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The Little Orphan

United States

1948

8 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR William Hanna, Joseph Barbera

PROD Fred Quimby

SCR William Hanna, Joseph Barbera

Synopsis

The Bide-a-Wee Mouse Home has sent the orphan mouse, Nibbles, to spend Thanksgiving with Jerry. But Jerry’s cupboard is bare, and Nibbles is always hungry. They start by raiding Tom’s milk dish, but Tom wakes up and drains it. Fortunately, Mammy has just put out a huge Thanksgiving feast, just ready for the raiding. And that’s just what Tom and Nibbles do, grabbing Pilgrim hats from the table decorations. All goes fairly well until Nibbles eats a whole orange, which is way too big for him. Jerry smacks him with a spoon, which sends the orange flying, right into Tom’s mouth. Tom stalks up to the table in a feather duster, which turns into an Indian headdress. Battle follows, featuring Tom sending flaming cat-tails after the mice, and culminating in a champagne bottle launching Tom into the dish cabinet, which crashes down. Tom waves a white flag, and all three sit down to a polite dinner, but Nibbles eats the whole turkey before anyone else can touch it. —IMDb

Director

Original

William Hanna

The son of a construction superintendent for the Sante Fe railway stations, William Hanna was obliged to move around quite a bit as a youngster. Influenced by the preponderance of professional writers on his mother’s side of the family, Hanna gravitated towards the creative arts in high school. He played saxophone in a dance band, then majored in journalism and engineering at Compton (California) Junior College. While looking for work in the early stages of the Depression, he landed a backstage engineering job at Hollywood’s Pantages Theatre. Hanna’s brother-in-law, who worked for a Hollywood lab called Pacific Title, tipped him off to a job opening at the Harman-Ising cartoon studios. From 1931 onward, Hanna contributed story ideas to Harman-Ising’s Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series, produced on behalf of Leon Schlesinger and Warner Bros. He also wrote the music and lyrics for several of the catchy tunes heard in these animated endeavors. When Harman-Ising moved to MGM, they… read more

Original

Joseph Barbera

For over four decades, Joseph Barbera reigned, along with his partner William Hanna, as one of the princes of American animation, second only to Walt Disney in infamy. Over the years, Hanna and Barbera created so many inimitable cartoon legends that their resumé reads like a laundry list of American television icons: Tom & Jerry, Scooby-Doo, Yogi Bear, the Jetsons, the Flintstones, Top Cat, Jonny Quest, Huckleberry Hound, the Smurfs, and many, many others, far too numerous to mention. Working together, the men indelibly altered the landscape of American entertainment.

Born on March 24, 1911, in Manhattan, the son of an Italian immigrant, Joseph Roland Barbera came of age in Flatbush, Brooklyn. He demonstrated an incredible propensity for artistry as a young man, and spent hours at a time honing his skills by exhaustively copying magazine illustrations. After high school, Barbera studied at the American Institute of Banking, then spent time alternately working as an accountant… read more

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Displaying 4 wall posts.
Picture of Gulazhar

Gulazhar

26Jan11

The little mouse is absolutely hateful, but at the time so irresistibly cute)

Picture of Maximilian Bercovicz

Maximilian Bercovicz

31Mar10

I think I submitted this... does anyone know how to tell if it's YOUR submission?

Picture of Addiena of Mubi land

Addiena of Mubi land

25Mar10

I really hate that little mouse from hell!Just because they made a cartoon out of it, doesn't make it 'a good thing' to abuse a certain cat, that way. Abusive. I hate it as a child and I hate it now too.

Picture of Grey Daisies

Grey Daisies

23Mar10

In the caves<br> All cats are grey<br> In the caves<br> The textures coat my skin<br> In the death cell<br> A single note<br> Rings on and on and on.

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