William Nolan Movie Trailers
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Showing results: 61-97 of 97
A Wet Knight Trailer (1932)
19 June 1932
When a rainstorm hits, Oswald the Rabbit and Kitty seek shelter in a haunted castle, which is occupied by a monstrous ape.
Petunia Natural Park Trailer (1939)
03 January 1939
As a narrator describes the scene, we watch the whole Katzenjammer clan camping in the park of the title, a composite of several national parks in the western USA.
The Hare Mail Trailer (1931)
30 November 1931
A cat and his granddaughter have been robbed of their money. It's up to Oswald to get it back.
The Gaucho Trailer (1927)
21 November 1927
A girl is saved by a miracle after she falls from a cliff in the Argentine Andes, and is blessed with healing powers.
Searching for Santa! Trailer (1925)
01 January 1925
Krazy Kat is babysitting. The obnoxious whippersnapper can not be consoled and expresses his wish for Santa Claus.
Mars Trailer (1930)
29 December 1930
Mars is a 1930 short animated film. It is one of many short films in the Oswald the Lucky Rabbit series.
Poopdeck Pappy Trailer (1940)
15 November 1940
Popeye's elderly father, Pappy, wants to go out at night. Popeye wants him to sleep.
Teacher's Pests Trailer (1932)
19 December 1932
Oswald and his friends are students in a classroom run by an increasingly violent schoolmarm in this rather poor Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon.
Mechanical Man Trailer (1932)
14 February 1932
In this one, Oswald and his girlfriend are playing the piano with an animated light bulb and an accordion dancing along.
The Athlete Trailer (1932)
28 August 1932
A Walter Lantz Pooch the Pup cartoon released August 29, 1932.
Northwoods Trailer (1931)
31 May 1931
A Walter Lantz/Bill Nolan Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon released June 1, 1931.
The Shriek Trailer (1933)
27 February 1933
Oswald the Rabbit comes to the rescue when a peg-legged sheik abducts his girlfriend and brings her to a mysterious pyramid filled with walking skeletons, animate hieroglyphics and other strange sights.
Radio Rhythm Trailer (1931)
26 July 1931
Oswald is running a one-rabbit radio station, and all the other animals are listening in on their forest radios.
Five and Dime Trailer (1933)
17 September 1933
Oswald is out on the street in a good mood, but a rainstorm drives him into a Five & Dime store, where he finds songs, jokes and a bride.
Wild and Woolly Trailer (1932)
21 November 1932
A Walter Lantz Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon released November 21, 1932.
The Fireman Trailer (1931)
05 April 1931
Oswald and Bunny go to a Fireman's Picnic and make friends -- sort of -- with a lost kitten in this cartoon.
Carnival Capers Trailer (1932)
09 October 1932
Oswald the Rabbit takes his date to a carnival and has to contend with a bullying pitbull.
The Gingerbread Boy Trailer (1934)
15 April 1934
By this point, Lantz used Oswald the Lucky Rabbit as his house mascot, here to introduce the cartoon.
Going to Blazes Trailer (1933)
09 April 1933
A Walter Lantz Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon released April 10, 1933.
My Pal Paul Trailer (1930)
15 June 1930
Oswald the Rabbit puts on a concert for a group of barn animals - but when they discover that he's miming to a record of his idol, Paul Whiteman - they boo and shun him.
William Tell Trailer (1934)
08 July 1934
The story of how William Tell came to shoot the apple off his son's head is told in this Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon from Walter Lantz.
Throwing the Bull Trailer (1918)
17 June 1918
Based on the comic strip Happy Hooligan, this cartoon was packaged with the Hearst-Vitagraph News Pictorial and shown before the main features in theaters.
Parking Space Trailer (1933)
18 December 1933
Disaster ensues when Oswald neglects his day care center. I won't spoil the experience for you; just let this document of one-sided American "history" wash over you like a cool fungus.
Stomach Trouble Trailer (1927)
14 March 1927
Short, comical cartoon about comic strip character Krazy Kat who makes several futile attempts to get food.
Snow Use Trailer (1929)
24 November 1929
This is a very early Lantz sound cartoon, so early that it merely makes use of simple synchronization, matching the music and tempo to the action at hand -- for example, when Oswald sticks a burning stove in Pete's trousers, we hear "There'll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight".
Scents and Nonsense Trailer (1926)
02 January 1926
It's a fairly straightforward piece in which Krazy gets involved with a dance contest, a bear, a skunk and a pawnbroker.