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Films With Live Action And Animation
This is a list of films with live-action and animation, films that combine live action and animated elements, typically interacting. Shorts by decade 1900s * 1900 – '' The Enchanted Drawing'' 1910s * 1914 – '' Gertie the Dinosaur'' * 1917 – ' ("''When Captain Grogg was to be painted''") * 1918 – '' Out of the Inkwell'' series (animated characters in live action surroundings: series between 1918 and 1929) 1920s * 1923 – ''Alice Comedies'' series (live action girl in animated surroundings) * 1929 – '' Bosko, the Talk-Ink Kid'' 1930s * 1933 – '' Zero for Conduct'' * 1936 – '' Puppet Show'' * 1938 – '' Daffy Duck in Hollywood'' (live action film clips) 1940s * 1940 – '' You Ought to Be in Pictures'' * 1940 – '' Eatin' on the Cuff or The Moth Who Came to Dinner'' * 1943 – '' Who Killed Who?'' (two live-action sequences) * 1944 - '' What's Cookin' Doc?'' * 1949 – ''Señor Droopy'' * 1949 – '' The House of Tomorrow'' * 1949 – '' Rabbit Hood'' (footage f ...
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Live-action Animated Film
A live-action animated film is a film that combines live action filmmaking with animation. Films that are both live-action and computer-animated tend to have fictional characters or figures represented and characterized by cast members through motion capture and then animated and modeled by animators. Films that are live action and traditionally animated use hand-drawn, computer-generated imagery (CGI) or stop motion animation. History Origins of combining live-action and animation During the silent film era in 1920s and 1930s, the popular animated cartoons of Max Fleischer included a series in which his cartoon character, Koko the Clown, interacted with the live world; for example, having a boxing match with a live kitten. In a variation from this and inspired by Fleischer, Walt Disney's first directorial efforts, years before Oswald the Lucky Rabbit was born in 1927 and Mickey Mouse in 1928, were the live-action animated ''Alice Comedies'' cartoons, in which a young l ...
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Rabbit Hood
''Rabbit Hood'' is a 1949 ''Merrie Melodies'' cartoon released on December 24, 1949. The entry was directed by Chuck Jones and written by Michael Maltese, and features Bugs Bunny. Plot There is a wall covered with anti-poaching notices and wanted posters of Robin Hood and Little John. Bugs is trying to silence an alarm attached to a carrot he just pulled out of the King's Carrot Patch. He is caught by the Sheriff of Nottingham and is about to be put to the rack when Little John (depicted as a fat goonish fellow) appears and introduces Robin Hood. However, Robin Hood does not appear. Bugs and the Sheriff continue to converse, and Bugs averts the latter's attention by lying about the king's arrival ("Hail, the king approacheth!"). Bugs clubs the Sheriff while the latter is bowing and runs off. While examining the garden wall in an attempt to scale it, Bugs is chased by the Sheriff up to the Royal Rose Garden, which the Sheriff regards as "royal ground". Here, Bugs dupes the Sher ...
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The Lost World (1925 Film)
''The Lost World'' is a 1925 American silent fantasy giant monster adventure film adapted from Arthur Conan Doyle's 1912 novel of the same name. The film was produced and distributed by First National Pictures, a major Hollywood studio at the time, and stars Wallace Beery as Professor Challenger. It was directed by Harry O. Hoyt and featured pioneering stop motion special effects by Willis O'Brien, a forerunner of his work on the original ''King Kong''. Doyle appears in a frontispiece to the film, absent from some extant prints. In 1998, ''The Lost World'' was deemed "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. Because of its age the film has come into the public domain, so that anyone may freely copy it for a commercial purpose. Plot From a lost expedition to a plateau in the borders of Peru, Brazil and Colombia, Paula White brings the journal of her father, ex ...
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Bugs And Daffy's Carnival Of The Animals
''Bugs and Daffy's Carnival of the Animals'' (originally aired on TV as ''Carnival of the Animals'') is a 1976 live action/animated television special featuring the ''Looney Tunes'' characters Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck and directed by Chuck Jones. The special, based on Camille Saint-Saëns' musical suite of the same name and consisting of entirely new animation, was purposely cast in the successful mold of Jones' own earlier musical cartoons (including '' Rabbit of Seville'', ''Long-Haired Hare'' and '' Baton Bunny''), and set the familiar showbiz rivalry between Bugs and Daffy against the orchestral backdrop of conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, in a performance based on Saint-Saëns' music and Ogden Nash's poetry. ''Carnival of the Animals'' originally aired on CBS on November 22, 1976, and was the first Warner Bros.-commissioned work featuring Bugs Bunny following the release of the cartoon '' False Hare'', as well as their first ''Looney Tunes'' production following the ...
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Winnie The Pooh And Tigger Too
''Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too'' is a 1974 animated featurette based on the third chapter of '' Winnie-the-Pooh'' and the fourth and seventh chapters of '' The House at Pooh Corner'' by A. A. Milne. The featurette was directed by John Lounsbery, produced by Wolfgang Reitherman, released by Walt Disney Productions, and distributed by Buena Vista Distribution on December 20, 1974 as a double feature with the live-action feature film ''The Island at the Top of the World''. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film, but lost to '' Closed Mondays''. ''Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too'' was the third animated featurette in the '' Winnie the Pooh'' film series. The film's title is a play on the slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler too" made famous during the 1840 United States presidential election. It featured the voices of Sterling Holloway as Winnie the Pooh, Paul Winchell as Tigger, John Fiedler as Piglet, Timothy Turner as Christopher Robin, Dori Whitaker as Roo, ...
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