Silly Symphonies Cartoons
Submitted by Martin1983 on Sat, 01/19/2008 - 09:30
Tags:
- The Skeleton Dance (1929)
- El Terrible Toreador
- Springtime
- Hell's Bells
- The Merry Dwarfs
- Summer (1930)
- Autumn
- Cannibal Capers
- Frolicking Fish
- Arctic Antics
- Midnight in a Toyshop
- Night
- Monkey Melodies
- Winter
- Playful Pan
- Birds of a Feather (1931)
- Mother Goose Melodies
- The China Plate
- The Busy Beavers
- The Cat's Out
- Egyptian Melodies
- The Clock Store
- The Spider and the Fly
- The Fox Hunt
- The Ugly Duckling
- The Bird Store (1932)
- The Bears and the Bees
- Just Dogs
- Flowers and Trees (First Technicolor cartoon; Academy Award winner of 1932)
- King Neptune
- Bugs in Love
- Babes in the Wood
- Santa's Workshop
- Birds in the Spring (1933)
- Father Noah's Ark
- The Three Little Pigs (Academy Award winner of 1933)
- Old King Cole
- Lullaby Land
- The Pied Piper
- The Night Before Christmas
- The China Shop (1934)
- The Grasshopper and the Ants
- Funny Little Bunnies
- The Big Bad Wolf
- The Wise Little Hen (Features the debut of Donald Duck)
- The Flying Mouse
- Peculiar Penguins
- The Goddess of Spring
- The Tortoise and the Hare (1935) (Academy Award winner of 1934)
- The Golden Touch
- The Robber Kitten
- Water Babies
- The Cookie Carnival
- Who Killed Cock Robin? (Academy Award nominee, 1935)
- Music Land
- Three Orphan Kittens (Academy Award winner of 1935)
- Cock o' the Walk
- Broken Toys
- Elmer Elephant (1936)
- Three Little Wolves
- Toby Tortoise Returns
- Three Blind Mousketeers
- The Country Cousin (Academy Award winner of 1936)
- Mother Pluto
- More Kittens
- Woodland Café (1937)
- Little Hiawatha
- The Old Mill (Academy Award winner of 1937)
- Moth and the Flame (1938)
- Wynken, Blynken, and Nod
- Farmyard Symphony
- Merbabies
- Mother Goose Goes Hollywood (Academy Award nominee, 1938)
- The Practical Pig (1939)
- The Ugly Duckling (Academy Award winner of 1939 and remake of 1931 cartoon of the same name)








The Silly Symphonies were a series of animated shorts set to music, rather than featuring recurring characters (ie: Mickey Mouse et al). These were produced by Walt Disney between 1929 and 1939, and oversaw the move to Technicolor, and features seven Academy Award winners.