics (except The Tears of an Onion), entitled Somewhere In Dreamland, was released in 2003. It includes only a fraction of shorts remastered from 35mm film, but otherwise taken from the best available sources Kit Parker could provide VCI, and digitally recreating the original front-and-end Paramount titles. Animation archivist Jerry Beck served as consultant for this box set, as well as providing audio commentary for select shorts.
VCI Entertainment also released a DVD compilation of all the public domain Popeye cartoons (both Fleischer and Famous) entitled Popeye the Sailor Man Classic Cartoons: 75th Anniversary Collector's Edition in 2004.
In Japan, Mr. Bug Goes to Town was released on DVD in April 2010 by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment as part of the Studio Ghibli's Ghibli Museum Library collection.[14]
Fleischer Studios today
editIn 1985, DC Comics named Fleischer Studios as one of the honorees in the company's 50th anniversary publication Fifty Who Made DC Great for its work on the Superman cartoons.[15]
Today, a new iteration of Fleischer Studios effectively holds the rights to Betty Boop and associated characters such as Koko the Clown, Bimbo and Grampy, though courts have never supported their ownership claims. It is headed by Max's grandson Mark Fleischer, who oversees merchandising activities.[16] Fleischer Studios utilizes King Features Syndicate to license Fleischer characters for various merchandise.[17]
In 2021, after decades of being shown in altered and worn prints, the Fabulous Fleischer Cartoons Restored company was started by Max Fleischer's granddaughter, Jane Fleischer Reid, to focus on the restoration and screening of the Fleischer Studios library. The restoration efforts are a collaboration between film archives around the world including Paramount Pictures which owns the original camera negatives. Beginning with Somewhere in Dreamland; the restored cartoon had its premiere on the MeTV network in December of the same year.[18] In March of 2023, a week long screening event took place at the Museum of Modern Art which showcased around 60 brand new Fleischer restorations.
Legacy and influence
editThe loose, improvisatory animation, frequently surreal action generally termed "The New York Style" (particularly in films such as Snow White and Bimbo's Initiation), grungy atmosphere, and racy pre-Code content of the early Fleischer Studios cartoons have been a major influence on many underground and alternative cartoonists. Kim Deitch, Robert Crumb, Jim Woodring, and Al Columbia are among the creators who have specifically acknowledged their inspiration. Much of Richard Elfman's 1980 cult film Forbidden Zone is a live action pastiche of the early Fleischer Studios style. The Fleischer style was also used in the 1995 animated series The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat. The studio's art style and surreal atmosphere was a central influence on the indie game Cuphead, with the studio being described as "magnetic north" for the game's art style.[19] Genndy Tartakovsky has also cited the works of the studio as a major inspiration for the look of his 2023 animated series Unicorn: Warriors Eternal.
Fleischer Studios staff (1929–1942)
editProducers
editDirectors
edit- James Culhane (Mr. Bug Goes to Town; uncredited)
- Dave Fleischer
Writers
edit- Eric St. Clair
- Pinto Colvig
- Max Fleischer
- Dave Fleischer
- Warren Foster
- Dan Gordon
- Cal Howard
- Seymour Kneitel
- George Manuell
- Jack Mercer
- Carl Meyer
- Tedd Pierce
- Graham Place
- Hal Seeger
- Edmond Seward
- Isadore Sparber
- David Tendlar
- William Turner
- Jack Ward
- Bob Wickersham
Animators
edit- Tom Baron
- Bob Bemiller
- Thomas Bonfiglio
- Eli Brucker
- Robert Bentley
- Willard Bowsky
- Orestes Calpini
- Joel Clive
- Herman Cohen
- Roland Crandall
- James Culhane
- Joe D'Igalo
- Ugo D'Orsi
- James Davis
- Nelson Demorest
- Anthony Di Paola
- H.C Ellison
- Frank Endres
- Al Eugster
- Otto Feuer
- Don Figlozzi
- Dave Fleischer
- Max Fleischer
- Lillian Friedman Astor
- George Germanetti
- Arnold Gillespie
- Tom Golden
- Reuben Grossman
- Charles Hastings
- William Henning
- Winfield Hoskins
- Tom Johnson
- Abner Kneitel (also credited as Abner Matthews)[20]
- Seymour Kneitel
- Bob Leffingwell
- Michael Maltese
- Carl Meyer
- Thomas Moore
- George Moreno Jr.
- Steve Muffati
- Grim Natwick
- Bill Nolan
- Joe Oriolo
- Sid Pillet
- Graham Place
- Lod Rossner
- Ted Sears
- Hal Seeger
- Gordon Sheehan
- Ben Solomon
- Irving Spector
- Sam Stimson
- William Sturm
- Dave Tendlar
- Jim Tyer
- Edith Vernick
- Myron Waldman
- Harold Walker
- John Walworth
- Bob Wickersham
- Bernard Wolf
- Lou Zukor
Animation directors
editNote: An animator who is credited first in a Fleischer cartoon is a director of animation. Dave Fleischer's role during production is more in line with a creative supervisor.
- Willard Bowsky
- Orestes Calpini
- Roland Crandall
- James Culhane
- H. C. Ellison
- Al Eugster
- Arnold Gillespie
- Tom Johnson
- Seymour Kneitel
- Bob Leffingwell
- Bill Nolan
- Tom Palmer
- Graham Place
- Stan Quackenbush
- Dave Tendlar
- Myron Waldman
Layout and scenic artists
edit- Eddi Bowlds
- Hemia Calpini
- Robert Connavale
- Robert Little
- Anton Loeb
- Shane Miller
- Erich Schenk
- Gustaf Tenggren
Photographers
edit- Leonard McCormick
Voice actors
editMusical supervisor and arrangements
edit- Lou Fleischer (supervisor, 1930–1942)
- George Steiner (1930–1935)
- Sammy Timberg (1932–1942)
- Winston Sharples (1940–1942)
Selected filmography
edit Public domain |
Partially public domain |
Copyrighted material |
Status unclear
|
Title | Production period | Preservation status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Experiment No. 1 | 1914–1916 | Lost | Includes Boy Scout Semaphore and Rotoscope Patent Demonstration. |
Experiment No. 2 | 1914–1916 | Lost | Chaplin Cartoon (unreleased) |
Experiment No. 3 | 1914–1916 | Lost | Clown Antics |
Theodore Roosevelt and the Chanticleer | 1914–1916 | Lost | First commercial job for Pathé (unreleased). |
Title | Theatrical release | Copyright status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Various World War One training films | 1916–1917 | Public domain | Includes The Submarine Mine Layer, How to Read an Army Map, How to Operate a Stokes Mortar, How to Fire the Lewis Machine Gun, and Contour Map Reading. No known prints survive. |
Out of the Inkwell | 1918–1921 | Public domain | – |
The Eclipse of the Sun | July 1918 | Public domain | – |
The Electric Bell | April 4, 1919 | Public domain | – |
The Elevator | June 19, 1919 | Public domain | – |
How the Telephone Talks | 1919 | Public domain | Reissued June 12, 1924 |
The Birth of the Earth [23] | June 19, 1919 | Public domain | – |
Hello, Mars | January 25, 1920 | Public domain | – |
All Aboard for the Moon | February 2, 1920 | Public domain | Also known as All Aboard for a Trip to the Moon. |
If You Could Shrink | August 31, 1920 | Public domain | – |
If We Lived on the Moon | September 26, 1920 | Public domain | Solo release of All Aboard for the Moon. |
A Word About Miss Liberty | October 21, 1920 | Public domain | – |
Through the Earth | November 8, 1920 | Public domain | – |
Title | Theatrical release | Copyright status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Out of the Inkwell | 1921–1926 | Partially public domain | Inherited from Bray Productions. |
Evolution | 1923 | Public domain | Also known as Darwin's Theory of Evolution. |
The Einstein Theory of Relativity | 1923 | Public domain | Derivative work of German director Hanns Walter Kornblum's Die Grundlagen der Einsteinschen Relativitäts-Theorie (The Basics of Einstein's Theory of Relativity) — now lost. |
Fun from the Press | 1923 | Public domain | – |
Adventures in the Far North | May 7, 1923 | Public domain | Also known as Captain Kleinschmidt's Adventures in the Far North, a documentary film following German explorer Frank Kleinschmidt in the Yukon. |
Ko-Ko Song Car-Tunes | 1924–1926 | Public domain | "Ko-Ko's" name was hyphenated until the bankruptcy of Red Seal Pictures where after it was simply "Koko". The hyphenated version returned periodically until it became permanent at the end of 1928. |
Keep 'em Guessing | September 1, 1926 | Public domain | for the Magician's Society of America |
Now You're Talking | 1927 | Public domain | for AT&T |
That Little Big Fellow | 1927 | Public domain | for AT&T |
Inklings | 1927–1928 | Public domain | Eighteen known issues produced from 1924 to 1925 with few surviving today; later rebranded as "Snipshots" in the UK with added music and narration. |
Inkwell Imps | 1927–1929 | Partially public domain | – |
Title | Theatrical release | Copyright status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Screen Songs | 1929–1938 | Public domain | Inherited by Famous Studios. |
Finding His Voice | June 21, 1929 | Public domain | For Western Electric. |
Talkartoons | 1929–1932 | Partially public domain | – |
In My Merry Oldsmobile | March 1, 1931 | Public domain | For Olds Motor Division. |
A Jolt for General Jerm | May 21, 1931 | Public domain | For Lysol. |
Step on It | May 21, 1931 | Public domain | For Texaco. |
Tex in 1999 | 1931 | Public domain | For Texaco. |
Suited to a Tea | 1931 | Public domain | For Indian Tea Company. |
Betty Boop | 1932–1939 | Partially public domain | – |
Popeye the Sailor | 1933–1942 | Partially public domain | Inherited by Famous Studios. |
Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor | November 27, 1936 | Public domain | Popeye Color Special |
Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves | November 26, 1937 | Public domain | Popeye Color Special |
Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp | April 7, 1939 | Public domain | Popeye Color Special |
Color Classics | 1934–1941 | Partially public domain | All 36 shorts are currently public domain except for The Tears of an Onion. |
Stone Age Cartoons | 1940 | Public domain | – |
Animated Antics | 1940–1941 | Public Domain | – |
Gabby | 1940–1941 | Public Domain | – |
Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy | April 11, 1941 | Public Domain | – |
Superman | 1941–1942 | Partially Public Domain | Inherited by Famous Studios; ancillary rights (such as merchandising) retained by Warner Bros. Entertainment, but all original episodes are public domain. |
The Raven | April 3, 1942 | Unclear | Copyright renewed by National Telefilm Associates (now Melange Pictures) in 1970. |
Title | Theatrical release | Director | Copyright status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gulliver's Travels | December 22, 1939 | Dave Fleischer | Public domain | – |
Mr. Bug Goes to Town | December 5, 1941 | Unclear | Copyright currently held by Melange Pictures (managed by parent company Paramount Global), but film has been regularly rereleased by unrelated public domain companies. |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Pointer, Ray (2016). The Art and Inventions of Max Fleischer: American Animation Pioneer, McFarland & Co. Publishers. Pg. 5
- ^ "Out of the Inkwell Films, Incorporated". Progressive Silent Film List. Silent Era.
- ^ "Inkwell". Fleischer Studios. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
- ^ "1600 broadway". bixography. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
- ^ "1600 Broadway on The Square". Condopedia. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
- ^ Pointer, Ray (2016) The Art and Inventions of Max Fleischer: American Animation Pioneer, McFarland & Co. Publishers. pp. 65–70
- ^ Beck, Jerry. "Fleischer Becomes Famous Studios". Cartoon Research. Archived from the original on June 26, 2015. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
- ^ a b Barrier, Michael (1999). Hollywood Cartoons. New York: Oxford University Press. Pg. 304.
- ^ a b Barrier, Michael (1999). Hollywood Cartoons. New York: Oxford University Press. Pgs. 303–305. ISBN 0-19-516729-5.
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