Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs (1943) | |
Director(s) | Robert Clampett |
Producer(s) | Leon Schlesinger |
Top Genres | Animation, Comedy, Family, Musical |
Top Topics |
Featured Cast:
Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs Overview:
Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs (1943) was a Family - Animation Film directed by Robert Clampett and produced by Leon Schlesinger.
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Quotes from
Dwarfs:
[examining the unconscious So White] She's out of this world!, she's stiff as wood!, she's got it bad and that ain't good!
'Dopey' Dwarf: There's only one thing that'll remedy this and that's Prince Chawmin and his dynamite kiss!
read more quotes from Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs...
'Dopey' Dwarf: There's only one thing that'll remedy this and that's Prince Chawmin and his dynamite kiss!
read more quotes from Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs...
Facts about
The queen, with her enormous fake nose, does a brief imitation of Jimmy Durante.
This was the only short for which the animators at Warner Bros. did any research. They went to African American nightclubs to learn the slang.
One of the 11 shorts banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 (then the owners of the pre-1947 color Looney Tunes shorts) for alleged racism. Ted Turner continued the ban when he acquired these cartoons and stated that these films will not be re-issued and will not be put on home video. Warner Bros., however, reacquired these shorts in 1996 when Time Warner purchased Turner Entertainment, which returned them to their original aegis for the first time since 1957. These cartoons will probably never air on television again, and only non-Warner Bros.-licensed public-domain video tapes will probably ever have these shorts on them.
read more facts about Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs...
This was the only short for which the animators at Warner Bros. did any research. They went to African American nightclubs to learn the slang.
One of the 11 shorts banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 (then the owners of the pre-1947 color Looney Tunes shorts) for alleged racism. Ted Turner continued the ban when he acquired these cartoons and stated that these films will not be re-issued and will not be put on home video. Warner Bros., however, reacquired these shorts in 1996 when Time Warner purchased Turner Entertainment, which returned them to their original aegis for the first time since 1957. These cartoons will probably never air on television again, and only non-Warner Bros.-licensed public-domain video tapes will probably ever have these shorts on them.
read more facts about Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs...