The Extras - Announcing the TOM & JERRY GOLDEN ERA ANTHOLOGY Blu-ray
Episode Date: September 9, 2025Send us a textWarner Archive announces the release of all 114 Tom and Jerry animated shorts produced by Hanna-Barbera at MGM between 1940-1958, completely uncut and uncensored in a definitive collecti...on coming December 9th.• Comprehensive six-disc Blu-ray collection from Warner Archive features the entire Hanna-Barbera Tom and Jerry library in chronological order• Special features include two new documentaries: "Animal Hijinx: The Friends and Foes of Tom" and "Lady of the House: The Story of Mammy Two Shoes"• The set includes 20 audio commentaries, HD excerpts from "Anchors Aweigh" and "Dangerous When Wet," and a 28-page booklet• DVD version will be available at select retailers while the deluxe Blu-ray set will be available from online retailers carrying Warner Archive products• George Feltenstein and Jerry Beck discuss the importance of presenting these cartoons uncensored as they were originally created for theatrical release• This release corrects issues from previous attempts, including the canceled Golden Collection Volume 2 from 2013• The cartoons have been restored using the best available elements despite the original negatives being lost in a 1978 firePre-orders are not available yet. The Extras Facebook pageThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog Group As an Amazon Affiliate, The Extras may receive a commission for purchases through our purchase links. There is no additional cost to you, and every little bit helps us in the production of the podcast. Thanks in advance. Otaku Media produces podcasts, behind-the-scenes extras, and media that connect creatives with their fans and businesses with their consumers. Contact us today to see how we can work together to achieve your goals. tim@theextras.tv
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, this is filmmaker Constantine Nassar, and you're listening to The Extras with my good friend, Tim Millard.
Hello, and welcome to The Extras. I'm Tim Malar, your host, and joining me are animation historian Jerry Beck and George Feldstein from the Warner Archive.
Hi, guys. Hey, anything happening.
Well, it's always great to have you guys together because that means it's fun animation discussions.
And today is a very exciting day because you have some great news to share with animation fans out there.
So I'm going to turn this over to you, George.
Well, for fans of a cat and mouse by the name of Tom and Jerry,
we're very happy to announce that all 114 Tom and Jerry animated short subjects,
produced and directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera at the MGM.
animation department between 1940 and the last release was 1958.
All of them are coming out in an uncut, uncensored, 114 cartoon collection on DVD from Warner Brothers
Discovery Home Entertainment, and on Blu-ray, a six-disc set with five discs of the
cartoons on BD-50s and a bonus disc, making a total of six.
are coming from the Warner Archive Collection
to commemorate everybody's favorite cat and mouse
on their 85th birthday, their 85th anniversary.
And there will be, as I said,
the Blu-ray set from the Warner Archive Collection
has a bonus disc with two new documentaries,
which we're really excited about,
some vintage clips,
and some other goodies that we think the fans will really enjoy
and the best part of it is that, as I mentioned before, a little bit,
the cartoons are completely uncut, uncensored,
all 114 of them presented chronologically,
looking and sounding fantastic.
This has been a labor of love for many people here within the company.
This would not have happened without the collaboration of many colleagues here,
I don't want to mention anyone specifically by name because then they'll get bombarded with emails and phone calls and God knows what else.
There are some people that really went to the mat for this so that we could do this the right way, which we've never been able to do before.
30 years ago, Jerry and I put together the art of Tom and Jerry Laserdisc box sets.
and even those releases were compromised in quality,
and sometimes we weren't able to provide complete versions of certain cartoons
because the masters that Turner would send to us at MGMUA were censored.
These are all completely uncensored as they were shown in theaters,
and that is a monumental achievement.
And I can't name names, but just know that a lot of people,
in a lot of different divisions within this corporation
all saw the wisdom of paying homage to Hannah and Barbera
and their wonderful cat and mouse that kept people around the world
because Tom and Jerry is universally beloved in so many countries,
especially because they don't talk.
They shouldn't talk.
We won't talk about that 1992 feature.
This is a moment of celebration for,
the true animation fans who have been begging, clamoring, and pleading for this, those who were so
disappointed in 2013 because the Tom and Jerry Golden Collection, Volume 2, was going to be
missing Casanova Cat and missing mouse cleaning. And that announcement and people's nasty comments
all over the internet ended up canceling the release, ruining it for everyone. Well, now all those
past pains can be put in the past because it's only celebration these cartoons going to look
and sound magnificent. They're all going to be presented uncut chronologically with, on the
Blu-ray version, a whole bonus disc, and there will be 20 commentaries included amongst the
114 animated short subjects in these collections. The DVD set will be available at certain
retailers that still carry physical product.
The Blu-ray version from the Warner Archive will have a deluxe booklet and really nifty
packaging and will be available from your favorite online retailer, whoever that may be.
But anybody who carries Warner Archive products will certainly be touting this.
And I think it's going to be under the Christmas tree of a lot of people I know.
Well, one of the people, of course, that has been involved with Tom and Jerry, not working at Warner Brothers, but obviously I'm talking about you, Jerry, is here with us. So why don't you tell us, Jerry, a little bit about what this means to you and what's so special about this release?
Well, this is definitely a special release. This is a one of those must have items. If you're collecting it all, this does supersede a lot of old.
older sets that were done way back when because, A, these are restored, it's the whole
thing all in one package. Like George said, we did this way back when. We did this like 30 years
ago. I don't even know the date, but it was in the 90s. And this is one of those things we
wanted to make good forever. We hoped to do it, what was it, 10 years ago with the Golden
collections, that didn't happen. The great news is that we live in a different era, mainly because
of the technology, the fact that we've dug deeper into the archives, the scanning, the high
depth, all of that has improved. No matter what you've had before, this is definitely
an improvement. This is really the ultimate set as far as this series is concerned. And there's
bonus materials, as George will tell you, and
great bonus docs. I hope George talks
tells you, reveals what they are.
And, you know, it's the, I don't want to say
the final word, but I think it is. It's really the final word on
Tom and Jerry. No, it doesn't have the Chuck Jones cartoons
or the Gene Dyche cartoons or the
filmation cartoons, but it's got the ones
we all want. And I'm not putting
anything else down. It's got what we want. Here it is. And I actually know, I was going to ask
George, this is the beginning. As much as we've been doing this for 30 years, as much as we've
been doing great stuff on Blu-ray for the last more than 10, this is really the beginning,
right, George? Yeah, I mean, starting a new slate here, and it's going to be good.
There are many things in the planning stages that bode well for 2026 and beyond, hopefully.
that we're excited about because this opens a lot of new doors.
And I also want to speak to the fact that some of the cartoons that were on,
like the Golden Collection, Volume 1, which was a nice collection,
but some of the cartoons didn't look good.
And also not the best elements we have were used.
Right.
So people were seeing 1960s reissue titles with the black MGM Lions.
on the back of them and like it was like no no one was paying attention jerry and i were not
involved with that um but we're now correcting for that we are correcting a lot of mistakes that
were made in the past it's also funny jerry you mentioned those laser disc sets that we did
yeah leave they were a hundred and twenty five dollars a piece retail price uh
Because it would cost you, you know, somewhere between $250 and $300 to get all this.
And we look at the quality on those now.
And it's hard to believe that we once thought they were amazing.
But compared to what we grew up with on television, it were.
But I also want to talk about some new material that is on our bonus disc.
Again, exclusive to the Warner Archive Blu-ray set,
we have a new documentary called Animal Hyjinks,
the Friends and Fos of Tom,
and then a really, really exciting documentary
that has been many years in the making.
It was actually started for Golden Collection, Volume 2,
and never finished,
because that release got squashed.
And thankfully,
the elements were still there and the filmmaker, Constantine Nazar, who has been our partner
in making documentaries and all sorts of things for so many of our releases, but specifically for all
the animation collections, Constantine was able to fulfill his dream after 13 years. He has
made a documentary called Lady of the House, The Story of Mammy Two Shoes. And this is
a retrospective on that character,
which really never got that name, Jerry.
Isn't that correct?
That's not an actual official name.
That's not the character's name at all,
but it has been pegged that way for decades.
Well, I've seen this documentary.
Jerry's in this documentary.
I'm younger, have your hair.
But I am not,
but there are some wonderful animators,
animation historians,
film historians.
And there's some great archival footage with your late friend, June 4A.
There's just great, great material in the way this is put together to give you context of this character that really was so integral to a lot of the best Tom and Jerry cartoons.
And then in addition to the documentaries, we have the excerpt from Anchors Away with Jerry the Mouse and Gene Kelly.
We have the excerpt from Dangerous When Wet with Tom and Jerry and Esther Williams.
Both of those, of course, are on HD.
The bonus disc is high definition.
And I may have mentioned this already.
If I am, I'm repeating myself.
But we have 20 of the cartoons have audio commentaries from beloved animation historians.
And there's a 28-page booklet in the Blu-ray collection, exclusive to the Blu-Rae collection.
exclusive to the Brewery collection is not in the DVD set
that has original artwork, sketches, and essays.
So this is really a first for the Warner Archive.
We've never had such a deluxe offering
with a bonus disc and a booklet and fancy packaging,
but I think we're moving up in the world.
Well, you've had a lot of great first this year, George,
and this is just another one of them
for the Warner Archive.
And those books,
Bunny would say,
and the year ain't over yet,
Doc.
Well, this is a great gift
for animation fans.
I mean,
this is the 85th anniversary
of Tom and Jerry,
and I know there's been a lot
going on from the studio
for consumer products
and other things,
but to do this
for the physical media fan
is a wonderful,
wonderful gift for the holiday.
And to go back a little bit
about some of the
more sensitive cartoons
that are included in here,
that's going to be
a huge,
huge, huge thing for the fans. Isn't that, Jerry?
Well, yeah. I mean, there's a whole bunch of cartoons on here that, you know,
won't be televised by your streaming services or your, or the broadcast channels because
they don't want the kids to see some of these films. These films, of course, were never
made for kids. I say that every time I come on, but that's true. It's made for the whole audience.
it was they were products of their time again this is really one of the pinnacles the highlights of
the history of animation is the hannah barbarous series of tom and jerry in the 40s and 50s
and for to finally once and for all be presented complete you know never looking like they've
never have before i mean i don't even know what else i can say other than take my money you know
I want this now and, you know, I'm just so excited that we could do it the way we believe
it could be done. We're living in a great period where people like George are at Warner's
and George and talks to me occasionally and no, and we can guide the company to do the right thing
on some of these releases, all of these releases. That's why I wanted to make note of the
fact that this didn't happen in a vacuum. I've been pushing for this kind of freedom and
liberation and removing the veil of judgment so that people can see the films in the way
they were meant to be seen. And Jerry's point, this has been our ethos for God knows how many
years. These were films made to be shown to adults in theaters that were okay if the kids were
in the audience, you know, it wasn't pornographic or anything like that.
But suddenly there became this, oh, my God, you can't possibly show this and you can't
possibly show that.
Well, this is a collection for the adult collector.
And it's up to the parent, whether they want to share this with their child or not.
But adult collectors grew up with these cartoons, and a lot of them got to see them
uncut until somebody got in there with a very heavy pair of scissors.
Some of that is dealt with a little bit in the documentary about the lady of the house,
about how that character, Mammy, Two Shoes, which is really not her name.
You know, she was reanimated to be an Irish washer woman in the 1960s and revoiced by June Foray.
And then there was another attempt to change it again.
And the way it originally was was intentionally funny and respected by the people who provided those voices.
And that is what the contextual documentaries really provide is another light to look at where these fall in not only the history of animation, but the history of film.
Because another thing that Jerry and I have both been very insistent about is, and I'm quoting Jerry now,
it's like, you wouldn't do that to singing in the rain, you wouldn't do that to an American in Paris.
These films need to be treated the same way.
And I think, am I quoting you right, Jerry?
Yes, yes.
That's been his watch cry, and we all owe a tremendous debt to Jerry because even before I got into the home video business, Jerry was behind.
in October of 1980, the very first group of Tom and Jerry cartoons that were among the very first
group of MGM home video releases in October of 1980.
And that was long before I got to MGMUA home video, and it wasn't even MGMUA home video
then.
It was MGM TVS home video.
That's right.
But I still have my Betamax tape that I bought as a kid.
Oh, yeah.
I still have all my VHSs of that period.
I thought this would be a one and gone forever thing.
I thought it was never going to happen again.
Well, some people have tried to make it that way, but I've got to tell you, folks,
physical media, it rules.
Yeah.
And these cartoons, the way they're going to look in this new collection,
is going to surprise a lot of people because some of them haven't looked very good for a very long time.
and that's now changing.
You know, it's great about physical media
in this particular collection
and most of the collections we do.
These are presentations of these films
in a way that only physical media can do it.
You know, we have streaming services.
They have them come in the cartoons listed,
you know, in order or whatever,
and you get to pick the one you want to watch
and this and that.
You have the broadcast channels
that run whatever they want to run at that time.
this gives you complete freedom
to pick what you want to see when you want to see it
you can see the chronology
and the progression of the characters
and animation as it goes through time
I mean it's
you know that's what's great about home
media and that's what's great about being able to own these
if a streaming service
pulls the Tom and Jerry cartoons
you will still have them you know
and that's really really
it. That's it. I fear the day that we don't have
physical media. I hope that never happens
because that's the way it was. George and I lived through this. That was the
way it was in our childhoods, our teenage years, right? Our early
20s, that's how old we are, that you couldn't go and buy
Casablanca. You couldn't go and get those, you couldn't buy these things.
They were either on TV at a certain date and you had to make sure you were
there to watch it or maybe played in a repertory theater if you were
lucky or a museum if you were lucky um but uh to be able to own to like a book you know
to be able to have it on your shelf pull it off and watch it any time this is definitely i know
it is for george it's a dream come true and i've never been less enthused about that in the
entire time this is why it's so important for people to recognize that physical media allows you to
to build a library that will entertain you and those in your life for years and years to come.
And it's something you can share with other people.
And if somebody's talking about something, you're also getting it with the very best quality.
Yes, there are alternative ways of seeing.
Jerry mentioned that.
but you're not getting the curation
and you're not getting the context
because what we have here are
we have these documentaries,
we have these essays,
we've got the booklet,
we also have 20 commentaries
among the 114 cartoons
all in one release.
And that is basically unprecedented.
And I hope, and I actually know,
that it is the beginning of a sea change for the better.
Because there are some things that I wish we could have done more along these lines in the past,
and it wasn't possible.
And I think the future looked bright for Tom and Jerry,
just as they were the first MGM cartoons to make it on beta and VHS.
And I think they were on a CED and a Laserdist, too.
Yeah.
you know, before we did our Lizardous boxette.
You know, back in our day, I'm going to, I'll do some confession and reveal a little bit about
myself, but I don't think I could have gotten through high school if I didn't see Tom and Jerry
and Bugs Bunny when I got home. And they really inspired me to go on. And they really mean
a lot to me, and that's why I got involved with documenting the history of animation because
at that time there were no DVDs, tapes, there weren't even books.
So I got involved with how many cartoons were there?
Who did them?
You know, that kind of thing.
I got involved.
I just started researching it and that, so I got involved.
Back in our day, remember, we would buy things, if you're a movie buff, you would buy
these books, which I still have, from Citadel publishing, like the films of John
Wayne, you know what I mean?
You know, the films of every big movie star, the films of Gene Kelly.
And I would buy those books, A, to relive those great films.
They'd have stills, the credits.
We didn't have IMDB.
We didn't have a computer.
We didn't have YouTube.
And we'd buy those books.
And I was, like, comforted knowing I had the record of these films.
You know, Leonard Moulton's Our Gang, right?
And then I got to work with Leonard on of Mice and Magic to document, you know, the cartoons.
We bought those things because we wanted them.
as soon as this idea of home video came to be, the idea that you've got to have a complete set,
you know, which we sort of pioneered way back when.
I slept better at night, you know, knowing that I could watch acrobati bunny whenever I wanted.
Because, you know, those cartoons really mean something to me.
They're deeper than just the funny little seven minutes.
They got me through school, like I said.
So this is the payback.
This is what we're doing to, you know, make sure these things live forever.
Now, I think it's somewhat well-known, sadly, that the original negatives for all the Tom and Jerry cartoons burnt in a tragic fire in 1978, they had been copied for preservation onto safety film, those that were on nitrate film.
but it was all the cartoons from 1940 to about 1952.
So we've always been at a disadvantage.
We thought that a handful of them didn't burn up.
And that information was incorrect.
It wasn't original negatives at all.
They were safety separations and not nitrate original negatives.
But because they were the successive exposure,
people thought that it was nitrate and it wasn't,
and it was at a different facility.
But the point is that every effort has been made
to use the earliest generation source material
of the best quality
and mistakes that were plentiful on prior releases
have been hopefully eradicated
or made the best that they can be
dealing with what we can deal with.
And everybody here is very, very proud.
This has been such a wonderful congregation of different people in different departments here at Warner Brothers, all working together to have something wonderful to do for Tom and Jerry's 85th birthday.
And there was a time in this company where you couldn't say how old a cartoon was.
You couldn't say that a character had an anniversary or birthday
because somebody thought that was going to jeopardize one thing or another.
And this is when there already was IMDB,
where you could look and see whenever anything was released or made.
Not that IMDB doesn't have errors in it, it does, but overall it's pretty good.
But the point is now I think everybody's put their best foot forward,
and my hope is that our loyal customers who,
been asking, pleading, crying for this, I hope it will make a lot of people really happy.
I know that I'm grateful to my colleagues and, of course, to both of you, and to everybody who
gathers together to support our efforts here. And it's really wonderful to think how this is
arriving just in time for Christmas. And, you know, let Santa come down your chimney with Tom and Jerry.
It doesn't get better than that.
Well, I know I'm looking forward to seeing these.
Gee, some of these have not been seen for so long.
And to just have it all together in one collection is going to be amazing.
I'm going to want to watch them chronological just because there's no way I've ever seen them that way before.
So it's going to be a brand new experience in HD.
Beautiful sound, beautiful picture.
You know, it's going to be fantastic.
So, George, Jerry, this is exciting news.
As always, thank you for coming on and sharing this with the fans.
Well, thank you, Tim, as always.
We are so grateful for the opportunity to share what's happening with the people out there who support our work.
And I thank you and I thank them.
And just to let everybody know, we'll get back together once we get the discs and we'll be talking about these as well.
So they can look forward to that down the road.
We're going to have to do 114 different podcasts.
It'll be sometime in June next year by the time I finish.
No, but that'll be a lot of fun.
Just one of them will be all about the cartoons that have mouse in the title.
Exactly.
All right.
Thanks, guys.
Thank you.
Well, this is just so exciting for animation fans and for fans of Tom and Jerry
and those of us who grew up with all of these fantastic classic cartoons.
Until next time, you've been listening to Tim Malar.
Stay slightly obsessed about animation.
Hi, this is Tim Millard, host of the extras podcast,
and I wanted to let you know that we have a new private Facebook group
for fans of the Warner Archive and Warner Brothers catalog physical media releases.
So if that interests you, you can find the link on our Facebook page
or look for the link in the podcast show notes.