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Animated feature film label
- Warner Bros. Pictures Animation[a] (WBPA), formerly known as Warner Animation Group (WAG), is an American animation studio that serves as the animated feature film label of Warner Bros. ' theatrical film production and distribution division, Warner Bros. Pictures.
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Warner Bros. Animation Inc. [2] is an American animation studio which is part of the Warner Bros. Television Studios, a division of Warner Bros., which is a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery and serves as the animation division and label of Warner Bros.
Warner Bros. Pictures Animation [a] (WBPA), formerly known as Warner Animation Group (WAG), is an American animation studio that serves as the animated feature film label of Warner Bros.' theatrical film production and distribution division, Warner Bros. Pictures.
- Origin of Warner Bros. Cartoons: Bosko, Buddy, and Beans The Cat
- Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, Bob Clampett, and Mel Blanc
- End of The Golden Age of Warner Bros. Cartoons
- Legacy of Warner Bros. Cartoons
Warner Bros. Animation began when producer Leon Schlesinger, who was distantly related to the Warner Brothers who founded their namesake studio, hired a pair of animators, Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising, veterans of Walt Disney's Kansas City cartoon studio. Schlesinger put them in charge of creating cartoon shorts for the Warner Bros.' feature releas...
One of the major reasons why Porky was such a success was because of the influence of animation director Tex Avery, who had joined Leon Schlesinger Productions in 1935, and his team of animators that included Bob Clampett and Chuck Jones. Under Avery's direction, Porky was redesigned to be "softer" as opposed to fat, and Avery encouraged his animat...
Like other studios, Warner Bros. began phasing out theatrically-released cartoon shorts with the increasing popularity of television in the late 1950s. During this period, the studio underwent several major changes. The studio shut down cartoon production in 1962 and instead contracted the production company DePatie–Freleng Enterprises (founded by ...
Five Warner Bros. shorts won the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Cartoon): Tweetie Pie (1947),For Scent-imental Reasons (1949), Speedy Gonzales (1955), Birds Anonymous (1957), and Knighty Knight Bugs (1958). In addition, the documentary short So Much for So Little, directed by Jones for the studio, was one of two shorts to win the Academy Awa...
This is a list of animated feature films, shorts, specials, and television series produced by the American animation studio Warner Bros. Animation, which is part of the television division of Warner Bros. Entertainment, which is owned by Warner Bros. Discovery.
#TitleRelease DateCo-production With1March 11, 19922March 17, 19983September 22, 1998Warner Bros. Family Entertainment ...4October 5, 1999Warner Bros. Family Entertainment ...Warner Bros. Animation (currently known alternatively as Warner Bros. Pictures Animations for theatrically released films) is the animation division of Warner Bros., a subsidiary of Time Warner. The studio is closely associated with the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies characters, among others.
In recent years, Warner Bros. Animation has focused primarily on producing television and direct-to-video animation featuring characters created by other properties owned by Warner Bros., including DC Comics, the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio (through Turner Entertainment Co.) and Hanna-Barbera Productions.
Warner Bros. Pictures Animation (previously Warner Animation Group) is an American animation studio that serves as the feature film label of Warner Bros.' theatrical film production and distribution division, Warner Bros. Pictures.