Krazy Kat filmography

After George Herriman conceived the Krazy Kat comic strip in 1913, the title character began appearing in animated shorts three years later. From 1916 to 1940, Krazy Kat was featured in 231 films.[1] The following is a list of the cartoons released theatrically, separated by studio.
Title | Release date |
---|---|
Introducing Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse | February 18, 1916 |
Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse Believe in Signs | February 21, 1916 |
Krazy Kat & Ignatz Mouse Discuss the Letter 'G' | February 25, 1916 |
Krazy Kat Goes A-Wooing | February 29, 1916 |
Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse: A Duet, He Made Me Love Him | March 3, 1916 |
Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse in Their One-Act Tragedy: "The Tail of the Nude Tail" | March 6, 1916 |
Krazy Kat, Bugologist | March 14, 1916 |
Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse at the Circus | March 17, 1916[2] |
Krazy Kat Demi-Tasse | March 21, 1916 |
Krazy Kat Invalid | March 27, 1916 |
Krazy Kat at the Switchboard | April 3, 1916 |
A Tale That is Knot | April 14, 1916 |
Krazy Kat the Hero | April 14, 1916 |
Krazy Kat to the Rescue | April 14, 1916 |
Krazy Kat at Looney Park | June 17, 1916 |
A Sad Awakening | June 20, 1916[3] |
A Tempest in a Paint Pot | July 3, 1916 |
A Grid-Iron Hero | October 9, 1916 |
The Missing One | November 27, 1916 |
Krazy Kat Takes Little Katrina For an Airing | December 23, 1916 |
Throwing the Bull | February 4, 1917 |
Roses and Thorns | March 11, 1917 |
Robbers and Thieves | April 12, 1917 |
The Cook | April 29, 1917 |
Moving Day | May 27, 1917 |
All Is Not Gold That Glitters | June 24, 1917 |
A Krazy Katastrophe (final Krazy Kat theatrical short in World War I) | August 5, 1917 |
Title | Release date |
---|---|
The Great Cheese Robbery* | January 16, 1920 |
Love's Labor Lost* | January 30, 1920 |
The Best Mouse Loses* | March 3, 1920 |
Kats Is Kats* | June 4, 1920 |
The Chinese Honeymoon | July 3, 1920 |
A Family Affair | October 25, 1920 |
The Hinges on the Bar Room Door | January 8, 1921 |
The Awful Spook | January 21, 1921 |
How I Became Krazy | January 26, 1921 |
The Wireless Wire-Walkers* | February 26, 1921 |
* Directed by Vernon Stallings
In the first two cartoon series', Krazy was depicted as a genderless feline, similar to the comic strip. From here onward, Krazy is portrayed as a male cat. These were produced by Bill Nolan’s studio.
Title | Release date | Note |
---|---|---|
Hot Dogs | October 1, 1925 | |
The Smoke Eater | October 15, 1925 | |
A Uke-Calamity | November 1, 1925 | |
Bokays and Brickbatz | November 15, 1925 | |
The Hair Raiser | November 15, 1925 | |
The Flight That Failed | November 15, 1925 | |
The New Champ | November 30, 1925 | |
Jams and Gems | December 1, 1925 | Often mis-cited as "James and Gems". |
Monkey Business | December 15, 1925 | |
Pie-Eyed Pie | 1925 | May be a variant title for Monkey Business; listed in Motion Picture News but no other trade papers. |
Battling For Barleycorn | January 1, 1926 | |
A Punctured Romance | January 15, 1926 | Often mis-cited as "A Pickled Romance" or "A Picked Romance"; New York State and Pathé ("Eve's Film Review") records establish actual title. |
The Ghost Fakir | February 1, 1926 | |
Puss and Boots | February 15, 1926 | |
Sucker Game | February 15, 1926 | |
Back To Backing | March 1, 1926 | Sometimes cited as "Back to Batching". |
Double Crossed | March 15, 1926 | |
Scents and Nonsense | April 1, 1926 | |
Feather Pushers | April 15, 1926 | |
Cops the Suey | May 1, 1926 | Often mis-cited as "Cops Suey". |
In the Movies | August 15, 1926 |
R-C Pictures/Winkler Pictures
[edit]Shorts begin to be outsourced to Ben Harrison and Manny Gould’s studio.[4]
Title | Release date | Note |
---|---|---|
The Chicken Chaser | September 2, 1926 | |
East Is Best | September 22, 1926 | |
Jimmy's Whiskers | October 1, 1926 | Sometimes cited as "Jiminy Whiskers". |
Shore Enough | October 11, 1926 | |
Watery Gravy | October 15, 1926 | |
Mouse Trapped | October 15, 1926 | Home movie title "Krazy Kat's Mouse Trap"; commonly circulating in a version (erroneously) retitled as Bokays and Brickbatz, in fact a different cartoon. |
Farmyard Frolic | 1926 | Home movie title "A Barnyard Frolic"; UK release as a two-part serial, with second half titled "The Frolics That Finished" (this part commonly circulated). |
Fowl Play | 1926 | |
The Pole-Lander | 1926 | UK release as a two-part serial, with titles "Searching for Santa!" (this part commonly circulated) and "Santa Claws Our Pet". |
Teeth for Two | 1926 | |
Cheese It | November 8, 1926 | |
Dots and Dashes | November 22, 1926 | |
Gold Struck | December 6, 1926 | |
The Wrong Queue | December 20, 1926 | |
Horse Play | January 3, 1927 | |
Busy Birds | January 17, 1927 | |
Sharps and Flats | January 31, 1927 | |
Kiss Crossed | February 14, 1927 | |
A Fool's Errand | February 28, 1927 | |
Stomach Trouble | March 14, 1927 | |
The Rug Fiend | March 28, 1927 | |
Hire a Hall | April 11, 1927 | |
Don Go On | April 23, 1927 | |
Burnt Up | May 9, 1927 | |
Night Owl | May 23, 1927 | |
On the Trail | June 6, 1927 | |
Passing the Hat | June 20, 1927 | |
Best Wishes | July 4, 1927 | |
Black and White | July 10, 1927 | |
Wild Rivals | July 18, 1927 | |
Bee Cause | August 15, 1927 | |
Skinny | August 29, 1927 |
Paramount-Famous/Winkler Pictures
[edit]Ben Harrison and Manny Gould’s studio began making Krazy Kat’s for Mintz by March of 1927 and by the time they switched distributors to Paramount they completely took over from Bill Nolan.[5]
Title | Release date | Note |
---|---|---|
Sealing Whacks | August 1, 1927 | |
Tired Wheels | August 13, 1927 | |
Web Feet | August 27, 1927 | |
School Daze | September 10, 1927 | |
Rail Rode | September 24, 1927 | |
Aero Nuts | October 8, 1927 | |
Topsy Turvy | October 22, 1927 | |
Pie Curs | November 5, 1927 | |
For Crime's Sake | November 19, 1927 | |
Milk Made | December 3, 1927 | |
The Stork Exchange | December 17, 1927 | |
Grid Ironed | December 31, 1927 | |
Pig Styles | January 14, 1928 | |
Shadow Theory | January 28, 1928 | |
Ice Boxed | February 11, 1928 | |
A Hunger Stroke | February 25, 1928 | |
Wired and Fired | March 10, 1928 | |
Love Sunk | March 24, 1928 | |
Tong Tied | April 7, 1928 | |
A Bum Steer | April 21, 1928 | |
Gold Bricks | May 5, 1928 | |
The Long Count | May 19, 1928 | |
The Patent Medicine Kid | June 2, 1928 | |
Stage Coached | June 16, 1928 | |
The Rain Dropper | June 30, 1928 | |
A Companionate Mirage | July 14, 1928 | |
News Reeling | August 4, 1928 | |
Baby Feud | August 16, 1928 | |
Sea Sword | September 5, 1928 | |
The Show Vote | September 15, 1928 | |
The Phantom Trail | September 29, 1928 | |
Come Easy, Go Slow | October 15, 1928 | |
Beaches and Scream | October 29, 1928 | |
Nicked Nags | November 9, 1928 | |
Liar Bird | November 23, 1928 | |
Still Waters | December 7, 1928 | |
Night Owls | December 22, 1928 | |
Cow Belles | January 5, 1929 | |
Hospitalities | January 18, 1929 | |
Reduced Weights | February 1, 1929 | |
Flying Yeast | February 15, 1929 | |
Vanishing Screams | March 1, 1929 | |
A Joint Affair | March 15, 1929 | |
Sheep Skinned | March 19, 1929 | |
The Lone Shark | April 13, 1929 | First short with synchronised sound.[6] |
Torrid Toreadors | April 27, 1929 | |
Golf Socks | May 11, 1929 | |
Petting Larceny | May 25, 1929 | |
Hat Aches | June 8, 1929 | |
Fur Peace | June 22, 1929 | |
Auto Suggestion | July 6, 1929 | |
Sleepy Holler | July 20, 1929 |
By this period, the Krazy Kat shorts started using sound. Ben Harrison and Manny Gould helmed the series together until they briefly split for the 1931-1932 season. After Columbia Pictures decided to decrease Gould’s and Harrison’s (and Sid Marcus’ and Dick Huemer’s) wages on account that their cartoons were unprofitable, they left the studio and their crew took over. All would return (except for Huemer who went to Disney).[7] Allen Rose would be given the series in 1936 as Harrison and Gould focused on the Color Rhapsodies. Due to waning popularity, the Krazy Kat series ended in 1939, but he would appear in two more shorts in the Fables and Phantasies series.
Title | Release date | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Ratskin | August 15, 1929 | Ben Harrison and Manny Gould | |
Canned Music | September 12, 1929 | Lost cartoon. | |
Port Whines | October 10, 1929 | ||
Sole Mates | November 7, 1929 | Lost cartoon. | |
Farm Relief | December 30, 1929 | ||
The Kat's Meow | January 2, 1930 | ||
Spookeasy | January 30, 1930 | Lost cartoon. | |
Slow Beau | February 27, 1930 | ||
Desert Sunk | March 27, 1930 | Lost cartoon. | |
An Old Flame | April 24, 1930 | Lost cartoon. | |
Alaskan Nights | May 23, 1930 | ||
Jazz Rhythm | June 19, 1930 | ||
Honolulu Wiles | July 17, 1930 | ||
Cinderella | August 14, 1930 | Lost cartoon. | |
The Bandmaster | September 8, 1930 | ||
The Apache Kid | October 9, 1930 | ||
Lambs Will Gamble | November 1, 1930 | ||
The Little Trail | December 3, 1930 | ||
Taken for a Ride | January 3, 1931 | ||
Rodeo Dough | February 13, 1931 | ||
Swiss Movements | April 4, 1931 | ||
Disarmament Conference | April 27, 1931 | ||
Soda Poppa | May 29, 1931 | ||
The Stork Market | July 11, 1931 | ||
Svengarlic | August 3, 1931 | ||
Weenie Roast | September 14, 1931 | ||
Bars and Stripes | October 15, 1931 | Manny Gould | |
Hash House Blues | November 2, 1931 | ||
The Restless Sax | December 1, 1931 | ||
Piano Mover | January 4, 1932 | Ben Harrison | |
Love Krazy | January 30, 1932 | Manny Gould | |
Hollywood Goes Krazy | February 13, 1932 | ||
What a Knight | March 14, 1932 | ||
Soldier Old Man | April 2, 1932 | ||
The Birth of Jazz | April 13, 1932 | Ben Harrison | |
The Ritzy Hotel | May 9, 1932 | Manny Gould | |
Hic-Cups the Champ | May 28, 1932 | ||
The Paper Hanger | June 21, 1932 | Ben Harrison | |
Light house Keeping | August 15, 1932 | ||
Seeing Stars | September 12, 1932 | Ben Harrison and Manny Gould | |
Prosperity Blues | October 8, 1932 | ||
The Crystal Gazabo | November 7, 1932 | ||
The Minstrel Show | November 21, 1932 | ||
Snow Time | November 30, 1932 | ||
Wedding Bells | January 10, 1933 | ||
The Medicine Show | February 7, 1933 | ||
Wooden Shoes | February 25, 1933 | ||
Bunnies and Bonnets | March 29, 1933 | ||
The Broadway Malady | April 18, 1933 | ||
Russian Dressing | May 1, 1933 | ||
House Cleaning | June 1, 1933 | Rudy Zamora | |
Antique Antics | June 14, 1933 | Ben Harrison and Manny Gould | |
Out of the Ether | September 5, 1933 | ||
Whacks Museum | September 29, 1933 | Harry Love and Al Eugster | |
Krazy Spooks | October 13, 1933 | Rudy Zamora and Harry Love | |
Stage Krazy | November 13, 1933 | ||
The Bill Poster | November 24, 1933 | Harry Love | |
Curio Shop | December 15, 1933 | ||
The Autograph Hunter | January 5, 1934 | ||
Southern Exposure | February 5, 1934 | Ben Harrison and Manny Gould | |
Tom Thumb | February 16, 1934 | Harry Love | |
Cinder Alley | March 9, 1934 | ||
Bowery Daze | March 30, 1934 | ||
Busy Bus | April 20, 1934 | Allen Rose | |
The Masquerade Party | May 11, 1934 | Harry Love | |
The Trapeze Artist | September 1, 1934 | Sid Marcus | |
The Katnips of 1940 | October 12, 1934 | Ben Harrison | |
Krazy's Waterloo | November 16, 1934 | ||
Goofy Gondolas | December 21, 1934 | ||
The Bird Man | February 1, 1935 | ||
The Hotcha Melody | March 15, 1935 | ||
Peace Conference | April 26, 1935 | ||
The King's Jester | May 20, 1935 | ||
Garden Gaieties | August 1, 1935 | ||
A Happy Family | September 27, 1935 | ||
Kannibal Kapers | December 27, 1935 | ||
The Bird Stuffer | February 1, 1936 | Sid Marcus | |
L'il Ainjil | March 19, 1936 | Ben Harrison | Sole attempt by Screen Gems to reflect the original comic series. |
Highway Snobbery | August 9, 1936 | Allen Rose | |
Krazy's Newsreel | October 24, 1936 | ||
The Merry Cafe | December 26, 1936 | ||
The Lyin' Hunter | February 12, 1937 | ||
Krazy's Race of Time | May 6, 1937 | ||
The Masque Raid | June 25, 1937 | ||
Railroad Rhythm | November 20, 1937 | ||
The Auto Clinic | March 4, 1938 | ||
The Little Buckaroo | April 11, 1938 | ||
Krazy Magic | May 20, 1938 | ||
Travel Squawks | July 4, 1938 | ||
Gym Jams | September 9, 1938 | ||
Hot Dogs on Ice | October 21, 1938 | ||
The Lone Mountie | December 10, 1938 | ||
Krazy's Bear Tale | January 27, 1939 | ||
Golf Chumps | April 6, 1939 | ||
Krazy's Shoe Shop | May 12, 1939 | Final Krazy Kat short in the series. | |
The Little Lost Sheep | October 2, 1939 | First Fables short, and the only Krazy Kat short to be a part of the Fables series. | |
The Mouse Exterminator | January 26, 1940 | The only Krazy Kat theatrical short in the Phantasy series and the final appearance of Krazy Kat in a theatrical cartoon. |
References
[edit]- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 34–35, 97–98. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
- ^ American Memory Collection (Motion Picture and Television Reading Room, Library of Congress). (2010, August 31). Library of Congress. Retrieved April 26, 2013, Archived on March 1, 2005
- ^ Motion Picture News, July 1, 1916. Retrieved February 4, 2021, https://lantern.mediahist.org/catalog/motionpicturenew133unse_1461
- ^ "The (Annotated) Handwritten Notes of Ben Harrison |". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved 2025-08-03.
- ^ "The (Annotated) Handwritten Notes of Ben Harrison |". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved 2025-08-03.
- ^ "The (Annotated) Handwritten Notes of Ben Harrison |". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved 2025-08-03.
- ^ "The (Annotated) Handwritten Notes of Ben Harrison |". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved 2025-08-03.