The Milky Way (1940 film)
The Milky Way | |
---|---|
Directed by | Directed and supervised by: Rudolf Ising (uncredited) |
Story by | Maurice Day |
Produced by | Rudolf Ising Co-produced by: Fred Quimby and William Hanna (both uncredited) |
Starring | Bernice Hansen |
Music by | Musical supervision: Scott Bradley (uncredited) |
Animation by | Character animation: Michael Lah Ray Abrams George Gordon Carl Urbano Pete Burness David Treffman (all uncredited) Effects animation: Al Grandmain (uncredited) |
Layouts by | Bob Allen (uncredited) |
Color process | Technicolor Perspecta (1958 reissue, uncredited and original titles retained) |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Loew's Inc. |
Release date | June 22, 1940 |
Country | U.S.A. |
Language | English |
The Milky Way is a one-reel animated cartoon short subject, produced in Technicolor and released to theatres with the film The Captain Is a Lady in 1940 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The short (produced and directed by Rudolf Ising and co-produced by Fred Quimby with the voice of Bernice Hansen as the kittens and their mother, and musical supervision by Scott Bradley) explores the adventures of the "three little kittens who lost their mittens", as they explore a dreamland where space is made up entirely of dairy products (for example, the Milky Way is made of milk and the Moon is made of green cheese). The short won the 1940 Oscar for Best Animated Short Film, and was the first non-Disney film to do so. Other shorts nominated in 1940 included A Wild Hare by Warner Bros., introducing Bugs Bunny, and another MGM cartoon Puss Gets the Boot, with Jasper & Jinx, the prototype for Tom and Jerry. It was added as a bonus feature in the Marx Bros. DVD release of Go West (1940).
Plot
Three kittens, denied milk as punishment for losing their mittens after playing out in the snow, sail up into the Milky Way in a basket lifted by three helium balloons. Their spaceflight takes them past the Moon, the planet Mars, the Big Dipper, and the Little Dipper, until they reach their destination.
Once in the Milky Way, they find it a land of natural milk springs and gushers. The kittens proceed to happily gorge themselves on milk, until they end up getting into trouble and risk falling back down to Earth. However, it turns out to be just in their imagination, and their mother comes in to their bedroom to invite them for supper. They rush down excitedly only to be shocked to see that their supper consists milk.
Home Media
- Go West (unrestored bonus feature)
- Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Academy Awards Animation Collection: 15 Winners (restored)
- Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Academy Awards Animation Collection, Disc 1 (restored)
External links
- The Milky Way (1940) on Dailymotion (uploaded by InternetAnimationDatabase)
- The Milky Way at IMDb
- 1940 films
- 1940 animated films
- 1940 short films
- 1940s American animated films
- 1940s animated short films
- 1940s fantasy-comedy films
- 1940 musical comedy films
- American films
- American musical comedy films
- Best Animated Short Academy Award winners
- English-language films
- Films directed by Rudolf Ising
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated short films
- 1940s musical fantasy films
- Films based on nursery rhymes
- American animated short films
- Animated films about cats
- Films about dreams
- American musical fantasy films
- Films produced by Fred Quimby
- Films scored by Scott Bradley
- Milky Way in fiction
- Mars in film
- Moon in film
- Films set on balloons
- Spaceflight in fiction
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio short films
- Short animated film stubs