Betty Boop is incensed at her farmer neighbor’s cruelty to his animals. But the inventive Grampy knows how to teach him a lesson.
After running out of gas in hillbilly country, Betty Boop seeks help from the locals, but ends up being held at gunpoint. She proves her identity as a dancer by putting on a demonstration; the hillbillies join in with their genuine bluegrass stylings. Won over, the rustics give Betty a jug of good ol’ sour mash to fuel her car.
Betty flies to Japan to do a show, and sings the title number. She then dons a kimono, and sings it again in Japanese. (
The first cartoon in a series of twelve with Toby the Pup. The series was produced by Charles Mintz 1930-1931 and distributed through RKO Radio Pictures. Toby works as a janitor in a museum and has his own way of handling the artifacts in the exhibition.
Deep in the jungle, a tribe of aboriginal warriors is having a celebration. Their leader is a tall man in a white cloak. Secretly, he’s really a Nazi commander, and the tribe’s sacred temple is really an underground Nazi outpost…
Bugs Bunny goes to a military base where he meets up with a mischievous gremlin who gets the better of him. Animation by Rod Scribner, music by Carl W. Stalling. Produced in 1943.