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The Boy and the Bronc Buster (1973)
Character: Jesse Compion
An orphan teen (Vincent Van Patten) follows a rider (Earl Holliman) on the rodeo circuit, unaware his hero is wanted for murder.
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Go for Croak (1969)
Character: Crazylegs Crane (voice)
A clumsy bird named Crazylegs Crane is chasing Toro and Pancho for a meal. When the two frogs arrive to the room full of bottles containing nitroglycerine in the small house, the two frogs thought they could trick the bird by pretending to drink it by filling empty nitroglycerine bottle with water, but Pancho accidentally switched the bottle with real nitroglycerine, and the bird saw Toro drinking it and bird didn't want him to blow up, and let the the toads do what ever they want. The bird took frogs to Havanna, and bird went to Las Vegas after frogs arrived at Havanna. Two frogs happily danced, and blew up! The frogs, instead, arrived at Heaven!
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Snake in the Gracias (1971)
Character: Crazylegs Crane / Blue Racer (voice)
Crazylegs Crane gets an amnesia and Toro and Pancho tricks him into thinking he's a frog. They use him to guard them from the Blue Racer, the fastest snake in the west, who wants to have them for a meal.
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Two Jumps and a Chump (1971)
Character: Crazylegs Crane (voice)
The Crane from "Go For Croak" and "A Snake in the Gracias" returns to eat the toads, but of course, his plans backfire.
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The Egg and Ay-Yi-Yi! (1971)
Character: Crazylegs Crane / Older Bird (voice)
Proud parents Poncho and Toro "adopt" Crazylegs Crane when they "find" his egg.
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Fastest Tongue in the West (1971)
Character: Cactus Kidd / Sheriff (voice)
Toro and Poncho watch the Sheriff's posse chase the Cactus Kid right into a showdown with Poncho at the Horny Toad Saloon for the fastest tongue in the west.
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A Leap in the Deep (1971)
Character: Crazylegs Crane / Toad (voice)
After a big toad takes over Toro and Pancho's pond, they decided to move to an even bigger pond. However, they have to dodge Crazylegs Crane and a big fish, who both has an appetite for frogs.
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Kloot's Kounty (1973)
Character: Crazywolf (voice)
A shepherdess loses her sheep and Hoot thinks Crazywolf stole them, so he's off to get him. Unfortunately, Crazywolf is a practical joker and catching him is harder that he thought. First "Hoot Kloot" cartoon.
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Pay Your Buffalo Bill (1973)
Character: Crazywolf / Big Red (voice)
Hoot Kloot tries to arrest Crazywolf for selling medicine without a license. However, Hoot gets a deal on his medicine which makes his strong, though only problem is it wears off quick.
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Mesa Trouble (1974)
Character: Townspeople (voice)
Big Red is coming to Cactus Goat to give revenge on Hoot Kloot for sending him to the river. Hoot tried to get help from townsfolk, but everybody refuses, because they're afraid of Big Red.
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Gold Struck (1974)
Character: (voice)
Everyone chickened out delivering bags of gold to Virginia City because to get there, you have to get past the Bad Land. Hoot decides to deliver it himself to the city. Hoot managed to get past the Bad Lands to a ghost town so Hoot decides to spend the night in the hotel, where a mischievous vampire trying to get the hands on the gold.
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The Badge and the Beautiful (1974)
Character: Townspeople / Bartender / Priest / Lauri Be (voice)
Hoot Kloot is set to arrest Calamity Jane for disturbing peace, but Hoot finds out it won't be easy when Jane falls in love with him and makes him marry her. Hoot tries to get away, with every attempt failing.
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Big Beef at the O.K. Corral (1974)
Character: Billy the Kidder (voice)
Hoot Kloot is guarding the cattle from the notorious cattle rustler Billy the Kidder. Billy's strange goal? Steal the cows so he can set them free in the wild.
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By Hoot or By Crook (1974)
Character: The Fox / Coach Driver / Guard (voice)
While Hoot was chasing the notorious bank robber The Fox, his horse finds the Fox's costume, and for fun Hoot dressed up like the Fox. One of the delivery men, thinking Hoot was the Fox, gives him the strong box with the town's pay roll, so Hoot Kloot has to bring it back to the bank while dressed up like the Fox. The real Fox has another idea.
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Saddle Soap Opera (1974)
Character: Judge Sayabe / Hotel Clerk (voice)
Hoot Kloot and Fester arrives at San Francisco to bring Judge Sayabe (the hanging judge) back to Cactus Goat. Unfortunately for the judge, Hoot Kloot goofs up along the way and the judge gets blown up, run over by a train, and falls down the cliff. They eventually return to the Cactus Goat, with the judge making a certain sheriff his enemy. Last "Hoot Kloot" cartoon.
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Dead Men Tell No Tales (1971)
Character: Sam Mirakian
A photographer is chased by professional killers who have mistaken him for the person they're really after.
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Ten Miles to the Gallop (1973)
Character: Crazywolf (voice)
Hoot, thinking it's impossible to catch Crazywolf on his horse Fester, replaces him with a police-car. Crazywolf of course makes it impossible for him to catch him even with his car.
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The New Misadventures of Ichabod Crane (1979)
Character: Rip van Winkle (voice)
Sleepy Hollow, a town plagued by the Headless Horseman, hires the most educated person they can find to fight him - Ichabod Crane. He, talking horse and dog, and Rip van Winkle go on the quest. But the Horseman has a secret.
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Donovan's Kid (1979)
Character: Larson
Timothy Donovan, a con-man, returns to San Francisco to see his wife and daughter. Realizing his family is under the control of his wife's domineering uncle, Timothy Donovan teams up with a fellow con-man to free them.
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Caprice (1967)
Character: Inspector Kapinsky
Patricia Foster, an industrial designer, causes chaos when she sells a secret cosmetics formula to a rival company.
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The Sting (1973)
Character: Train Conductor
A novice con man teams up with an acknowledged master to avenge the murder of a mutual friend by pulling off the ultimate big con and swindling a fortune from a big-time mobster.
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Nippon Tuck (1972)
Character: Blue Racer (voice)
In a Mexican town, The Blue Racer flies in a plane and tries to hypnotize the Japanese Beetle.
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Pony Express Rider (1976)
Character: Blackmore
A young Texas Man who saw his father get killed by a group of bandits, decides years later to go to work for the Pony Express. But he is not just working around the country to deliver mail, he is actually finding the bandits who murdered his father.
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The Appaloosa (1966)
Character: Priest
A man tries to recover a horse stolen from him by a Mexican bandit.
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Flaming Frontier (1958)
Character: Bradford
Army officer whose parents are white and Indian tries to avert an Indian war.
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Yokahama Mama (1972)
Character: Blue Racer / Hen / Baby Ostrich (voice)
Blue Racer finds out that the Japanese chicken in the local farm has laid an egg. Blue Racer wastes no time getting it. Unfortunatly, the egg's father is a champion fighting rooster and foiled his plans several times. In his final attempt, he trips the rooster, which, as a result, the egg rolled down to the ostrich farm. The rooster mistakes an ostrich egg as his and takes it home, only, it hatched. The chicken couple argues over it, in Japanese language. Blue Racer, watching the scene, tells the audience that this is the Be Kind to Egg week, "So take your egg out to dinner, or at breakfast."
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The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming! (1966)
Character: Man with a Cat (uncredited)
When a Soviet submarine gets stuck on a sandbar off the coast of a New England island, its commander orders his second-in-command, Lieutenant Rozanov, to get them moving again before there is an international incident. Rozanov seeks assistance from the island locals, including the police chief and a vacationing television writer, while trying to allay their fears of a Communist invasion by claiming he and his crew are Norwegian sailors.
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Wham and Eggs (1973)
Character: Blue Racer (voice)
While looking for a thousand year egg in a Japanese contest, Blue Racer stumbles upon a dragon who hatches in one of it, and the dragon thinks he is his mother. After many misfortunes raising him, Blue Racer sends the dragon to Tokyo to become a movie star. In the end, Blue Racer reads in a newspaper that the dragon did became an actor.
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Mother Dogfather (1974)
Character: Crazylegs Crane (voice)
Crazylegs Crane tries to deliver a baby to the Dogfather.
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Black Eye (1974)
Character: Avery
An ex-police officer operating a private detective business comes face to face with a syndicate-backed dope ring.
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Freeze a Jolly Good Fellow (1973)
Character: Blue Racer / Bear / Flophouse Owner / Tall Bear (voice)
It's winter and The Blue Racer is looking for a place to stay. He comes across a cabin that's perfect except for a bear that wants it for himself.
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Charley and the Angel (1973)
Character: Felix
Charley is a workaholic family man that finds out from an angel that his "number's up" and he will be dying soon so he tries to change his ways and be a better husband and father with the time he has left.
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Do Not Fold, Spindle, or Mutilate (1971)
Character: Lutz
Four elderly ladies with a lot of time on their hands get the idea to create a fictional "girl" for a computer dating service. However, things take a turn for the worse when their description of the "girl" attracts a psychopath.
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The Octagon (1980)
Character: Tibor
Scott James, a veteran martial arts expert, is recruited as the protector of the wealthy and beautiful Justine after she becomes the target of a ninja clan. When Scott finds out that his ruthless arch-nemesis, McCarn , is involved with the stealthy and dangerous criminals, he is eager to settle old scores. Soon Scott is facing off against McCarn and the entire ninja horde in an effort to take them all down.
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There Was a Crooked Man... (1970)
Character: Harry
A charming but ruthless criminal is sent to a remote Arizona prison, where he enlists the help of his cellmates in an escape attempt with the promise of sharing his hidden loot.
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Fowl Play (1973)
Character: Blue Racer / Rooster / Chick / Ed / Joe (voice)
Blue Racer is forced to play with a rooster's son, so Racer tries to play games with him, which usually involve Blue Racer trying to get rid of the little bird. Unfortunatly for the snake, the rooster is keeping an eye on them all the time.
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Spencer's Mountain (1963)
Character: Spencer Brother (uncredited)
Clay Spencer and his wife, Olivia, live in a small town deep in the mountains. When Clay isn't busy drinking with his buddies or railing against the town minister, he's building the house he's always promised Olivia. He is overjoyed when he learns his eldest son will be the first Spencer to attend college, if he can resist the charms of a pretty local girl and rustle up the money for tuition.
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Treasure Island (1973)
Character: Doctor Livesey (voice)
Young Jim Hawkins, a pirate mouse named Hiccup, Dr. Livesey and Squire Trelawney hire a ship to find the legendary treasure of notorious late pirate Captain Flint. However, Flint's former crewmates plan to take over the ship.
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Killarney Blarney (1973)
Character: Blue Racer (voice)
The shipwrecked Blue Racer spots an island and also spots two mischievous leprechauns giving the fast blue snake hard time.
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The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970)
Character: Grocer
A successful African American businessman has a quarrel with a white policeman, suspecting that he is having an affair with his wife. The policeman's colleagues are seeking to avoid publicity.
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Hiss and Hers (1972)
Character: Blue Racer (voice)
The Blue Racer's wife wakes the Blue Racer up and sends him out for food. He encounters the Japanese Beetle, tries to eat and capture the Beetle over and over, but fails. First "The Blue Racer" cartoon.
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Love and Hisses (1972)
Character: Blue Racer / Elephant (voice)
While feeling amorous, the Blue Racer hits on what he believes is a fellow snake but turns out to be a tough elephant's trunk. The elephant gives him a pounding but hurts his trunk in the process. Coming upon the Japanese Beetle, the pachyderm asks him to perform a little chiropractic karate on his sore trunk. The Beetle obliges, and in gratitude the elephant promises to protect him from a certain serpent.
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Camera Bug (1972)
Character: Blue Racer (voice)
The Japanese Beetle goes to school to learn to be a photographer. The Blue Racer uses the opportunity to try and catch him.
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Aches and Snakes (1973)
Character: Blue Racer / Crazylegs Crane (voice)
Crazylegs Crane and Blue Racer fights to get the honey bee for a meal.
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Scandalous John (1971)
Character: Bartender
A crotchety old ranch owner fights to be able to live his life the way he wants to, and not the way other people--and the law--tell him he has to.
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Blue Racer Blues (1972)
Character: Blue Racer (voice)
Japanese Beetle helps the lonely Blue Racer make friends with humans. Beetle tries everything from making him a pet who can sing and do tricks, disguising him as a dog, and joining a hippie parade. However, all plans fail.
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The Boa Friend (1973)
Character: Blue Racer / Calypso Bee / Homer (voice)
A singing bee gives Blue Racer suggestions on how to win back his girlfriend.
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Snake Preview (1973)
Character: Blue Racer / Crazylegs Crane / Bee (voice)
The Blue Racer snake hunts for food. After failing to nab an egg from Crazylegs Crane, he decided to try catching a bee, but even that fails.
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Little Boa Peep (1974)
Character: Blue Racer / Ant / Elephant / Wolf / Sheepdog / Sheep (voice)
Blue Racer sunks into depression when he realizes that he was a hideous snake, so he asks Dr. Owlsley-Hoot for suggestions. He tells Blue Racer that he is what he thinks he is, so Blue Racer decides to become a sheepdog. Unfortunatly, he doesn't know what sheep look like, so he mistakes an ant, an elephant, and a caterpillar for a sheep. He finally finds a sheep herd, and after stopping a wolf in a sheep's clothing, a real sheepdog helps him make his dream of being a sheepdog come true. Last "Blue Racer" cartoon.
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A Covenant with Death (1967)
Character: Chillingworth
An innocent man is found guilty of murder and sentenced to death, but as he's about to be hanged he accidentally kills his executioner. He now faces a new trial, presided over by a young and inexperienced judge.
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The Perils of Pauline (1967)
Character: Prince Benji's Father
Pauline becomes involved in a series of adventures around the world and is aided by her ever present friend, George.
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A Snow White Christmas (1980)
Character: Mirror (voice)
The wicked queen creates an ice storm meant to get rid of the younger Snow White, but instead freezes the whole village, just barely missing her. Snow White travels to the land of the Seven Friendly Giants and makes friends with them. Snow White is never safe from the wicked queen because she'll always be able to find her. Can the giants save Snow White from her vengeance, or will she end up an icicle like her parents?
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Punch and Judo (1972)
Character: Blue Racer (voice)
The Japanese Beetle uses his karate skills to fight The Blue Racer.
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Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964)
Character: Workman (uncredited)
Set in Prohibition era Chicago, bootlegger Robbo and his cronies refuse to pay the greedy Guy Gisborne a cut of their profits after Guy shoots mob boss Big Jim and takes over. When Big Jim's daughter, Marian, gives Robbo a large sum, believing he has avenged her father's death, the gangster donates to an orphanage, cementing his reputation as a softhearted hood.
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Return to Oz (1964)
Character: Rusty, the Tin Man (voice)
Rather than adapt a later or create a new Oz story, this production has Dorothy still in posession of the shoes, and she clings to an apple tree during a tornado which takes her back to Oz. The Scarecrow, Tin Woodman, and Lion (using the names created for the nearly-abstract television series, Tales of the Wizard of Oz, from which this was derived) have had their MGM gifts destroyed by the restored Wicked Witch, and the four proceed to the Wizard for help, who is ineffectual as usual.
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The Swinger (1966)
Character: John Mallory
An authoress writes a steaming sex-novel and proceeds to live out her heroine's adventures.
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Cotter (1973)
Character: Mr. Wolfe
A rodeo rider is killed because Cotter is too drunk to distract the raging bull.
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Blue Aces Wild (1973)
Character: Blue Racer / Crazylegs Crane / Giraffe (voice)
Feeling down about his reptilian appearance, Blue Racer wonders what it would be like to instead be a bird. Just then, a wizard appears out of thin air in need of some snake sweat for a magical potion. Blue Racer refuses to help, but the wizard entices him by offering to grant him three wishes. Intrigued, Blue Racer wishes he had wings. The wizard obliges, but a little courting escapade, an encounter with Crazylegs Crane, and the rescue of a small chick make Blue Racer realize that life as a winged blue snake isn't all it's cracked up to be.
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Willy McBean y las máquinas voladoras (1965)
Character: Professor Von Rotten (voice)
Little Willy McBean joins up with a Mexican monkey named Pablo to travel back in time and stop the evil Prof. von Rotten from changing history.
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The Singing Nun (1966)
Character: Mr. Duvries
Belgian nun Sister Ann is sent to another order where she's at first committed to helping troubled souls, like Nichole and little Dominic. When Father Clementi hears Sister Ann's uplifting singing style, he takes her to a talent contest. Sister Ann is signed to a record deal and everyone is listening to her lighthearted songs. She is unprepared for her newfound fame (like appearing on The Ed Sullivan Show) and unwanted side effects, including a wrongful attraction to an old friend.
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The Daydreamer (1966)
Character: Various (voice)
A young Hans Christian Andersen goes in search of knowledge in the Garden of Paradise in order to make his studies easier. Each time he falls asleep, he experiences in his dreams the different characters he would later write about in fairy tales including The Little Mermaid, Thumbelina, and The Emperor's New Clothes.
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Oliver Twist (1974)
Character: N/A
When 9-year-old orphan Oliver Twist dares to ask his cruel taskmaster, Mr. Bumble, for a second serving of gruel, he's hired out as an apprentice. Escaping that dismal fate, young Oliver falls in with the street urchin known as the Artful Dodger and his criminal mentor, Fagin. When kindly Mr. Brownlow takes Oliver in, Fagin's evil henchman Bill Sikes plots to kidnap the boy.
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The Green Hornet (1974)
Character: Dr. Eric Mabouse
After the superstardom and early death of Bruce Lee, 20th Century Fox decided to cobble together a couple of theatrical feature films from this property, of which this 1974 effort is the first. The bulk of the film consists of four episodes crudely spliced together. Scattered throughout are bizarrely irrelevant fight scenes from other episodes, which make the already disjointed plotting quite surreal. The television image was cropped to make a widescreen film, which means the tops of heads and hats are lopped off the frame with alarming regularity.
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In the Heat of the Night (1967)
Character: Watkins
African-American Philadelphia police detective Virgil Tibbs is arrested on suspicion of murder by Bill Gillespie, the racist police chief of tiny Sparta, Mississippi. After Tibbs proves not only his own innocence but that of another man, he joins forces with Gillespie to track down the real killer. Their investigation takes them through every social level of the town, with Tibbs making enemies as well as unlikely friends as he hunts for the truth.
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The Wild Country (1970)
Character: United States Marshall
Uprooted from their comfortable home in Pennsylvania, James and Kate Tanner, along with their sons, Virgil and Andy, journey to the wild country of 1890s Wyoming to become farmers. Soon, they come face-to-face with tornadoes, bears and wolves. But through the hardships their love for each other endures, even when a local rancher sees the newcomers as "squatters" on his land, and will stop at nothing – including murder – to drive them out.
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Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1964)
Character: Yukon Cornelius (voice)
Sam the snowman tells us the story of a young red-nosed reindeer who, after being ousted from the reindeer games because of his glowing nose, teams up with Hermey, an elf who wants to be a dentist, and Yukon Cornelius, the prospector. They run into the Abominable Snowman and find a whole island of misfit toys. Rudolph vows to see if he can get Santa to help the toys, and he goes back to the North Pole on Christmas Eve. But Santa's sleigh is fogged in. But when Santa looks over Rudolph, he gets a very bright idea...
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Hitched (1973)
Character: Governor
The adventures of a newly married teenage couple in the Old West.
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The DePatie/Frelang Collection: The Blue Racer (2017)
Character: Blue Racer
Unlike other high-velocity cartoon characters, nothing about DePatie-Freleng's supersonic Blue Racer could be described as "streamlined". While surely speedy, this lisping reptile is definitely not slick and ranks as more of an Everysnake who loses more battles than he wins, most of them to a philosophical Japanese Beetle. The DePatie-Freleng artists, while dubious ethnologists, still display their knack for extended physical comedy and squash-and-stretch action scenes in this surprisingly popular skein that bucked the contemporaneous trend toward limited animation. Never consigned to any indigenous natural habitat, the Blue Racer vacations in Tokyo, winters in Alaska, even emigrates to Ireland with a wanderlust echoed by the films' producers, who outsourced one of the entries to Sydney, Australia and another to Barcelona, Spain.
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