A boy and his cat, Puss in Boots, visit the princess in her backyard. The king, however, catches the boy flirting with his daughter and kicks him out. The boy's cat- inspired by seeing "Rodolph Vaselino" in a film-within-a-film, "Throwing The Bull"- comes up with a way to win His Majesty's favor. The boy decides to fight the bull at his local arena, where the king and his daughter are watching. The boy (who is wearing a mask) becomes a seemingly expert bullfighter, while the cat secretly knocks out the bull with a remote-control "radio hypnotizer". After the boy wins the bullfight, the king says that he can marry his daughter. As soon as the boy removes his mask, the king runs after the pair, who escape in a car.
Martha is a short film made by Walt Disney in 1923. It was black and white, and also silent. It was made in the United States, and aired there. It is the only film in the Laugh-o-Gram series that is presumed lost, as no prints are known to exist.
Alice and Julius go fishing where Alice charms the fish ashore with a tune from her flute.
While big game hunting, Alice and Julius find themselves brought into the court of the King Lion.
When Julius tries to elope with Alice's maid, Alice enlists a nearby policeman to follow them and the chase is on!
Alice, Julius and Pete compete in a manic golf tournament.
Julius discovers Alice being help captive on Pete's pirate ship and once again has to take on Pete to rescue her.
Alice and Julius visit a carnival where they ride the rides and take in the sideshow.
Julius wins a bucking bronco contest at the rodeo, but when Pete steals his winning he is forced to take on the Bear to get them back.
Alice coaches a college football team with Julius as her star quarterback.
Comic misadventures with the pair ice skating in the Alps and later mountaineering with Pete.
A madcap auto race. Pete tries to cheat by switching some road signs, but Julius as usual comes in a winner.
Alice and Julius as circus acrobats, up on the high wire, and taming the lions.
Pete, in a suit of armor, steals away the object of Julius' affection. So Julius makes himself a suit of armor out of junk to fight back.
Alice and Julius protect their western fort from the Three Bad Eggs and a band of attacking Indians.
Alice and all her pals enjoy a picnic day at the park, until a gang of rats steal their food and they are forced to attack back.
Julius and Pete match swimming skills in a race across the English Channel with Alice as the referee.
Alice and Julius strike gold while prospecting in the Klondike and need to protect it from a thieving Pete.
Alice and Julius sell patent medicine as part of a travelling medicine show.
Alice plays on the beach while Julius engineers a dramatic rescue as a lifeguard.
Alice attempts to umpire a big league baseball game where the animals begin to take exception to her bad calls.
Oswald is fired from his job as a limousine driver for flirting with the boss' daughter. But when the boss' bank is robbed by Pete, it's Oswald to the rescue!
The first Disney "Christmas" themed short as Oswald plays Santa for a group of orphans.
A rather odd little short for Disney as Oswald plays a cop who woos a nurse who wanders into the park. Pete then gets Oswald drunk and woos the nurse wearing Oswald's stolen uniform.
Oswald is a tourist in a Moroccan cafe and falls in love with a dancing girl, who he inevitably has to rescue from the clutches of Pete.
Oswald takes Fanny out for a ride in his jalopy and soon finds himself in a race with a chasing police car.
A pastoral outing as Oswald and his friends take in the delights on a swimming hole.
Oswald plays a cowboy who must rescue Sadie from a runaway stagecoach and Pegleg Pete.
In a foreshadowing of what was to become a staple of the Mickey shorts, Oswald manages his farm along to a musical beat.
In a switch for Pete, he plays a pal of Oswald as they become hoboes riding the rails until they are discovered and take refuge in a nearby schoolyard.
Mickey is trying to fly an airplane to imitate Charles Lindbergh.
Oswald gets a visit from the stork ... again and again and again. He has to resort to a variety of strategies to stop the continual flow of babies.
Oswald plays the hockey champ, but gets distracted and flirts with a beautiful snow bunny.
Oswald and his wife, Ortensia the anthropomorphic cat go to the circus. While Ortensia is impressed by the high wire act, Oswald in an attempt to prove how macho he is by climbing the wire to perform, which upsets the ringmaster, from which, high-jinx pursue.
Oswald sneaks away from school in order to visit a circus sideshow, and is chased through the circus by the police.
Yanky Clippers is a 1929 silent animated film starring Oswald the Lucky Rabbit.[1] It is among the few shorts created during the Winkler period known to exist. The cartoon is also Oswald's last silent film.
The God Pan flits through the fields, coaxing music and dance out of the flora and fauna, who cooperate well. Maybe too well when a dancing thundercloud bumps together, producing a lightning strike that threatens to burn everything down. Fortunately, Pan's musical charms are able to lure the flames into a nearby pond where they are safely extinguished.
A short short made especially for the 1932 Academy Awards show; it features a small parade of the nominees for best actor and actress. In order they were Wallace Beery for "The Champ" (with Jackie Cooper trailing along behind), Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne for "The Guardsman", Helen Hayes for "The Sins of Madelon Claudet", Fredric March for "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde", and Marie Dressler for "Emma."
Mickey and the gang stage "Uncle Tom's Cabin," but the crowd receives Horace's villainous performance as Simon Legree too seriously, bombing him off the stage with vegetables. Clarabelle's dramatic performance as a fleeing slave is also ruined, when dogs that are supposed to be chasing her are led astray and through the orchestra pit by a cat.
A baby falls asleep. The little one and his stuffed puppy visit Lullaby Land, filled with everything that a baby needs. He dreams of a land where powder puffs and pacifiers grow on trees. But look out! Stay out of the Forbidden Garden, where "things are sharp and things are hot, and baby mustn't touch!"
Mickey and Pluto come to call on Minnie and Fifi, but when Pluto exchanges the chocolates Mickey was going to give as a gift with the bone he has for Fifi, Minnie thinks Mickey did it and a violent argument starts. Mickey and Minnie each vow to give up the opposite sex... but they don't keep those vows for long.
The hen is looking for someone to help her plant her corn. Peter Pig and Donald Duck both feign belly aches to get out of the chore. So, with help from her chicks, she plants it herself. Harvest time comes; again, Peter and Donald claim belly aches. She cooks up a variety of corn dishes, and heads over to Peter and Donald, but before she can open her mouth, they already have their belly aches. Once she asks, they are miraculously "cured" but all she gives them is castor oil, for their belly aches.
Pencil test version of Mickey's Fire Brigade.
Pencil test version of Pluto's Judgement Day.
Pencil test version of On Ice.
When the saxophone son of the King of the Isle of Jazz falls in love with the violin daughter of his father's rival, the Queen of the Land of Symphony, war erupts. The Prince and Princess are nearly drowned in the Sea of Discord until a cease fire is called. The short ends in a double wedding and the uniting of the two kingdoms with the Bridge of Harmony.
Mickey and his best friends are hired by telephone to evict a number of ghosts from a haunted house. Unknown to them they were hired by the ghosts themselves, four lonesome ghosts who are bored because nobody has visited the house they are haunting for a long time. They wish to play tricks on the mortals. And they do through a series of inventive gags, but by the end the trio has managed to scare the ghosts out of the house when flour accidentally spilled over the trio.
The Sorcerer's Apprentice is the third and most famous segment in Disney's Fantasia and is played again in Fantasia 2000. It stars Mickey Mouse. Although The Sorcerer's Apprentice was already a popular concert piece, it was brought to a much larger audience through its inclusion in the 1940 Walt Disney animated concert film Fantasia, in which Mickey Mouse plays the role of the apprentice. Disney had acquired the music rights in 1937 when he planned to release a separate Mickey Mouse film, which, at the suggestion of Leopold Stokowski, was eventually expanded into Fantasia.
Produced for National Film Board of Canada, propaganda short encouraging Canadians to buy War Bonds.
A German ""oom-pah"" band parades through town extolling the ""virtues"" of the Fuehrer with the title song. They awaken Donald Duck who has to go to work in a Nazi munitions factory, much to his regret. Luckily in the end, after a frantic workday trying to alternate between making bombs and saluting Hitler, he finds that it has all been a nightmare and that he is still living the the good old U.S.A. Der Fuehrer's Face won the 1942 Academy Award for Best Short Subjects: Cartoons.
A doctor persuades a group of boys to be vaccinated by explaining how it will protect them against disease.
Huey, Dewey, and Louie earn enough money to buy their Uncle Donald a birthday present. Donald, not knowing what the money is for, wants the kids to save their money for a rainy day. The boys manage to get the money back and buy Donald a box of cigars. Donald thinks the boys have taken up smoking and force them to smoke the cigars.
An elderly bee, seeing an equally elderly Donald Duck in the park, looks back on their long partnership. The bee started helping Donald pick up trash, then using his sharp stinger to increase sales for balloon vendor Donald, then as a tattoo artist, and finally doing embroidery. After a particularly demanding tapestry, the bee asks for time off, and Donald shows him to a custom-built greenhouse. In there, along with lots of lovely flowers, and moreover, a lady bee. This obviously causes some problems in the relationship with Donald.
Bandit Pistol Pete enters a lawless western town and robs a bank. The town is in desperate need of a sheriff. Enter wandering cowboy Goofy who notices a pretty girl being held up in a stagecoach robbery by Pete. Lovestruck and completely oblivious to Pete, he foils the robbery while getting to know the girl better. This earns him a reputation as a great gunslinger and he is challenged to apprehend Pete. Pete tries to get his revenge on Goofy but every attempt backfires due to Goofy's clumsiness usually directed unintentionally at Pete.
Susie is an automobile in an auto showroom who is bought by a man who is taken with her. She finds it hard to fit into high society but copes with it. Eventually, she becomes old and hard to operate and her owner trades her in. Another man notices her and buys her but this men is considerably less genteel leaving her out in the cold and mistreating her. Much to her horror, she eventually discovers she is a stolen car and is chased by the police during which she is totalled in an accident. Now Susie is kept in a junkyard but, when all looks hopeless, another man notices her, buys her, gives her an overhaul, and has her back on the road in no time.
As the narrator explains, educating children is one of the most important things today and the heroic man who takes on this role is "the school teacher" (Goofy, naturally). After taking role call, Goofy tries to teach the class but keeps having to deal with a mischievous trouble-maker named George who enjoys sneaking out of class to go fishing, eating the teacher's apple, squeaking chalk, making faces while teacher gives a geography lesson, and terrorizing the other students with his water pistol. In the end, George's mischief goes too far when he destroys the school with an exploding bomb and is forced to write "I will not bomb the school again" 100 times!
Donald's nephews come by for halloween and Donald plays tricks on them. But Witch Hazel was watching, and offers to help the boys get even. She brews up a potion that animates inanimate objects and sics them on Donald. He initially agrees to treat the boys, until he hears the witch call him a "pushover". She animates his feet to get him to cough up the key to his pantry.
After several long days at work, Goofy finally takes a much needed vacation. However, his trip never quite gets off the ground mainly because he spends most of it stuck behind a slow moving trailer. When he gets a flat tire, the mechanic inspects every part of his car except the tire. The only motel he can find is a little shack too close to a railroad track. On the road once more, he gets stuck behind said trailer again only to pass it and discover no one is driving it.
Pluto comes bounding outside to help Mickey get a Christmas tree. Chip 'n Dale see him and make fun of him, but the tree they take refuge in is the one Mickey chops down. They like the decorations, especially the candy canes and Mickey's bowl of mixed nuts. But Pluto spots them and goes after them long before Mickey spots them. Minnie, Donald, and Goofy drop by to sing carols.
Goofy is hired to solve a mystery of a missing "Al." He searches the city for clues, but constantly runs into a city sheriff (who is portrayed by Pete) who tells him to let the police handle it. A car chase occurs and the drivers ram into a haystack. It turns out that Al is actually the city sheriff who is supposed to get married to the woman who hires Goofy to find him.
Mrs. Goofy leaves for the day leaving the house in the hands of her husband, Goofy. Goofy is confident that he can handle the day's household chores but he keeps making typical goof-ups while attempting them. His first mistake is sending Junior to school on a Saturday. At first, he just makes small blunders but, of course, they keep escalating to the point where his house is flooded, scribbled on, set on fire, invaded by firemen and policemen alike, and, basically, an utter disaster area when the wife returns.
Mickey and Pluto go fishing. Pluto has a run-in with a clam, who eventually lodges in Pluto's mouth; Mickey thinks the clam is Pluto's tongue and can't understand why Pluto keeps begging for more food. After they get rid of the clam, Mickey's attempts to use his minnows as bait are thwarted by a hungry seagull; he brings his friends, and they chase our heroes away.
Goofy, driving through Mexico, deals with a stubborn bull on the road who eventually charges, and Goofy unwittingly subdues the bull. Mexicans who are watching the scene believe that Goofy is "the great Matador" and the minute Goofy arrives in Mexico City, they dress him like a matador and make him do battle with another bull. The reluctant Goofy tries to escape the enormous bull although after a while, once again, he triumphs over the bull by accident.
An owl teaches his class full of birds about melody. It's all around in nature. Only birds and man can sing; man "sings" even when he speaks. We see a quick survey of the stages of life, as captured by songs: the alphabet song for primary school, Here Comes the Bride, The Old Gray Mare, etc. Some inspirations for song are outlined in song: love, sailing, trains, the West, motherhood, etc., but "we never sing about brains." Finally, an example of how a simple melody can be expanded into a symphony: an elaborate version of the simple tune that opened the lesson.
The boys are more interested in their comic book than the sights on their Florida vacation. When the car breaks down next to the spring "mistaken for the fountain of youth", Donald decides to have some fun with his nephews and hides the part of the sign saying "mistaken for". As baby Donald, he starts shredding their comic book and generally acting like a spoiled brat. But when he decides to pretend he's turned into an egg (borrowed from an alligator), he's in for trouble he hadn't bargained for once the gator finds out.
Goofy plays everyman again. He's an average working joe who demonstrates "the up on time/work on time/bed on time" routine while going from work to home every weekday. On Saturday night, however, he parties it up and attempts to get some rest the next Sunday but with his son around, it's impossible. He insists Dad take him to the beach and, although Goofy refuses, he ends up going anyway where he gets into all sorts of trouble mainly as the result of chasing his son all over the place. Worse yet, when he leaves, he falls victim to the world's biggest traffic jam. As a result of all this, he is relieved to go back to work the following week!
In this short subject (which mostly represents a departure from Disney's traditional approach to animation), a stuffy owl teacher lectures his feathered flock on the origins of Western musical instruments. Starting with cavepeople, whose crude implements could only "toot, whistle, plunk and boom," the owl explains how these beginnings led to the development of the four basic types of Western musical instruments: brass, woodwinds, strings, and percussion.
Two Benny Goodman songs are paired with animated sequences in this short film, originally created for Disney's 'Make Mine Music'. In "After You've Gone", animated musical instruments dance along with a jazz tune in surreal settings. In "All the Cats Join In", a group of teens go to the local malt shop and dance to a jazzy jukebox tune.
Flannery, a railway agent does everything by the book. He gets into a scrape with a customer, McMorehouse, who wants to pay 44 cents freight for two guinea pigs which he considers pets. Flannery, however, considers them pigs (freight 48 cents), a decision he begins to regret when the animals begin to reproduce.
The city of Anyburg decides its traffic situation has gotten out of hand, so it puts the automobile on trial. The trial (conducted in rhyme) starts with a car that was in a hit-and-run accident, followed by a sports car whose sins are peeling rubber and general hot-rodding, followed by a heap, on trial for lack of safety.
Windwagon Smith blows into town with a strange contraption: a conestoga wagon outfitted with a wind sail. The town fathers figure that since a small windwagon does so well, a big one must do better. They set out to build one (while Smith woos the mayor's daughter) and launch it on it's maiden voyage to very unexpected results.
A father tells his son the invention of the wheel was most important; to prove it, the two hipsters visit the inventor caveman Donald Duck. There follows a survey of the progress of transportation, a digression into the basics of gear ratios, a series of live-action dancers to various styles of music inside a giant jukebox, an illustration of the use of wheels in power generation and space satellites, etc. Ultimately, Donald decides he doesn't want the responsibility, but certainly someone else would take on the task.
A history of the steel industry in America stretches from the geological formation of iron ore to technological innovations now being developed in research laboratories. Shows mining procedures, smelting techniques, special-use tools, and basic steps of contemporary steel production. Uses animation to illustrate the primitive steps of iron making with Donald Duck as the original iron master
Disney's Halloween Treat" is a 47-minute Halloween-themed clip show which first aired on Walt Disney in 1982 and featured a compilation of Disney animated shorts involving spooky or supernatural themes as well as excerpted segments from Disney feature films. The credits also featured footage from the Haunted Mansion ride. It was narrated by a talking jack o'lantern, which was also used in an educational short to talk about Halloween safety called "Disney's Haunted Halloween". The opening and closing credits feature a colorized version of the 1929 Silly Symphonies short, "The Skeleton Dance", as well as its own theme song, sung in the credits. The lyrics were written by Galen R. Brandt with music by John Debney.
A Disney Channel Christmas (released on VHS as Jiminy Cricket's Christmas) is a compilation special originally aired on the Disney Channel on December 3, 1983, similar to the previous year's A Disney Christmas Gift. The song "On Christmas Morning" from that program also played on this one. It is hosted by Jiminy Cricket, mostly using scenes from From All of Us to All of You. An edited version of this program was released on home video in 1986, under a different title: Jiminy Cricket's Christmas.
Luxo Sr, a big illuminated desk lamp, sees a yellow ball roll up to him and pushes it away. When it comes back to him, he realises that Luxo Jr, his son, wants to use it to play with him.
Somethin's Cookin is a 1988 animation film in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, that opens the movie. In it, Roger is given the task of babysitting Baby Herman, or risk being "sent back to the science lab". From his crib Baby Herman spots a cookie jar on top of the refrigerator, and promptly escapes his crib into the kitchen. Roger tries to stop him as he wanders into danger, but fails. Herman eventually makes it to the top of the refrigerator while Roger has various mishaps, and eventually Roger ends up with the refrigerator landing on his head. Then the director Raul scolds him for having birds circle his head instead of stars.
In delivering a bouquet of flowers across town to a stunning starlet named Fawn Deer, a delirious delivery cat named Bonkers D. Bobcat turns a relatively easy assignment into a catalog of catastrophes. Racing against the clock to meet his five-minute delivery deadline, Bonkers encounters a wide array of ridiculous roadblocks, ranging from banana peels to the world's slowest taxi driver, in his frantic attempts to meet the deadline and keep his job.
On Halloween, Pooh and his friends are eager to go trick-or-treating. Piglet has never gone trick-or-treating, having always been too afraid of the frightening atmosphere of Halloween. After building an imposing mannequin in an attempt to face his fears, he joins his friends in preparation for trick-or-treating. Pooh's attempt to get honey from a bee hive ends in failure, and the bees chase the group into Rabbit's garden, destroying some of his pumpkins. As night falls and a thunderstorm looms, Tigger overzealously speaks of the horrors of Halloween, frightening Piglet enough that he runs home and barricades the door.
This is the story of the Wolf, who, having failed to get Little Red Riding Hood, obsesses over his failure to the point of ruining his life. The Wolf tries to get Little Red after hiding Grandma in a closet, only to be chased off by the Woodsman. The next morning he is caught daydreaming aqbout Red, scolded by his boss and mocked by his co-workers. So, in the middle of a nervous breakdown and his wife regretting the fact that she didn't marry an extremely rich Leonard Fox when she had the chance, our hero decides to build a time machine and get it right.
It's the Fourth of July and Donald Duck has found the perfect picnic spot to watch fireworks under the stars with Daisy. He battles the blanket, wrestles the lawn chairs, and combats the picnic basket until, finally, the site is set. But when Daisy arrives, she discovers that Donald has miscalculated and they can't even see the fireworks. Donald is disappointed to discover he has messed things up once again, but Daisy thinks the view is very romantic - a beautiful full moon.
Mr. Jollyland hires Mickey, Donald, and Goofy to paint his amusement park's roller coaster, the Whiplash, saying that whoever paints the most of it wins a lifetime pass to the park. The competition between Mickey and Donald escalates to a wild paint war, but Goofy ends up winning the pass with his sure-and-steady pace.
While driving to pick up Minnie for their date, Mickey's faithful car breaks down so he buys a new futuristic car. The new car proves to be a bigger problem than his old one. The car even dumps Mickey on the side of the road. Later he goes back to get his old car but someone has already bought it. That someone turns out to be Minnie and the two go on their date.
Mickey is out playing a game of "catch the stick" with Pluto when suddenly he's reminded that he and Donald are going out on a double date with their girlfriends, so the game is cut short, and Pluto is left behind feeling lonely. Suddenly, he notices a beautiful Maltese Terrier named Tiki and immediately falls for her, pursuing her and her owner all the way to the sky-high skyscraper in which they live. However, Butch is guarding the building, cutting Pluto off from getting to his new love. After an attempt at mailing himself inside the building only results in him getting shipped to Alaska and back, Pluto manages to scare Butch by constructing a Trojan Rabbit-like replica of himself, which causes the bulldog to faint on sight. After climbing the stairway all the way up to the penthouse apartment in which Tiki lives, Pluto is immediately pounced upon and kissed by her and fantasizes about marrying her and having puppies with her.
Huey, Dewey, and Louie want to go on the best ride in the whole amusement park, The Rocket Ruckus - but Uncle Donald is the ride operator, and he alters the height-requirement sign so his nephews are too short to ride. When the angry boys finally succeed in getting past him, Donald spins the ride out of control and his nephews decide to take mischievous revenge.
Mickey finds an envelope of money and uses it to buy Minnie an expensive hair bow. Minnie then tells him that she had lost an envelope of money meant to go to orphans. Upon realizing his mistake, Mickey makes several attempts to get the hair bow back from Minnie so he can get the money back to the orphans. After many failed attempts to try and get the hair bow back from Minnie, Minnie reveals that she knew Mickey bought her the bow all along and that she sold it and gave all the money back to the orphans. When Mickey questions why Minnie made him go through all the fuss, Minnie says that she just wanted to teach Mickey a lesson and giggles. Feeling relieved, Mickey hugs Minnie and tells her she's the greatest. The short ends with Mickey kissing Minnie on the cheek.
It's Valentine's Day, but Donald can only afford a "$1.00" box of candy for Daisy's present. Unfortunately, his dollar bill blows away on a gust of wind and into a kite-flying park. Donald straps on a kite to make a set of wings and takes to the sky, battling other kites, stormy winds and his pesky, playful dollar-bill before he emerges victorious. Sadly, the $1.00 box of candy is already sold by the time Donald returns to the store. Luckily, it was Daisy who bought the box and happily feeds Donald chocolate.
Pluto overcomes his dislike for felines and rescues three stray kittens from a rainstorm. Hiding them from Mickey, Pluto takes the blame for their antics and gets thrown out of the house for breaking the rules. In the end, after Pluto's angel and devil appear over Mickey's head (Pluto's devil blurted out that the kittens are in the house), Mickey discovers the kittens, apologizes to Pluto for sending him out into the rain, and all is well.
Minnie Mouse is looking forward to a quiet night at home, but the peace and quiet is soon interrupted when Daisy Duck calls and tells her that she used up her hot water and cannot take her 'nightly-therapeutic relaxation bubble bath', and, thinking Minnie is OK with it, "invites" herself over, baggage and all, to use Minnie's bathtub.
After struggling with the countdown for his rocket, Professor Von Drake decides to think of a way to deal with it by taking a shower. Unfortunately, Von Drake has trouble with his shower, so he makes some adjustments and accidentally turns it into a teleportation device. With each twist of the faucet, towel-clad Von Drake finds himself in another embarrassing situation.
When Minnie signs herself and Mickey up to perform in a piano recital, Mickey believes that is way too easy and decides that life is too short for him to practice piano. But when he begins to actually practicing, very close to his deadline, he realizes that without practice things never go as planned.
In order to demonstrate how to haunt a house, the narrator (voiced by Corey Burton) arranges for Goofy to be in an accident that causes his spirit to roam around as a ghost. Although Goofy worries that this means he's a goner, the narrator assures him that it's only temporary, just long enough to help with his demonstration. The first step is to "choose a house to haunt", so the narrator suggests that Goofy check the classified ads in the paper to find one. Doing as tasked, Goofy settles on a house on a hill with creaking hardwood floors, a fog-enshrouded breakfast nook and an informal dying room. Step two is "selecting a hauntee", and the narrator gives Goofy the choice of selecting Mickey Mouse, Clarabelle Cow, or Donald Duck to be the one he will haunt.
It is Christmas Eve, and a girl named Maria (Minnie Mouse) is admiring her Christmas presents as an offscreen narrator (voiced by John Cleese) rhetorically asks, "Who could describe them all?" At that point, Maria's guardian, Godpapa Drosselmeyer (Ludwig Von Drake) answers that by attempting to describe the toys before the narrator interrupts him, telling him that he wasn't really supposed to answer his question, and orders him to "pretend I'm not even here."
Huey, Dewey and Louie wake up Chip and Dale one Christmas morning and then go downstairs to open their presents, even though they are supposed to wait for Daisy, Uncle Scrooge and Aunt Gertie to arrive. The boys then take their new sleds from Uncle Donald (not reading the included card) and go sledding before having Christmas dinner, where Donald yells at them to learn some manners. While Donald, Daisy, Uncle Scrooge and Aunt Gertie sing carols, the boys play with their new toys.
Goofy and Max are mailing a letter to Santa Claus. However, as soon as they get home, their neighbour Pete tells Max that Santa does not exist, saying it is impossible that he cannot fly around the world in one night. Things get worse when Goofy poses as Santa for some kids and Max finds out that he tricked him. Goofy is determined to prove to Max that Santa does exist and stays up all Christmas Eve to keep an eye out for him while Max, still bitter, just wants to move on. After mistaking a Beagle Boy (who was robbing Pete's house) for Santa, Goofy eventually gives up hope of Santa coming. Max then does everything that Goofy did, to try and make him happy, including posing as (a very small) Santa himself. In the end, the real Santa actually comes and gives Max the gift he had asked for earlier (as well as burying Pete's house next door, in snow). When Max asks Goofy if Santa forgot his present, Goofy answers that every year he asks for the same thing - Max's happiness.
Mickey wants to get Minnie a gold chain for her one heirloom, her watch, so he works at Crazy Pete's Tree Lot. Minnie wants to give Mickey something special for Christmas as well, so she works hard at her job in a department store to get a bonus to buy a present with. When Mickey offers a small tree to a poor family who can't afford to buy a special 10-footer tree, his greedy boss Pete, steals all of Mickey's money and sacks him. Pete then accidentally puts his lit cigar into his pocket with Mickey's money without noticing, which sets himself, the money and his trees on fire. Meanwhile, Minnie's bonus from her stingy boss Mortimer Mouse proves to be nothing but a fruit cake. After playing music for a toy drive with the Firehouse Five, Mickey has the idea that he can trade his harmonica for the gold chain. The shop is closing when he gets there and the owner who is just leaving isn't interested in the harmonica, but changes his mind after hearing Mickey play it.
Mickey, Donald, and Goofy run a locksmith business in their apartment. Mickey gets a call from Minnie telling him about an emergency. The trio tries to get out, but they find that their key is missing. Goofy tries to check his keychain, but only manages to rattle off some lame puns. Goofy then takes out the spare key hidden under his mouth, but he and Donald fight over it and it falls through the door's mail slot. The three try to reel it back in through the window above the door and end up causing trouble for various people in the city and catch a big fish.
After accidentally eating the last of Minnie's bag of nuts (which she had planned to use in her famous nut stuffing for their Holiday party), Mickey has to fight Chip and Dale for the last bag at the supermarket. Though Mickey succeeds in getting the bag, the mischievous chipmunks end up having the last laugh.
It's Halloween, and Huey, Dewey, and Louie are going trick-or-treating. They receive treats from Mickey, Minnie and Goofy (the latter thinking it was Easter and giving them eggs while dressed as a bunny). They visit Donald's house, but Donald disguises himself as a scary man with a hook and a hockey mask and scares the boys away. The boys run away in fear and terror and hide behind a tree. Donald takes the candy that the children left behind as well.
After getting tricked into saving Pete from a snowstorm, Mickey is captured and snowbound with him and his cousin Zeke who have stolen an ATM. However, Mickey outwits the two Pete cousins in various techniques (e.g. getting the cash out of the ATM, checking the food freshness, framing each other, dividing out the money) and lastly, trapping them in jail, all which results both Pete and Zeke bickering every time.
When Mickey and Donald accidentally break a picture of Minnie and Daisy by playing football in the house, they go to extreme lengths to try to replace it, even if it means crossdressing as Minnie and Daisy respectively to replace the photo, only for their efforts to go down the drain upon finding out that both Minnie and Daisy actually hated the picture both Mickey and Donald had previously broke, hence making the duo's attempts to replace the said picture of Minnie and Daisy a complete waste of time.
Mickey is playing a game of catch with Pluto when Minnie drives by, reminding Mickey to meet her for dinner tonight. Mickey says he'll be there "unless they lock me up and throw away the keys." Mortimer overhears this and, while Mickey and Pluto aren't looking, snatches the baseball they're playing catch with. When Mickey comes looking for the baseball, Mortimer suggests to him that it landed in his house. When Mickey sees his baseball on the floor in Mortimer's house, Mortimer helps him climb in the window. Just as Mickey gets his hands on the baseball, Mortimer suddenly acts as though Mickey has broken into his house and then has Chief O'Hara, whom he has already called, come in and arrest Mickey.
Mickey calls Minnie over to rush over to his house. When she arrives, he sets the scene up like as if he's about to propose to her, but when she opens the ring box, an airhorn pops out and blows loudly in her face. Mickey laughs at this and tells her that it's April Fool's Day. Minnie is naturally furious about that prank, but Mickey offers to make it up to her by taking her out to brunch. However, right as he's getting his car started, the car suddenly fills with popcorn, having been laid there by Mortimer. Mickey retaliates by leaving a brick in Mortimer's driveway right as he's backing his car out, and then laying in front of Mortimer's car as if he'd been run over and killed.
Mickey is waiting for Minnie at the soda shop, but he then gets distracted by a pirate peg leg Pete-themed pinball machine for hours. And as he plays the game, Mickey gets so into the game he believes it is real and Pete has captured Minnie and Mickey has to save her. After he is done playing the game, it offers him a free game but he destroys the machine and has a great date with Minnie.
Goofy is sitting on a bench all alone, crying loudly. When the narrator asks him why he is so sad, he replies that he's lonely, has no friends and getting some is just plain impossible. The narrator says that it will not be impossible if he is a rock star, intriguing Goofy. The narrator first explains the steps of image, starting by rock star hair, meaning having long hair, but Goofy ends up having an haircut that is too long and can't see anything, forcing him to remove the mass of hair with a pair of scissors, then he makes a hair joke.
The film shows a story of children from a South African town flying kites down a hill after one boy is inspired by a colourful feather floating from the sky. The children find materials from places all over the town and produce equally colourful kites. After a walk, they fly the kites and release them into the sky for the ending of the film.
"Mickey's Dog-Gone Christmas" has Mickey Mouse overdoing his living room with lights and decorations. When Pluto wrecks things, Mickey gets mad and sends him to his doghouse. Wrapped up in the superficial display rescue operations, Mickey doesn't even notice that his upset dog has run away. While Pluto finds himself at the North Pole among Santa's reindeer, Mickey finally notices his dog is missing and sets off on a journey to find his pal. Beyond the predictable reunion, all of the characters get together for a jolly conclusion.
The irascible duck is getting frustrated by the holiday season. The song "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" has been plaguing Donald, and a reluctant trip to the mall has him hearing the song everywhere, captured in an effective dialogue-less sequence. While in general I think the Donald Duck formula may be pretty thin, this one works fairly well and may be the best portion of the film.
"Christmas Maximus" relies heavily on pop-style singing to vocalize Max's growing concerns about how his father Goofy's normally clumsy behavior may ruin things when Max brings home his girlfriend Mona on their break from college. It's very short (6 minutes), takes a tone quite different from most Goofy/Max cartoons, and will probably fall under either "hokey" or "cute" for you. Pete is noticeably absent from this one, which will disappoint his loyal following.
"Christmas: Impossible" stars Scrooge McDuck and his nephew triplets Huey, Dewey, and Louie. Acting as their usual mischeivous selves (which riles up their uncle Donald, as usual), the boys get scared that they haven't been good enough to get the Christmas presents they want. They mail themselves to the North Pole to make sure they're on Santa's good list and encounter a number of obstacles before they begin to see the error of their selfish ways.
An animated short based on Hans Christian Andersen's tale about a poor young girl with a burning desire to find comfort and happiness in her life. Desperate to keep warm, the girl lights the matches she sells, and envisions a very different life for herself in the fiery flames filled with images of loving relatives, bountiful food, and a place to call home.
"Glago's Guest" follows the intriguing and thought-provoking story of a lonely Russian soldier stationed in a remote Siberian outpost. When the soldier's solitude is interrupted one day by the arrival of a strange new "guest" named Lars, Glago is jolted out of his uneventful daily routine. Soon, though, he comes to realize that things aren't always what they appear to be.
Penny and Bolt have been captured by the evil Dr. Calico, suspended above a pool of lava, inside a heavily guarded warehouse on an island in the middle of nowhere - a base which is impenetrable to both people and dogs. Penny's father watches the events from his lab through a secret camera imbedded in Bolts collar and worries that he cannot save her. Discovering that no man or dog can break into Dr. Calico's base, he turns to Rhino, who is watching TV in the background. In order to save Penny and Bolt, Rhino is put through the same procedure as Bolt to give him super-powers.
Wayne and Lanny, now partners, are called by Magee to meet with a secret contact – Mrs. Claus, who sends them on a new mission to retrieve a box from Santa’s secret workshop. Later they sneak into Santa’s office while he is asleep, using their high tech equipment from the previous film. Lanny’s expertise at dressing the tree enables them to enter the hidden workshop where they recover the box and escape just in time. Mrs Claus reveals the contents of the box to be the last part of the first toy that Santa ever made, and gives the complete toy back to him as his Christmas Present.
A story set in the bonny blue highlands of Scotland, and centered on Nessie, the friendly Loch Ness monster, her best friend MacQuack the rubber duck, and how the duo came to live in the moor they call home. Problems arrive in the form of a land developer named MacFroogle, who wants to build a mini-golf empire on top of Nessie's home.
The toys throw Ken and Barbie a Hawaiian vacation in Bonnie's room.
Mater's decision to fly lands him accidentally at a big airshow.
The beginning of the special introduces the Coal Elf Brigade, a special unit of Christmas elves that is responsible for delivering lumps of coal to naughty children. While seeming cruel to some, the brigade adds small, encouraging notes to the lumps such as "Try Harder next year," in an attempt to steer the children back to the nice list.
The short shows that Thunderbolt and Dawson are able to catch branches sticking from the side of the waterfall. Dawson is able to reach a ledge and as Thunderbolt's branch is about to snap, his human, the sheriff, is able to use his lasso to save him. The two pursue Dawson, but the thief uses explosives to cause an avalanche, blocking their path and allowing him to take some sacks of money from a wagon, which may be why Thunderbolt is chasing him. The sheriff thinks Dawson has escaped, but Thunderbolt climbs across the rock pile to continue the chase. In the end, thanks to Thunderbolt, Dawson is nabbed and brought to justice.
Sanjay, a young boy who loves cartoons and comics, dreams about the Hindu gods being superheroes. The boy embarks on an inspiring journey that helps him gain a new perspective about life.
Donald Duck decides to stay home and enjoy a winter wonderland Christmas instead of migrating South with all the other ducks for the winter. Join Mickey, Minnie, Goofy, Pluto and special guest stars Scrooge McDuck, Professor Ludwig Von Drake, Donald’s nephews Huey, Dewey and Louie and, of course, Santa Claus in this brand new holiday special.
What happened to Olaf within the moments after Elsa created him as she was “letting it go” and building her ice palace, and when Anna and Kristoff first meet him in the forest? And how did Olaf learn to love Summer? The film follows Olaf’s first steps as he comes to life and searches for his identity in the snowy mountains outside Arendelle.
Adrift on a lake, two kids with different ways of communicating attempt to connect
Prior to the events of Soul, 22 unsuccessfully attempts to dissuade a fellow soul from leaving the Great Before and going to Earth. Resenting Earth for taking away every friend she has ever had, 22 decides to abduct five souls and indoctrinate them into a secret resistance movement called the APOCALYPSE (Anonymous Provocateurs and Other Culprits that are Against Leaving Your friends to go to Pathetic Stupid Earth).
With his best friend, Luca, away at school, Alberto is enjoying his new life in Portorosso working alongside Massimo--the imposing, tattooed, one-armed fisherman of few words--who's quite possibly the coolest human in the entire world as far as Alberto is concerned. He wants more than anything to impress his mentor, but it's easier said than done.
Walt Disney's Oswald the Lucky Rabbit returns in his first traditionally animated short in 95 years, created for Disney's 100th anniversary.
The house of Givenchy is pleased to present a brand-new capsule collection in collaboration with Disney, starring Oswald, the Lucky Rabbit, in celebration of the Lunar New Year 2023 and Disney’s 100th anniversary.​
Animated documentary short which discusses the proper way to care for and handle tools.
Disney's Electric Holiday is a 2012 animated short starring Minnie Mouse. The short is a collaboration between The Walt Disney Company and the Barney's New York fashion industry. Along with Minnie, it co-stars a cast of iconic Disney characters and world renowned fashion designers, models, and more.
Clara Cleans Her Teeth is a short live-action (silent)/(sound) film made ​​by the Disney studio and released in 1926. This is the second film made at the request of Dr. Thomas B. McCrum, a Kansas City dentist, as Walt Disney had just moved to Hollywood. The first film of the series is 1922's Tommy Tucker's Tooth.
Disney's Electric Holiday is a 2012 animated short starring Minnie Mouse. The short is a collaboration between The Walt Disney Company and the Barney's New York fashion industry. Along with Minnie, it co-stars a cast of iconic Disney characters and world renowned fashion designers, models, and more.
Mickey Mouse is a singing lifeguard. Minnie Mouse is the damsel he must rescue before she is swept out to sea.ILD
Donald in Mathmagic Land is a 1959 American animated-live-action featurette produced by Walt Disney Productions and featuring Donald Duck. The short was directed by Hamilton Luske (with Wolfgang Reitherman, Les Clark, and Joshua Meador as sequence directors) and was released on June 26, 1959. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject) at the 32nd Academy Awards, and became a widely viewed educational film in American schools of the 1960s and beyond.
While touring the halls of the Disney Animation building, Mickey Mouse gets sucked into one of his old cartoon posters and takes a "whirlwind" trip through his past performances.