The Art Of Tom And Jerry Laserdisc Archive May 2026
最新消息: 按 Ctrl+D 键收藏本站不迷路.      发表垃圾评论和违法信息直接拉黑.

The Art Of Tom And Jerry Laserdisc Archive May 2026

He set down the pencil.

He’d won the lot for three hundred dollars—a gamble on a blurry eBay listing that promised “Misc. Laserdiscs, Animation, possibly Japanese import.” When he peeled back the tape, his breath caught. the art of tom and jerry laserdisc archive

Leo sat in the dark for a long time. Then he opened a new browser window, searched for “laserdisc preservation society,” and began to write an email he’d been avoiding for years—offering his collection for digitization, for free, no credit. He set down the pencil

He pressed pause. The remote trembled.

It was Joseph Barbera. The date stamp read 1994—two years before the laserdisc’s supposed manufacturing date. Leo sat in the dark for a long time

By disc four, Leo had called in sick to work. He was deep into the 1950s Cinemascope era, watching a version of Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl where the orchestra was fully rotoscoped from a live Los Angeles Philharmonic performance. The conductor’s face was Leonard Bernstein’s, drawn in 12 frames per second. The disc included a commentary track by Irv Spence, one of the original animators, recorded in 1989, months before his death.