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November 11

November 11, 1946 – The Donald & Goofy Short Film Frank Duck Brings ‘em Back Alive is Released to Theaters

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“Wanted – wild men. That ought to get me a wild man.”

On November 11, 1946, the Donald & Goofy short film Frank Duck Brings ‘em Back Alive was released to theaters. This is the fifth short of the series starring Donald and Goofy, with six released overall. The short was directed by Jack Hannah, with story by Dick Kinney.

The short begins in the jungle, where “wild man” Goofy is swinging on the vines gracefully, performing various tricks. He soon spies a boat in the nearby river, and watches as it parks on the river’s edge. Donald, going under the guise of Frank Duck, posts up a sign on a nearby tree, announcing that he’s looking for wild men to join the circus. Goofy then decides to leap from the tree with a knife, ready to attack Frank. Unfortunately, as he falls, the rest of the attachments on his Swiss army knife fall out, and as he fixes it, he face-plants deep into the jungle floor.

Frank tries to retrieve the contract, but is unable to grab it before Goofy devours it

Frank tries to retrieve the contract, but is unable to grab it before Goofy devours it

Frank asks Goofy to sign the contract, but as he doesn’t know how to sign, he just scribbles on the dotted line before emptying the pen’s ink onto the paper and eating it like a sandwich. Frank tries to retrieve the contract, but is pushed back by Goofy’s leg. Frank is unable to chase after Goofy, and instead tries to bribe him with food. Goofy is finally tempted by a strawberry shortcake, and falls into Frank’s trap, catching him in a cage. As Frank carries the wild man away, the cage breaks off from its bottom, and Goofy is free, unbeknownst to Frank. Frank then sails away, realizing a bit too late that he’s lost his wild man, and hurries back to catch him again. Goofy takes to the vines again, but ends up tangling himself on a vine and tree branch. Unfortunately, Frank is still unable to catch him, and the chase continues through the jungle. Frank chases Goofy into a lion’s den, and both are soon pursued by the lion. Goofy escapes in Frank’s boat, and Frank is left to become the wild man of the jungle.

November 4

November 4, 1949 – The Pluto Short Film Sheep Dog is Released to Theaters

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On November 4, 1949, the Pluto short film Sheep Dog was released to theaters. It was directed by Charles Nichols, with story by Eric Gurney and Milt Schaffer.

Pluto is herding his lambs back into their pen for the night, when he hears the cry of a coyote. He makes sure everything is secure before settling down for the night. Meanwhile, the coyote Bent-Tail and his cub are sneaking by, hoping to steal the lambs without Pluto noticing. The cub has a hard time listening to his father, as he is anxious to devour the lambs. Bent-Tail has to reign in Pluto, as the cub thinks Pluto could be a tasty meal as well. As the two sneak past Pluto, Bent-Tail gets the ides to disguise his son as a lamb so he can infiltrate the flock. The cub is able to pull a sleeping lamb to the fence, but wakes the lamb up. The lamb beats up the cub, which starts a chain reaction that ends with Pluto waking up and chasing the coyotes away from the pen.

As another measure of security, Pluto disguises himself as a lamb and settles down next to the flock. The coyotes try again, and the cub pulls Pluto away, thinking he is a giant lamb. Pluto pretends to keep sleeping, and once he is pulled out from under the gate, he chases after Bent-Tail, leaving the cub alone with the rest of the lambs. Pluto is sent on a wild goose chase, which leads back to the farm, where a giant fight breaks out. Bent-Tail manages to make it out with a lamb, and he races up the canyon and back to his cave. Unfortunately, he has only managed to pick up his disguised son, and howls with dismay.

November 3

November 3, 1950 – The Goofy Short Film Hold That Pose is Released to Theaters

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“When the day’s toil is over, are you the type person who drags his weary body home, slumps into a chair feeling beat, bored, bushed, and listless? If so, you need a hobby!”

On November 3, 1950, the Goofy short film Hold That Pose was released to theaters. This short marked the first appearance of Humphrey the Bear, who went on to not only be Donald’s nemesis, but have a small series of his own in 1956 with two shorts: Hooked Bear and In the Bag. Hold That Pose was directed by Jack Kinney, with story by Dick Kinney and Milt Schaffer.

The short begins with Goofy falling to the floor after a long day’s work. He crawls into his home and makes his way to his chair while the narrator declares that he needs a hobby. The narrator thinks that Goofy should take up photography, and he soon picks up everything from the photo shop. He takes all the supplies home and creates his own home darkroom, although he electrocutes himself on the red light socket. He spends forever winding his camera roll, but when he finally does, he is able to take his camera outside.

Goofy attempts to prop up the sleeping bear in the bear pit of the zoo for a photo op

Goofy attempts to prop up the sleeping bear in the bear pit of the zoo for a photo op

His first stop is the zoo, where he enters the bear pit, ignoring the signs to keep out. He then attempts to prop up Humphrey the Bear, who is fast asleep, and Humphrey falls on him. He finally gets Humphrey to stand up and stay in place, but for some reason his camera is shooting upside down. When he takes the shot with the flash powder, the powder blows up in Humphrey’s face, and sends Goofy fleeing for his life as Humphrey chases him all over the bear pit. Humphrey escapes the pit, as does Goofy, and continues the chase all over the amusement park. Goofy continues to shoot photos while he runs, even when he boards a taxi driven by Humphrey back to his own apartment. However, in the end, Humphrey and Goofy bond over the photos Goofy has taken, with Humphrey selling autographed pictures of himself for 10 cents.

November 1

November 1, 1924 – The Alice Comedy Alice Gets in Dutch is Released to Theaters

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“—-This is what happens when I find balloons in my school room-”

On November 1, 1924, the Alice Comedy Alice Gets in Dutch is released to theaters. It was the eighth Alice Comedy released overall, and the eighth of fourteen that starred Virginia Davis, the original Alice. The short was directed and produced by Walt Disney.

The schoolteacher is teaching her lesson, with the kids loudly (and rather badly) singing. Alice soon gets called to the front of the room with two other students for tuning, and is shown as a good example compared to the other two. A dog sneaks into the classroom and starts to howl along with the students; the teacher believes it to be one of the students at the front. Finally, the students sit down again, and one boy shows Alice a balloon that he fills with ink for a prank. The entire class watches as he blows the balloon up, and he hands it to Alice. The teacher finally notices the commotion, and takes the balloon from her. The students brace themselves, and when the teacher pops the balloon, ink sprays all over the place, covering her. Alice is given the blame for the prank, and is sent to the corner to wear a dunce cap.

Alice dances with Julius after she drifts off to the cartoon world

Alice dances with Julius after she drifts off to the cartoon world

As Alice pouts in the corner, she falls asleep, and drifts off to the cartoon world. She starts dancing with her friend Julius as other animals play instruments and dance. An evil schoolteacher leaves her schoolhouse and looks to attack Alice and her friends with an army of books called Reading, Writing, and Rithmetic. Everyone flees, and Alice jumps on the back of her donkey friend, who helps carry her to safety. Alice and her friends form an army to get rid of the “old hen,” while the teacher prepares cannons to fire at Alice. A cannon is fired and hits Alice several times. Alice and her friends dodge several cannons, then run to the junk pile to create their own weapons of attack. They create their own cannon, and fire cayenne pepper at the teacher. The pepper causes them to sneeze, with the books destroying themselves with every sneeze. However, the pepper accidentally goes off in front of Alice and her friends, and the group sneezes their arsenal away. The teacher chases Alice to a fence and pokes her with a stick as she tries to get away. Just then, Alice wakes up to see that her teacher is poking her, and Alice falls to the floor in surprise.

October 31

October 31, 1927 – The Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Short Film All Wet is Released to Theaters

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On October 31, 1927, the Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short film All Wet premiered in theaters. It was the fifth Oswald film released by the Disney Studio, and was directed by Ub Iwerks.

Oswald is selling hotdogs at the beach, and attaching two mice that keep sneaking by to steal from him. A customer arrives and buys one, but as the customer tries to eat, the hot dog starts barking, and the customer soon feels guilty enough to let the hot dog go free. As Oswald works, Fanny the Rabbit saunters by, and the two share flirtatious glances. As eh heads to a rowboat, Oswald closes up shop for the day and attempts to take her out in the boat, but she refuses. He then decides to get a job as a lifeguard, paying the current lifeguard to take his place. When Fanny sees him sporting the lifeguard badge, she immediately starts paying attention to him.

Oswald stands proudly with his lifeguard badge, while a nearby child nervously tries to ask him for help

Oswald stands proudly with his lifeguard badge, while a nearby child nervously tries to ask him for help

A child nervously approaches Oswald to get his attention, but Oswald ignores him, until the child is finally able to tell him his problem; Oswald quietly directs the child to the nearest bathroom. While he is distracted, Fanny comes up with a plan to get his attention: she decides to head out to sea in the rowboat herself, and pretends that she is drowning. Oswald hears her cries (although doesn’t realize she’s just floating in an inner tube) and race out after her. A large fish passes her and, thinking she’s food, grabs her foot and pulls her under. Oswald reaches her just in time, and a wave manages to carry them to shore. Fanny looks at Oswald as her hero, and gives him a huge kiss.

October 28

October 28, 1933 – The Mickey Mouse Short Film The Pet Store is Released to Theaters

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“Oh, hello Minnie! How do you like my zoo?”

On October 28, 1933, the Mickey Mouse short film The Pet Store was released to theaters. It was directed by Wilfred Jackson.

A sign hangs in the window of Tony’s Pet Store for a boy wanted to work in the shop. Mickey happens to come across it, and enters the store to apply for work, and Tony gladly offers him the job to sweep the shop while he goes out for lunch. Mickey takes to his job quickly, when Minnie strolls in. She is impressed with the pet shop, and begins to sing for the birds, who start chirping with her. An ostrich nearby starts eating the birdseed on the shelf, and develops a bad case of the hiccups. As Mickey takes Minnie to dance, she sets down her umbrella, which is soon eaten by the ostrich. Thanks to his hiccups, the umbrella opens in his throat with every hiccup.

Beppo pries Minnie away from Mickey, acting as though he were King Kong

Beppo pries Minnie away from Mickey, acting as though he were King Kong

A gorilla named Beppo, who does imitations of movie actors (including one of Stan Laurel), decides to imitate King Kong and break out of his cage. After leaving his cage, he grabs Minnie from Mickey and throws Mickey aside, sending the mouse crashing into the birdcages, freeing all the birds. Beppo then climbs a tower of birdseed, in true King Kong fashion, and starts growling from his perch. All of the freed animals start throwing things around creating a huge mess in the pet shop as they try to stop Beppo. Finally, Beppo is captured in a cage, and Mickey takes Minnie to flee from the shop before Tony returns from lunch to find his shop in disarray.

October 23

October 23, 1953 – The Donald Duck Short Film Rugged Bear is Released to Theaters

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“This is Bear Country: a quiet, peaceful part of the forest reserved exclusively for Mr. Bear.”

On October 23, 1953, the Donald Duck short film Rugged Bear was released to theaters. This marked the second appearance of Humphrey the Bear overall, and the second of five appearances in Donald Duck short films. The short was directed by Jack Hannah, with story by Al Bertino and Dave Detiege.

The short begins at a section of the forest for Bear Country, with dozens of bears sleeping soundly. The bears are alerted by the narrator that hunting season has begun, and while they all flee to their cave, Humphrey the Bear continues to sleep. He is soon woken up by flying bullets, and is locked out of the cave when all the other bears seal themselves inside. Humphrey runs crazily around the woods, dodging hunters, and comes across a house in the woods. Once inside, he realizes he’s in a hunting cabin, with guns and stuffed bear heads on the walls. As he tries to escape, he sees Donald walking to the house, holding a shot gun. He frantically tries to hide, and disguises himself as a bearskin rug.

Donald pretends to shoot his bearskin rug, making his "rug" rather nervous

Donald pretends to shoot his bearskin rug, making his “rug” rather nervous

Donald wipes his feet on the nervous bear’s back, and as he sits to clean his shotgun, he pretends to shoot the rug, which causes Humphrey to nearly panic. As Donald decides to light a fire in the fireplace, he uses Humphrey’s nose to light his match. Humphrey barely suppresses a yelp, and when he looks behind him to see where Donald (and, more importantly, the gun) is, he gets his nose stuck in the barrel and has to quietly follow Donald through the house. He manages to free himself when the kitchen door is slammed in his face, and when he tries to sneak away, he finds that hunting season is still occurring, and has to stay inside to stay safe.

Donald returns from getting his snack, and sits on Humphrey’s back in front of the fire. After swallowing a stray bit of Donald’s popcorn, Humphrey gets the hiccups; fortunately, Donald thinks he has the hiccups instead of his rug. After getting a drink of water, Donald returns and decides to take a nap on his rug. A stray spark from the fire jumps out and lands on Humphrey’s back, and he catches on fire, but he masks his scream by turning up the radio, waking Donald, who quickly puts the fire out. Seeing the mess this caused, Donald throws Humphrey into the washing machine. Poor Humphrey emerges after the dry cycle as a giant fur ball, which Donald remedies by cutting off his hair with a yard trimmer. Donald then curls himself up in the rug to fall asleep, much to Humphrey’s dismay.

Humphrey is relieved that Donald has left for the season

Humphrey is relieved that Donald has left for the season

Hunting season soon ends, and the bears clean up the mess the hunters left behind. Donald leaves his hunting cabin, and Humphrey, looking more than a little worse for wear, is relieved that he can finally escape. He hears a strange knocking from the wood box near the fireplace, and is surprised to find that the bear rug he’d rolled up and replaced at the beginning of the season was, in fact, another live bear, who thanks Humphrey for hiding him and taking his place. Humphrey looks at the camera with bloodshot eyes, a look of disbelief on his face.

October 20

October 20, 1931 – The Silly Symphony The Fox Hunt is Released to Theaters

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“Hooray!”

On October 20, 1931, the Silly Symphony The Fox Hunt was released to theaters. The short was remade in 1938 as a Donald Duck and Goofy short. The Silly Symphony was directed by Wilfred Jackson.

Sunlight streams through the trees of the forest, and several birds chirp with the coming of the dawn while a bell rings in the steeple nearby. Two riders sound their horns, and are followed by a long line of riders, finished with two pages holding a fox in a cage, and one page holding on to several leashes of dogs who are ready to begin the chase. The riders stop in front of a blacksmith, who is working hard at his trade. He sends out a horseshoe to his assistant, who begins to shoe the horses while the riders have tea. The horns sound again, and the riders head out for the hunt.

The riders eagerly chase the fox once the hunt begins

The riders eagerly chase the fox once the hunt begins

The gun sounds, and the fox is set free, followed by the herds of dogs and riders. The riders travel at different rhythmic paces, but are soon stopped when the fox jumps over a wall, with each rider accidentally headbutting the next. One rider flips off of his horse and ends up riding a cow instead, and when he falls off the cow, he ends up riding a pig, a porcupine, and a log that is filled with stuck dogs. The rider finally catches the fox by the tail, and traps him in another log. Unfortunately, when he thinks he can pull it out from the log, he pulls out a skunk instead. The appearance of the skunk causes all the riders and dogs to flee; once the crowd is gone, the fox leaves the log and shakes hands with the skunk.

October 14

October 14, 1938 – The Silly Symphony Farmyard Symphony is Released to Theaters

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“How are ya, toots?”

On October 14, 1938, the Silly Symphony Farmyard Symphony was released to theaters. It was based on the story of Chanticleer the rooster, a staple in Middle Ages folklore. Interstingly enough, stories of Chanticleer are usually told with Reynard the Fox, a character that the Disney Studios were looking to make a movie about, which eventually led the way to the 1973 film Robin Hood. The songs featured in this film is “La Donna E’mobile” from the opera Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi, “The William Tell Overture” by Gioachino Rossini, and Franz Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody. The film was directed by Jack Cutting.

The morning breaks over a pleasant farm, and a rooster is heard crowing with the dawn. Doves exit their nest, a bull scratches his back on a fencepost, and other animals wake up to greet the day. As a calf drinks from his mother’s udder, a baby pig, unable to get milk from his own mother, runs to hopefully get some milk. The claf scares the poor pig away, sending him running into the horse pen. The calf and the foal start running around together, until they spy some geese marching to the barn. The rooster crows again, although he has some trouble crowing to begin with. He marches around his domain as the literal cock of the walk, until he hears the hens snoring. He sneaks into the hen house and lets out a loud crow, waking them with a startle.

The rooster woos the hen with some serenading

The rooster woos the hen with some serenading

The rooster is attracted to one of the hens, who flirts with him not-so-subtly, but she also flees from his rather pushy nature of running after her. He then serenades her, and the two end up serenading the farm with a duet, with the whole farm eventually joining in. The opera is interrupted by the farmer and his wife calling the animals for feeding time. The baby pig from the beginning is once again unable to get food, and runs around the farm, trying to find a way to get something to eat, but is chased off by all the animals he encounters. He runs into a building, and knocks out all the corn inside, which is soon eaten the baby pig and all of the chicks.

October 3

October 3, 1927 – The Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Short Film The Mechanical Cow is Released to Theaters

On October 3, 1927, the Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short film The Mechanical Cow was released to theaters. This was the third Disney produced Oswald short released.

Oswald is fast asleep when his alarm goes off. Angered by the interruption, Oswald fights the alarm, but after realizing what time it is, starts running around to wake his mechanical cow, who refuses to wake, even after Oswald pulls her bed out from under him. Finally, the mechanical cow wakes, and Oswald carries her to the slide to get downstairs. As they venture outside, Oswald starts trying to sell milk from the cow, an gets his first customer in the form of a baby hippo. The hippo and his mother are happy customers as they walk away. Oswald then comes across his sweetheart Fanny, and begins to flirt with her, but the cow gets in the way.

As Oswald and Fanny attempt to rekindle their moment, Fanny is kidnapped by a mysterious figure, who takes her away is a car full of gangsters. Oswald hops on his cow and speeds after her, using a magnet to pull themselves closer to the car. The figure is armed with a cannon, however, which fires a shot that almost destroys the cow. Oswald and the cow are able to save Fanny, but are soon pursued by the gang. The cow stops at the edge of a cliff, throwing Fanny and Oswald over the side, although they are able to save themselves by holding on to a branch. The figure and his gang aren’t so lucky, as they fall over the cliff into the waiting mouths of the creatures below. When the cow sees Oswald and Fanny, she is overjoyed, and the three ride away together.