Boskos Dizzy Date (1932) 16mm Seven Arts titles
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
- Here at Cartoons On Film, we have always loved Bosko! We have nearly all of them in our 16mm collection, and they're occasionally screened as part of the Tommy Stathes Cartoon Carnival shows around the NYC area.
The main and end titles of particular print are being shared for our friends and followers as this is a rarely seen, much later Seven Arts version. The Warner Bros. Bosko cartoons are much more commonly seen in 16mm with earlier Guild Films/Sunset Productions title cards.
16mm print and standard def reference copy courtesy of the Stathes Collection:
tommyjose.com
Follow this channel and stay tooned for more info about upcoming silent era animation restoration and re-release projects! Bookmark: cartoonsonfilm.info
For silent era animation-related research and discussions, please join "The Silent Cartoon Fan Club" group on Facebook.
NOTICE: Please do not rip and re-upload this video to RUclips or other platforms. If you would like to share this video with friends, simply link them to this upload. Thank you.
That's an insane find, never thought I'd see 1968 titles on the early Bosko-era cartoons.
This short was issued under two names. It can be assumed that "Bosko and Honey" was a working title that somehow made it to print as well as the "Bosko's Dizzy Date" title. "Bosko's Dizzy Date" was ultimately the film released; "Bosko and Honey" was left unreleased. Despite the two being the same short film with very few differences, "Bosko and Honey" fell into the public domain, but not "Bosko's Dizzy Date".
It's nice to finally associate the W7 logo with something other than the lackluster final LT/MM shorts of the late 60s and those horrible redraws of the B&W Porky shorts. Great find!
Imagine a generation seeing Bosko and Buddy with these! 😅
God I remember to have a VHS with all these cheap redrawn Porky cartoons
@@donaldfuckPainful memories! 😅
...not the seven arts titles i was expecting, that's for certain!
I heard that it also happened with “Scrap Happy Daffy” (1943).
Link?
@@zltoonslc2000rjIt was an OLD eBay listing from either months ago or last year.
@@LDFE2002It also happened with Porky's Preview, it was from a listing on eBay from February 2024 by filmman324.
I wonder why they bothered to do this. For the redrawn cartoons, I understand putting on the newest title style since they basically wanted them to look like more recent cartoons, but for a black and white short, what would be the point?
It was largely for any international markets still willing to show black-and-white cartoons.
I'm sure the "Lost Media" crowd will love this...
Let the stimming commence.
@@cartoonsonfilm I would really prefer you not resort to making fun of traits commonly associated with people with autism or other disabilities in this regard. Please consider this. Thank you.
@@ShermleyCollege I’m relaying personal experience, not making fun of anyone. Please consider this possibility before accusing and attacking others over things you read on the internet.
That’s extremely rare! Awesome find!
Interesting they did it this way. I thought for a minute the titles were negative over a positive print.
LOL They kept "A Vitaphone Release" on the end title 🙂
All the Porky Pig redrawns used this too.
The dog's barking is the same number of syllables as "A Vitaphone Release!" Freaky...
Woah!
*let him play cowboy*
Is this real or fake?
Per the description, it’s real.
What is the context for this?? Were these made after WB bought Guild, like with the redrawns?
Oh this is so fucking weird
Are you sure this isn't a dupe with those titles spliced on? This looks so weird
You can’t splice titles on a print without mutilating the soundtrack. Note how the soundtrack is unaffected when the picture switches back and forth between the original element and the new titles.
@@cartoonsonfilmFurthermore, it’s probably why some of the redrawns have the seven arts logo attached, because their final B&W prints already had the logo added on
@@SCMacPeterIt's fascinating seeing the patchwork-at-play with these.
@@SCMacPeter Almost all of the redrawn Looney Tunes I watched on Miami's WCIX in 1978 and 1979 had the Seven Arts titles. The only one that didn't was "Porky's Naughty Nephew", which had Guild Films titles. The only redrawn Looney Tune I've seen with the original WB titles is "The Village Smithy" and that was something I saw online in recent years.
Were any stations buying these in the late 60s?
I know Puerto Rico was showing B&W cartoons well into the 70s, and the same was probably true in other markets abroad
@@cartoonsonfilmDoesn't surprise me. Still interesting WB didn't redraw these alongside the Porky's.
@@cartoonsonfilm Believe it or not, these BW Boskos were still being shown on Portuguese TV as late as 1989! I actually have some on VHS; they used to be shown before the Wednesday Night movie.
@@cartoonsonfilmI’m going to ask my mother about this. She was a child in Puerto Rico in the 1970s and she has told me she used to watch films in the AAP library growing up.
@@afonsogageiro Nickelodeon was showing Bosko, Buddy, the non-Harman-Ising B & W Merrie Melodies, the B & W Porky Pig cartoons that didn't get redrawn like "You Ought To Be In Pictures', "Porky in Wackyland", "Porky at the Trocadero" and "Porky in Egypt", and one shot B & W Looney Tunes like "Joe Glow the Firefly", "Gopher Goofy" and "Hobby Horse-Laffs" as part of Looney Tunes on Nickelodeon in the late 1980's. (Though they were missing the end titles and part of the opening titles and had a new copyright superimposed over the title card.) But that mostly came to an end in 1990. ("Sorry Bosko.")
The reused titles are.... terrible
I’ve removed your restorations from my Internet Archive account. Sorry for the inconvenience.
Wha - - ??