The Extras - Warner Archive August Release Announcement: A New 4K, Classic Hanna-Barbera, plus Four Classic Films
Episode Date: July 18, 2025Send us a textGeorge Feltenstein announces the Warner Archive's August releases, featuring a diverse lineup including classic dramas, a Technicolor musical, a John Ford film, a 4K crime thriller,... and a complete Hanna-Barbera series.• "The Hard Way" (1943) starring Ida Lupino in possibly her finest performance as a driven woman advancing her sister's career• "That Midnight Kiss" (1949) introducing Mario Lanza alongside Catherine Grayson in a Technicolor musical about classical music• "Intruder in the Dust" (1949) addressing racism and lynching in the South with Juano Hernandez in a powerful social drama• "Seven Women" (1966), John Ford's final film about female missionaries in 1935 China starring Anne Bancroft• "Get Carter" (1971) on 4K UHD featuring Michael Caine as a ruthless killer, restored in partnership with the British Film Institute• The complete "Huckleberry Hound Show" on 11 Blu-ray discs, featuring all 68 episodes as originally broadcast from 1958-1962Check out the Warner Archive Facebook page for pre-order information and release dates for all these titles. Currently pre-orders are not yet available. Warner Archive Store on AmazonSupport the podcast by shopping with our Amazon Affiliate linkDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.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, I'm Gregory Orr, grandson of Jack L. Warner and producer of the documentary Jack L. Warner
the Last Mogul, and you are listening to The Extras.
Hello and welcome to The Extras.
I'm Tim Lahrger, host and joining me is George Feltenstein of the Warner Archive to announce
the August Blu-rays, and that includes a highly anticipated Hanna-Barbera series, plus a new
4K release. Hi George!
Hello Tim! Great to be with you yet again as always.
Well there's a lot of excitement around the August releases and maybe a part of that is that the
announcement is just a little bit later than usual and I know that I was on vacation. So the 4th of July holiday maybe pushed it
just a little bit as others might have been as well.
But that just built the excitement.
And so it's great to see these new releases.
And I'm looking forward to going through these
with you today.
I am looking forward to talking with you
about them as well.
It's a very,
very diverse group and a little something for everyone.
I hope. Yeah.
And I think that animation fans are very going to be very happy this month.
We'll hold off on that for just a little bit,
because we do have quite a few titles to go through. And I thought
we'd kind of go through, starting with some of the oldest ones first. So that means that first up,
we have the 1943 drama, The Hard Way. What can you tell us about this film?
I've actually talked about this. I think when we did our discussion about The Man I Love,
I think when we did our discussion about the man I love,
which I think maybe was a year ago, maybe more,
but I've spoken on that occasion as well as other occasions
about my opinion that Ida Lupino needs to be more significantly recognized for her really supreme acting ability,
as well as completely unrelated in this particular situation.
But she was a fine director, and she was trying to establish herself as a director when the industry wouldn't even consider the idea of a female director.
So I just have great respect for her. I think this might be her best film performance, which is saying a lot. And she did get a best actress nod from the New York film critic circle for
her performance in this film, The Hard Way, which is directed by Vincent Sherman. This
is a film that only really Warner Brothers could pull off. It doesn't have any of the
Hollywood puffery or sheen that would have come from another studio, even some studios
that I really admire. This is a tough, gritty film that is making really no secret of the
fact that I, Lupino, plays a hardened, driven woman who will stop at nothing to support the performer stage performer career of her younger sister played by jones leslie.
And.
I did mention in the right up that we put out about the picture that it's a little bit foreshadowing the true life story of Gypsy
Rose Lee and her mother, Rose Hovik, who that whole dynamic between mother and daughter
and the mother stopping at nothing to help Gypsy's career as a performer. Well, the role of Ida
Lupino in this film and her kind of just tough as nails approach to doing
anything she can to further the performance career of her sister, Katie,
played by Joan Leslie, is just she, I don't want to say she'd choose the scenery
because that would mean she's overdoing it, but she's just right. And more people need
to know this film. And now it has finally morphed from looking ratty and awful in a 35 year old analog video master, which is what we put out as a DVDR 15 years ago.
And what now is a 4K scan off the camera negative, the nitrate camera negative, and a stunning
gorgeous master that does the film proud. And I also happened to be a fan of the director, Vincent Sherman, who
lived a long enough life that I actually got to meet him and we recorded some commentaries
with him. Alas, we tried to record commentaries with him on films that hadn't been released yet.
And unfortunately, the hard way wasn't one of them that got recorded.
So I'm grateful for what we have, but it would have been wonderful to have had his particular
thoughts on this film because it wasn't Bette Davis, it wasn't Joan Crawford, it wasn't Bogart, you know, it's
a whole other thing. My understanding is that the role that Lupino plays in this film
was offered to Bette Davis and she turned it down. So that seems very plausible.
She had also turned down Mildred Pierce, something she probably regretted for
the rest of her life. But Ida Lupino is the real centerpiece of the film and her performance
just makes it magnetic. I remember seeing this film on television as a kid and being being really mesmerized by the fact that Ida Lupino's character is just so,
well, let's just say, I don't want to, maybe evil is a little too hard, but
not a nice person and not a very ethical person and
not a very considerate person. I also think that the
not a very considerate person. I also think that the performance by Jack Carson,
who's one of the two vaudevillians
that come across Joan Lizzie's character
when she goes to the vaudeville house,
Jack Carson gives a very vulnerable performance,
which isn't usually like him. His characters are
usually very wise ass and of course he was downright applicably nasty in A Star is Born
in 1954. But here you actually feel compassion for him because he's basically destroyed by Ida Lupino in her wake to make her sister a success.
So it's a great deal of fun in that respect.
It's not fun watching somebody get destroyed, but when Ida Lupino is doing the destruction
work, it's impressive.
Well, it feels like we've talked about this one, as you said, earlier last year, maybe
the year before.
I mean, this has been requested by many people and we've talked about it because of the inclusion
of Ida Lupino and Joan Leslie.
So I'm excited to see this come out and I know a lot of others are as well.
Now, do you have any extras on this release?
Yes, we do. And it was an omission when we made the Facebook announcement yesterday
that we didn't talk about the extras. So I will be happy to share that information here. And then
we're going to update our Facebook page. There was a radio show version on Luxe
Radio Theater, full hour, but none of the original cast were participatory in the radio
version. It starred Miriam Hopkins and French Houtone, among others, and it's a very good
tone among others and it's a very good audio translation or audio edition of the storytelling. It's quite effective and Miriam Hopkins was a very strong personality in her own way and
she takes on the Lepino role very, very interestingly.
So I think people will enjoy that.
Then we have two 1943 Warner Brothers shorts,
both of which are in HD.
One of them is called Gun to Gun,
and the other is called Over the Wall,
and they reflect the wartime activities of 1943.
And then we also have, in addition to the original trailer,
we also have two Warner Brothers cartoons,
both of which are in HD
and both of which I consider to be famous.
The Aristocat, which is a wonderful, wonderful cartoon,
not with any of the most familiar characters, Brista Cat, which is a wonderful, wonderful cartoon.
Not with any of the most familiar characters, but it's tremendous.
And then a very famous cartoon, Scrap Happy Daffy,
which is black and white.
And both of those cartoons, as I said, are in HD.
So this is gonna be a really, really great disc.
Yeah, it sounds like it. Well, next up, George, you have a Technicolor release,
that Midnight Kiss from 1949.
What can you tell us about this film?
Well, this is a production from what I jokingly refer to as the
land of Pasternakia.
Joe Pasternak, who produced a very specific kind of musical
at MGM, his production unit was kind of in competition,
sort of, at MGM with the Arthur Freed unit.
The Freed musicals were very classy and used the very best talent.
And Freed musicals are generally trying to advance the form.
And they were much more in the direction of having music be a justified part of the screenplay.
Joe Pasternak's films were much more light.
They were lighter entertainment,
but that doesn't mean
that they weren't impressive productions.
He tended to really love classical music.
And so performers like Catherine Grayson and Jane Powell
They were often seen in Pasternak productions and Esther Williams
Swam more for Joe Pasternak. I think than any of the producers
And he liked to put
Novelty acts in his films as a result his films were often more profitable for the studio than
the more culturally respected Arthur Friede productions were. And that Midnight Kiss was
a 1949 Technicolor entertainment gala, I would say. It's based in the world of classical music and opera. You have pianist
Jose Iturbi, who was in several Pasternak films and many films at MGM. This was his
last because he was getting word from various people
that his performances in these movies
were taking away from his reputation as a serious musician.
So he decided to cast Hollywood aside after this.
But with a goodbye, there's also a hello.
And this is the film that introduced Mario
Lanza to the movie screen and Lanza had already established himself he was a
truck driver from Philadelphia and they changed his name he started making
recordings for RCA and when he was at the Hollywood Bowl performing,
the story is, I don't know if this is apocryphal or not,
that L.B. Mayer's assistant, Ida Koverman,
went to Mayer and said,
"'I heard the most amazing tenor at the bowl last night.
We've got to sign him to the studio.
However it happened exactly,
that's probably how it happened, but whatever the methodology was,
the studio signed him for a contract.
He does not get top billing in this movie.
It says, and introducing Mario Lanza.
So the top-billed stars of the film were, in fact, Catherine Grayson, Jose Iturbi, and
then Ethel Barrymore.
And then there's in big letters and introducing Mario Lanza. So in the film, Like
Life, he played a Philadelphia truck driver who had a great voice. And it's a romance
between Catherine Grayson and Mario Lanza. And this had an original screenplay, so the storytelling is actually very good.
Most of the music actually takes place on
the stage in terms of
operatic arias and so forth and so on.
There is a scene where Mario Lanza serenades
Catherine Grayson singing Jerome from the street.
He serenades her in her window.
He sings They Didn't Believe Me by Jerome Curran, a very famous popular song of the earlier part of
the 20th century. It's a highlight of the movie. I mean, they both had wonderful voices and they had good chemistry. The film was a very substantial box office performer and it did lead to them being reteamed
very shortly thereafter in a movie called The Toast of New Orleans, which also co-starred David Niven.
That's the song where Be My Love was introduced,
written for the movie and became a huge hit for Mario Lanza.
He made several films at MGM and his tenure there was brief.
He walked out on the studio when they were making the Student Prince in 1952,
and there was a legal skirmish, and eventually the settlement was that Lanza would not be
in the film, that he would record the songs for the student prince character
and it would be performed by actor Edmund Purdom.
So that was the last MGM studio-based production
that Lonza was in.
And then he made a film here at Warner Brothers Serenade,
which was actually based on a book
by James M. Kane, who wrote Mildred Pierce.
And then a couple of years went by where there were no Lanza movies, and Lanza hooked up
with, in the late 50s, a company called Titanus in Italy, and made two films, Seven Hills of Rome, and then for
the first time, both of which were filmed overseas.
But MGM ended up distributing, I think, for the entire world except Italy. So there is this irony that MGM and Lanza parted company
after a lawsuit in the early 50s and his last two films were done
basically for Titanus and MGM. He died very, very young. He had a heart attack. He was a heavy smoker. He
had fluctuating weight problems. His personal life was very, very sad and his premature
death was heartbreaking. But he still has a worldwide following specially among opera lovers and his recordings still sell over the world and his most famous film work.
What is portraying and re go to the great cruiser which was a huge box office head, and which we released a Technicolor restoration
on Blu-ray of in, I think, 2019 or 2020. But it was one of our Technicolor recombinations
and it looked and sounded fantastic. As does this. This is another one of those films where we've taken the original Technicolor negatives,
used our proprietary technology
to make a sharp, colorful presentation.
And it's very entertaining.
And we've added to the disc
something we also had on the DVD of it almost 20 years ago,
a deleted musical number called One Love of Mine. And
we also have two MGM cartoons in high def, Heavenly Puss with Tom and Jerry and Señor
Droopy with Droopy from Mr. Tex Avery and the original trailer. So it should be a very
fun disc. And I know that Lanz of fans will be
very happy by this news. They're coming out of the woodwork just saying how happy
they are. So really looking forward to it. The Technicolor restorations are
always home runs. So looking forward to this when it comes out in August. Well
next we have another film from 1949 and that that's the drama, Intruder in the Dust.
What can you tell us about this release?
Well, it couldn't be more different from that Midnight Kiss in terms of what filmed entertainment
is. Entertainment is and that this was a social drama.
That was based on the novel by william falconer and mg was very brave to make this film.
I deals with racism lynching prejudice.
racism, lynching, prejudice, in a very adult, straightforward manner that is not Hollywood. And in fact, director Clarence Brown, who had established himself as one of the great
directors at MGM in the silent era, he did many of the Garbo movies in the talkie era as well.
Clarence Brown brought his cameras to Oxford,
Mississippi where this story takes place.
One of my favorite actors who is very underrated,
but has now been properly recognized
in a contemporary sense, Juan Hernandez.
He plays a black man who is falsely accused of a crime.
You know, a white man is murdered, and the cops,
the Mississippi cops are completely corrupt,
and they're ready to lynch this man.
And David Bryan portrays a lawyer who is helped
by Claude Jarman Jr., a teenager who a lot of people
will remember from his work as
Jodie in the yearling that really put him on the map as an actor
But he was a young man here. This is several years after the yearling and
There's like a trio
it's the David Bryan character the Claude Jarman Jr. character, and also an older woman played by Elizabeth Patterson,
who is best known.
She was in some early 30s Warner pre-code movies.
She did a lot of work,
but most people know her as Mrs. Trumbull from I Love Lucy.
She's terrific in the movie,
and the three of them against all odds fight for one Hernandez.
Freedom and.
At the time this movie came out Bosley Crowther who was the reviewer for the New York Times who.
Very often didn't have much nice many nice things to say about most films.
Very popular films, he would usually trash them.
How he ended up being the Times film critic for as long as he was is shocking.
What ended his career was a terrible review he gave Bonnie and Clyde.
And when Bonnie and Clyde turned out to be revered as breakthrough in cinema, Mr. Crowther was sent
packing. But this was long before that. And yet he referred to A Truer is in the Dust as one of the great cinema dramas of our times.
If anybody wants to go back and use the New York Times' Times machine and read
Crowther's review, it's just an out-and-out rave that speaks to the
excellence of this film. And the fact that MGM had the courage to make it in 1949,
I think shooting probably started in 1948,
but it was released in 49.
And it is not a long film, it's 87 minutes long.
It is captivating, it is magnetic.
And here again, we're able to take a film
that wasn't looking very good
in what we've been distributing in television and on DVD.
Now it's got a gorgeous new master.
It's a 4K scan from our preservation elements,
which were second generation.
This is one of the many black and white negatives that
burnt up in the Eastman fire in 1978. So fortunately, we have fine grain that is
quite beautiful and very well made. And it almost looks like you're looking at the original negative.
It's just that beautiful. This film was named one of
the 10 best of the year by the National Board of Review back when they were doing the best films
of 1949, but I still believe that it isn't well known enough and I urge people to see it. And of
course, I urge people to buy it and make of course I urge people to buy it
and make it part of their libraries
because these things don't happen without consumer support.
And I can't imagine anyone who loves film
not wanting to have this film among their collection.
It's just knockout performances, fine filmmaking.
And as they said on the poster, it's sensational.
And you also put in a nice amount of extras on here as well for the fans. You got two shorts,
it looks like. Yeah, they're diversionary. One is, this would be again, if you went to a Lowe's theater and saw Intruder in the Dust,
it would likely be with a cartoon in a short.
We've got a Fitzpatrick Travel Talks short,
filmed in Technicolor, Playlands of Michigan.
And then we have another Tex Avery cartoon in HD,
Counterfeit Cat.
Both of these are from 1949.
And you know, I usually research and try to figure out what film opened with what short
or cartoon, but it changed from locale to locale. So I did find one theater that was showing counterfeit cat
with intruder in the dust.
So that felt like a right connection.
And it's ironic in the sense that the Fitzpatrick Travel Talk,
which is talking about fun places to be in Michigan,
it's completely the opposite of
the serious dark drama of Intruder in the Dust.
But this shows how people were wanting to be entertained in
the movies and how after World War II ended,
more dark, realistic, serious stories started to come from the major studios.
And this was a very brave and wonderful piece of filmmaking by MGM.
Well, next we have the John Ford film, Seven Women, and that's from 1966.
What can you tell us about this film?
And to be completely accurate, the film opened in the U.S. in 1966.
It has a 1965 copyright
because its first public performance, I believe,
was in Japan in 1965, like about a month before like december.
If that information is correct but this was john ford's last film.
And this has never been on dvd legally there is no legs floating around.
But there's never been a legitimate DVD release.
The reason for that was that our materials were really not good on the film and we needed
to go back to the negative.
That was a no-no for a long time, but now we scan the negative at 4K.
It looks magnificent.
And this is not a John Ford sweeping epic,
you know, on the outdoor vistas.
This is much more of a constrained atmosphere.
It is very, very well written, very well performed, and it is a
story of female empowerment coming from John Ford, who is so well known as being a man's
director. Well, John Ford also directed Charlie Temple in Wee Willie Winkler, which is a very good film, by the way,
and not ours.
But Seven Women has been
requested for so long
because there was no DVD.
And what they've been showing on television
is a four by three letterbox
master that has been blown up to be in 16 by nine and
looks wretched. So this so needed to be done. And the performances are tremendous. Anne Bancroft
is the leading lady. She happens to be one of my favorites for a number of reasons.
She gave so many wonderful performances,
but she's really the glue that holds us together.
She was a last-minute casting change because
the original person cast in this role was
Patricia Neal who suffered a stroke.
I think it might've been a heart attack and a stroke,
but they found Anne Bancroft as a suitable replacement.
And you also have Sue Lyon, who was in Lolita
and Night of the Iguana and Margaret Layton
and Flora Robeson and Betty Field,
really great group of women in this film.
And can't forget there's even an appearance by Eddie Albert.
He's one of the few major male roles in the movies.
And he probably started the first season of Green Acres
after they shot this movie, I would imagine.
But it's a terrific, terrific film.
And it's about obviously seven women
who are missionaries in China in 1935.
And it is not a long film, but it is very tightly packed.
And you have John Ford clearly still in full faculties
of his craft.
And by this point, he had been making movies
for nearly 50 years.
I looked for something to put with this
that would be appropriate.
So what we added was an Oscar-winning cartoon
that is not, I really should say,
an Oscar-winning short animated film
made by Chuck Jones called The Dot and the Line,
and it's based on the writings of Norton Juster,
who wrote the Phantom told Ruth with a very favorite book, children's book for many people,
and that Chuck Jones actually filmed for MGM in future years.
The dot in the line is in HD and it
comes with the feature along with the trailer.
I know this is going to make people very happy
because who doesn't
love John Ford and his films? He's probably the, if not the most respected American filmmaker
from the golden era of the 20th century. He's certainly at the tip top. He was the very
first recipient of the AFI Life Achievement Award, which says
something. So really important to his filmography that we bring this out. And we have other John
Fords in the offing as well that we're working on. We're actually, I would say we have about 75 films planned or in various
stages of pre-production or production right now, but which have all been approved and
then we're working on. So we're even doing more than the four Betty Davis movies that
I mentioned. I think it's six or seven now. So there is more John Ford coming as well
and people will be happy.
Well speaking of more, you are releasing your third 4k in August, which is terrific. It's
going to be your what, your third one in the course of about, well, less than a year. What
can you tell us about this one?
Well, I'd like to give credit where credit is due.
This is our release of a major restoration effort
that was undertaken under license from us
by the British Film Institute. One of the very most
important British films of the last 50 years, Get Carter starring Michael Caine.
The British Film Institute, they're wonderful, wonderful people, wonderful to
work with, and they pulled out all the stops to make a 4K UHD HDR amazing special edition of Get Carter.
And part of our agreement was that they would give us access to their work on the feature.
So it was a collaborative effort. We scanned the negative and they
did beautiful, beautiful work. They were kind enough to give us access to several
of the special features that they had in their deluxe edition. Not all of them
were they able to share with us, but many of them were. So this is a very loaded disc. It's a 4k disc, BD100, high bit rate of course,
disc production, encoding, authoring, compression done by Fidelity in Motion. David McKenzie is
the best. I've said it before, I'll say it again. We're so lucky to be working with him.
is the best. I've said it before, I'll say it again. We're so lucky to be working with him. The presentation is loaded with lots of extra features, and yet we keep the high
bit rate on the BD100 for the 4K HDR UHD presentation, which has Dolby Vision and HDR10, but the Blu-ray, which is on the BD50,
is the same remaster with the same content
in terms of special features.
So when you buy the combo,
if you haven't gotten your 4K set yet,
you have that disc waiting for you when you upgrade,
but you can get that new remastered blu ray.
In this presentation and the film itself was directed by a gentleman named mike hodges.
Who just passed away in the last few years i got to speak with him on the phone several times it was his i would would say, dying wish,
because I believe he was in his 90s at the time,
to see this film get properly anointed the way the BFI did.
And they not only created this amazing special edition,
they also toured the film throughout the UK. We had released our own, not Warner Archive, but Warner Home Video,
had released a Blu-ray of the feature,
I would say probably a little over 10 years ago,
maybe 11 years ago, might've been 10.
But that had an Americanized audio track where the Cockney accents had been kind of minimized to be more
understandable British accents by certain players.
And that was an appropriate choice for 1970, but our domestic Blu-ray had that track and it
really should have had both. What we've offered here is the original UK track
thanks to the work done by the BFI. I really want to be clear that the reason we are releasing this through the Warner Archive
is to give the proper treatment to all the work that the BFI did.
And I want to thank all the folks at the BFI for their incredible generosity in sharing these elements with us so that
we could make a US disc with a 4K Blu-ray combo that was affordable and that had plenty
of special features that speak to the excellence of this British crime drama. Because if you only think of Michael Caine
in his delightfully fun, you know,
he had so many roles where he just loved him
because he was, you know, the cider house rules
and all the films that came before.
He plays a ruthless killer.
Now the irony of it is, this film was remade into a black exploitation
film that we just put out a few months ago, Hitman. MGM was very, they were very anxious
to repurpose the property for a different audience and that's all well and good. But this is the original. It's not
sanitized. It's rated R. And it's exactly how the film premiered in the UK with its original audio
and it's mono because of that. There's no at most, there's no remix. It looks and sounds
tremendous because the BFI did a
beautiful job restoring it from the original negative. And I think people
will be very much appreciative of the fact that this work is now available.
There will be more 4Ks coming from us, not very many. They'll be occasional, as I said before,
maybe three, four a year, just because of the increasing cost.
And also because some of the older films just,
they don't really have 4,000 pixels in the negative.
It's just not there. So this is a film where,
courtesy of the BFI's work,
the colors are tight and they snap and it looks really,
really good and it's a wonderful thing to be able
to add to your library at a very reasonable price.
So that's Get Carter.
Not to be confused with this
Sylvester Stallone remake of the same name that came along in 2000. That's not
what we're selling here. Well as you mentioned there is just a load of extras
we won't go through all of them here but that would take a whole podcast just to
talk about. It's a lot. It's a lot. So this is going to be a great release and
it's really great to hear about the partnership between the Warner Archive, Warner Brothers and the BFI in this instance for this release.
Well, George, that leaves us with one TV series, highly anticipated animated TV series from Hanna Barbera. What can you tell us about this release? Well, when I was growing up, this was, I think, my first favorite television show
as a toddler. And this is a show that went on the air before I was born.
So I was late to the party.
But the Huckleberry Hound show finally arriving, not just on Blu-ray remastered,
but finally arriving in complete form.
And we've spent, I would say, probably about three years working on this because there
was a DVD that was released with the first 26 episodes. And that DVD came from Interpositives and strangely, the famous theme song was not
there. They did reconstruct the pilot episode. And if my memory is serving me and I haven't seen the DVD
in a very long time, I don't think they had the the main and end titles. And they did the best they
could at the time. But there was this rumor floating around that the reason why the rest of the series was never released was because the first DVD
volume didn't sell well. That's absolutely not true. It sold very well. The problem was
that at this point in the early years of Hanna-Barbera, music was used for these cartoons in the Huckleberry Hound show that was licensed
and the licenses did not include home video because home video didn't exist
then the licenses were for free television and non theatrical so we had
to go back and clear all this music. And that was just the beginning. Not only
did we have to spend quite a bit of money clearing the music, but we also
had to put the shows back together. And that was a daunting task because it
wasn't like, and I think I may have talked about this before in a similar fashion with
McGilligrilla, there is no Huckleberry Hound show episode one negative. That's the whole show. The
individual segments, which in the first two seasons were Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear and Boo Boo, Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinx. Those three
segments were saved and inventoried as such. That represents the first two seasons. The
third season, Yogi Bear left the Huckleberry Hound show and was replaced by Hokey Wolf for seasons
three and four.
So what we have here in effect now are the 68 shows as they were originally broadcast
across four seasons. We have included as many bumpers and bridges
as we could find.
They were all buried in a mass inventory listing
that required our people to pull their hair out,
trying to find as many pieces as possible.
And then we had to deal with the fact that
when the show was originally broadcast, that as early as I believe the 10th episode, there
was a repeated Huckleberry Hound segment.
So we were really at a crossroads. What do we want to do?
So what we chose to do was to replicate as close as possible
how each show was broadcast
during the original run between the 1958 and 1961-62 seasons.
So there are 68 shows.
Within those individual half-hour shows, there will be, on occasion, repeated segments that
were in earlier shows. So this is almost a reference series. And if you want to binge all the episodes,
you may want to fast forward through a segment that you saw earlier, or we added as many
original commercials from our good materials that we could find.
They're all black and white commercials, but some of those commercials and some of the
interstitials are repeated.
We did find some guide paperwork from the advertising agency that had put the package together because Kellogg's
Cereals was the sponsor. We have the original Kellogg's rooster, the picture of the cornflakes
in color. We were thrilled that we could find the original main titles in color because they were
changed for syndication later. We have
the original main titles which is wonderful. The end titles that we have
are original and we could only find black and white for that so that's what
we used. And we used as many of these commercials and interstitial pieces as
we could find. So the shows actually with everything put together
are just a hair longer than 30 minutes.
So that's why we're on 11 discs
because we're being as comprehensive as possible.
It isn't a hundred percent perfection.
A hundred percent perfection would have been if we had every bumper, every commercial, they just
weren't saved.
Nobody thought there was a need to use these things again.
So to reconstruct this properly and faithfully as we could, I look upon this as, of course, entertainment and something for
the animation collector, but also as much of a record of what people saw for those four
seasons. We had the Yogi Bear segments. They had been mastered already a few years earlier, I believe
for the launch of HBO Max back in 2020. But everything else was newly done for this from
the original negatives. And the result is quality that is quite remarkable.
I had only seen them 16 millimeter, you know, until the DVD came out, which wasn't complete.
Those came from interpositives.
This came from the original negatives. I can't tell you the amount of work four seasons and what they entailed.
All the segments are there in full.
There are a lot of bumpers and bridges that I had never seen that we were able to find.
The vintage Kellogg commercials are a treat,
but again, they have to be repeated so that every half hour show is similar to or exactly as broadcast.
Certainly, in terms of the segments in each show are the segments as broadcast.
And I'm very grateful to my colleagues for the incredible amount of research and work that they put into this
along with myself.
Ever since we started the Warner Archive back in 2009, people were asking for the rest of
Huckleberry Hound because all they had was the first 26 episodes. And now you have all 68 shows that ran across the four seasons with all the segments.
And Huckleberry Hound and Yogi Bear really set the stage for what Hannah Barbera was
about to do.
Pixie and Dixie are terrific and Mr. Jigs is a great character and Hokey Wolf and Ding-a-Ling
were fine fill-ins as Yogi Bear got his own show.
And I just think people are going to be really, really happy, I hope they will be, with what
we've put together here because it's been really a labor of love and dedication to treating Hannah
Barbera right and 15-16 years of people writing to us saying when are we gonna
get the full Huckleberry Hound show well the day has finally come.
I remember George you mentioning this a year or two, I mean, you have been mentioning to
me this ongoing work.
It's been a huge task and now it's finally ready.
And it's fantastic the way that you chose to do it so that you get the experience.
It's the Saturday morning, get your bowl of cereal, watch the episode with the commercials,
with the repeated, you know, it's that experience.
It's not, here's a bunch of episodes.
It's the experience that you're-
Absolutely.
And I mean, I know like when I think of this series or Rocky and Bo Winkle, their little interstitials, you know, fan mail from some flounder on Rocky and Bo Winkle.
The repetition was something that was actually
welcomed by the younger audience.
The great thing about these Hanna-Barbera early works is,
they were written more for all ages,
not talked down to children.
And so they can be entertaining to adults as well as kids.
But the fact that each episode is there
either exactly as it was presented
or as close as we could get as possible,
that's very, very important because it then becomes
more of a reference as well as a piece of entertainment.
And if anything is something you've seen repeated, if you've seen that commercial like five times
over the watching three discs, you just skip through it. There's ample chaptering, like every bumper, every bridge,
every commercial, every segment, every main and end tile,
they all are chaptered.
And I also wanna talk about the way this will be packaged.
There will be an elite case,
it's kind of along the lines of what we did with Cheyenne.
There will be an elite case with the first season episodes
in their own elite case,
then an elite case with seasons two and three,
and an elite case with the discs of season four.
They will be inside an outer sleeve.
So this is sturdy packaging.
You don't have to worry about something that is DVD sized.
It's Blu-ray packaging.
And you don't have to worry about opening up the case
and having the disc fall all over you.
This is very important to what we do at the Warner Archive.
Yeah.
And I'm delighted to... We've been working on this a very long time, and I'm delighted
that the day is finally here, that we can present it to the fans who have been very
patiently waiting.
Now, you have a lot of extras. Are those on the 11th disc or are they spread out?
They're on the last disc and we carried over the DVD extras with one exception. The one exception we didn't carry over because it really makes no sense now is reconstructing the pilot. They did a whole piece on how they were trying to piece together the original.
That was also a passion project for the people who were involved at the time,
but they weren't able to find a lot of the things that we have subsequently found,
and they didn't have as much support within the company for
their efforts. So it's not to denigrate their efforts. They were thinking along the same
lines that we are now. But that one piece isn't there, but we have a piece that is a
tribute to Dawes Butler, who did so many wonderful voices for Hanna-Barbera.
He was Elroy Jetson,
he was Huckleberry Hound, he was Yogi Bear.
He did just an amazing amount of voices.
There's a piece dedicated to him.
There's something that was very cutely put together as like a little music video
and another piece that cut together the way Huckleberry Hound would fracture the language
with this southern drawl. So those pieces are on here. But the extras, not to pull the
title of your podcast, really are built into every episode with the
vintage commercials from Kellogg's and the bumpers and the bridges and to have
you know Huck and Pixie and Dixie introduced the next Pixie and Dixie
cartoon those pieces weren't seen probably you, I can't be exactly certain of this, but I'm pretty sure that
after the 1966 rerun syndication airings began and everything got re-chopped up, I don't
know. I know there were certain bridges that were kept for the syndication reruns and then less as years went on.
But most of this material hasn't been seen until there have been some recent television
broadcasts as a result of the work that we've been doing for the last couple of years.
But the commercials have not been part of that,
and Kellogg's has not been a part of that.
And Kellogg's sponsorship of the Huckleberry Hound Show led to Kellogg's sponsorship of the Ogie Bear Show
and Quick Draw McGraw, and there was a very good relationship between that company and hannah barbara really help them off their feet because.
The first hannah barbara series was rough and ready which i hope we can release someday that was made in sixteen millimeters so it's.
It's a technical challenge cuz it doesn't look particularly it was made quickly on a low budget.
Bill and Joe were fired from MGM and they wanted to get something on NBC, hence Rough
and Ready.
But we do want to tackle that at some point.
But Huckleberry Hound, through the sponsorship of Kellogg's and their ad agency, Leo Burnett,
they were able to go to over 100 hundred stations and get the Huckleberry
Hound Show broadcast once a week sponsored by Kellogg's and that is what
we now can bring to the fans and the enthusiasts who've been waiting. So I
hope people appreciate the work that went into it and most importantly I hope
they enjoy it because it's really entertaining.
Right. Well George, August is another terrific month. I love the fact that you've got a brand
new animation that has been highly anticipated by the fans. You've got that wonderful 4k
from the BFI and then of course the classic films including another Technicolor.
Well thank you for the opportunity to speak about it Tim. I'm glad to share with the folks what's coming up
and we'll have a lot more to talk about in the future. A lot of exciting things happening.
That's for sure. Thanks again George.
Thank you.
For those who would like more information about the films George announced today, be sure and check out our Facebook page and our Warner Archive Facebook group.
You can find links to those and all of our social media sites in the podcast show notes.
Facebook is also the best place to get the pre-order links for these titles when they
become available.
If you aren't yet subscribed or following the show at your favorite podcast provider,
you may want to do that so that you don't miss anything we have coming up.
Until next time, you've been listening to Tim Millard.
Stay slightly obsessed.
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 Bros.
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.