Also, since you're our most eminent authority on this ninety-year-old one-pager, how would you entitle it? It doesn't seem to have a title in the printing we were discussing, and obviously didn't have one in Italian. And a title would be much handier for the wiki…
I called it "Musical Revenge" when putting it through production, both for the Good Housekeeping book and for an earlier Egmont reprint. Will that do?
Also, since you're our most eminent authority on this ninety-year-old one-pager, how would you entitle it? It doesn't seem to have a title in the printing we were discussing, and obviously didn't have one in Italian. And a title would be much handier for the wiki…
I called it "Musical Revenge" when putting it through production, both for the Good Housekeeping book and for an earlier Egmont reprint. Will that do?
Most references I recall of Julius back in the shorts made him basically the earlier model of Felix, but with white paws. This on the other hand is just outright the later model of Felix (when he became less a cat, more a cat person), which is hilarious to me.
Most references I recall of Julius back in the shorts made him basically the earlier model of Felix, but with white paws. This on the other hand is just outright the later model of Felix (when he became less a cat, more a cat person), which is hilarious to me.
Very early Alice shorts draw Julius as you describe—but look how he had "developed" by 1926!
Most references I recall of Julius back in the shorts made him basically the earlier model of Felix, but with white paws. This on the other hand is just outright the later model of Felix (when he became less a cat, more a cat person), which is hilarious to me.
Very early Alice shorts draw Julius as you describe—but look how he had "developed" by 1926!
Well… thanks for the link, I discovered a hilarious cartoon I had somehow missed so far. Really interesting to see how much further Disney took the "not falling until you notice you're standing in the air" gag decades before it became an overused cliché in its simpler form. Also, how seriously are we supposed to take the implication that Julius is actually a white cat wearing some sort of black costume?