News

5 Incredibly Bizarre MICKEY MOUSE Cartoons. Amy Ratcliffe. Mon, November 25, 2024 at 4:37 PM UTC. 2 min read. When you watch a Mickey Mouse cartoon, you don’t expect to say, “What the hell?!” ...
There are further implications for "Steamboat" Mickey's passage into the public domain, as the mouse has had a major hand in setting the last 30 years – if not longer – of U.S. copyright law.
One might think that turning Mickey Mouse into a slasher movie monster would be difficult, but it’s not as hard as it might seem, for the simple reason that early Mickey Mouse is kind of an asshole.
Paraguay Loves Mickey, Its Cartoon Mouse. Disney Doesn’t. Mickey, a homegrown food-packaging company, is famous for facing down Disney in Paraguay’s Supreme Court.
The House of Mouse’s earliest versions of Mickey and Minnie Mouse from the 1928 Steamboat Willie cartoon have officially entered the public domain in the U.S. as of January 1.
Epic Mickey Rebrushed kicks off with a more classical version of Mickey Mouse.He’s mischievous and curious. One day, this younger Mickey finds his mirror is actually a portal to a magical realm ...
Mickey Mouse isn’t just for kids anymore. A trailer has dropped for a horror comedy film in which Mickey Mouse is the psycho killer – on the first day that the 1928 Disney short film “Steambo… ...
The cartoon depicted Mickey Mouse working aboard a steamboat, making music, and vexing the boat's captain, a large cat named Pete. The slapstick humor, anthropomorphized animals, ...
M-I-C-K-E-Y M-O-U-S-E. One of the most beloved cartoon characters of all time is now the subject of several new interpretations thanks to the end of copyright protection for the 1928 Steamboat ...
Mickey first made it to the big screen, on Nov. 18, 1928 in his first cartoon released "Steamboat Willie." It was one of the first synchronized sound cartoons produced and was entered into the ...
5 Incredibly Bizarre MICKEY MOUSE Cartoons. by Amy Ratcliffe. Nov 25 2024 • 8:37 AM. When you watch a Mickey Mouse cartoon, you don’t expect to say, “What the hell?!” Out loud.
By 1969, Mickey was selling rice, sugar and baking soda in packages now decorated with the eponymous mouse. In 1978, the business moved to a factory topped by a 62-meter illuminated Christmas tree.