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The Pink Phink

United States

1964

7 Min
Color
1.37:1
None, English
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Friz Freleng, Hawley Pratt

PROD David H. DePatie, Friz Freleng

SCR John W. Dunn

DP John Burton Jr.

ED Lee Gunther

MUSIC William Lava, Henry Mancini

ANIM Don Williams, Bob Matz, Norm McCabe, Laverne Harding, Tom O'Loughlin

Synopsis

The Pink Phink is a 1964 animated short comedy film, directed by Friz Freleng and Hawley Pratt, featuring Blake Edwards’ Pink Panther competing with the Little Man over the new colour scheme of a house.

The Pink Panther and a painter (unnamed, but affectionately known as the “little white man”) compete over whether a house should be painted blue or pink. Each time the painter attempts to paint something blue, the panther thwarts him in a new way. At the end, the painter inadvertently turns the house and everything around it pink and the panther moves in. But just before he moves in, he paints the white man completely pink. The white man gets very upset and hits his head with a mailbox. The Pink Panther then walks into the house just before the sun sets.

It was the first Pink Panther animated short produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises and by winning the 1964 Academy Award for Animated Short Film it marked the first time that a studio won an Academy Award with its very first animated short.—Wikipedia

Director

Original

Friz Freleng

Friz Freleng began animating cartoons with Hugh Harman and Ub Iwerks at United Film Ad Service in the mid-1920s, then moved with his associates to the Disney studios. Freleng left Disney in 1929 and after directing his first cartoon for Walter Lantz at Universal (Wicked West), joined the Warner Brothers animation department. There his black-and-white cartoons of the mid-‘30s showed a special flair for integrating music and action, especially in his “Bosko” series. Freleng began directing Warners’ color series of Merrie Melodies cartoons in 1934 and over the next three decades made many of Warners’ funniest cartoons, creating such memorable characters as Yosemite Sam (said to be a self-caricature) and Speedy Gonzalez, as well as developing the identities of such iconic figures as Porky Pig (Porky’s Hired Hand), Bugs Bunny (Racketeer Rabbit, Rhapsody Rabbit), Daffy Duck (Ain’t That Ducky), and Sylvester and Tweety (Tweetie Pie, Birds Anonymous). After Warners’ cartoon unit folded, Freleng… read more

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