Downloads: 131Added: 01 July 2008
Like a neo-noir lounge lizard, Betty Black brings sex and sleaze to the FADER Sideshow.
Downloads: 225Added: 18 October 2008
Betty Boop is the black queen and Bimbo the white king in a surrealistic chess game.
Downloads: 93Added: 18 August 2008
A interview with Max Fleischer and a retrospective of Betty cartoons. Betty also gets some face time with Max and the reporter.
Downloads: 175Added: 22 November 2008
Betty Boop is an animated cartoon character appearing in the Talkartoon and Betty Boop series of films produced by Max Fleischer and released by Paramount Pictures. With her overt sexual appeal, Betty was a hit with theater-goers, and despite having been toned down in the mid-1930s, she remains...
Downloads: 62Added: 18 August 2008
Betty and some friends head over to Grampy's for a party and have some fun making music and dancing.
Downloads: 165Added: 28 August 2007
The first to create cartoons by tracing live-action footage, producer Max Fleischer and his brother, director Dave Fleischer, used this patented invention to revolutionize animation. More than 600 artists and technicians were employed on each cartoon to bring this magic to the screen, so prepare...
Downloads: 85Added: 29 August 2007
The first to create cartoons by tracing live-action footage, producer Max Fleischer and his brother, director Dave Fleischer, used this patented invention to revolutionize animation. More than 600 artists and technicians were employed on each cartoon to bring this magic to the screen, so prepare...
Downloads: 89Added: 18 August 2008
Classic Betty Boop. This one riffs off of Alice in Wonderland.
Downloads: 97Added: 29 August 2007
The first to create cartoons by tracing live-action footage, producer Max Fleischer and his brother, director Dave Fleischer, used this patented invention to revolutionize animation. More than 600 artists and technicians were employed on each cartoon to bring this magic to the screen, so prepare...
Downloads: 85Added: 29 August 2007
The first to create cartoons by tracing live-action footage, producer Max Fleischer and his brother, director Dave Fleischer, used this patented invention to revolutionize animation. More than 600 artists and technicians were employed on each cartoon to bring this magic to the screen, so prepare...