Among the many animation treasures celebrated here are the never-before-released 'Hell's Bells' and the original unedited 'Mother Goose Goes Hollywood', plus the Academy Award winning 'Three Orphan Kittens' (Best Cartoon, 1935). Enriching the collection even further are several options commentaries by some of the world's foremost animation and film music experts, who also take part in a lively conversation about the series that let Walt Disney push the envelope of animation art to unimaginable flights of fantasy.

Farmer Al Falfa goes to Paris along with a flapper who turns out to be some crook.
Terrytoons animated short film directed by Frank Moser

In 1960 Frank Glynn, a west of Ireland shopkeeper, bought an 8mm film camera. He would go on to reco...

Wart is a young boy who aspires to be a knight's squire. On a hunting trip he falls in on Merlin, a ...

This collection of 11 short films produced by Illumination includes: From the "Despicable Me" franch...

One little ancient British village still holds out against the Roman invaders. Asterix and Obelix ar...

The boy Mowgli makes his way to the man-village with Bagheera, the wise panther. Along the way he me...

When marauding Romans capture - and catapult - their pal Getafix into lands unknown, the shrewd and ...

Asterix and Obelix depart on an adventure to complete twelve impossible tasks to prove to Caesar tha...

In the boorish city of Agrabah, kind-hearted street urchin Aladdin and Princess Jasmine fall in love...

'Toon star Roger is worried that his wife Jessica is playing pattycake with someone else, so the stu...

Walt Disney's timeless masterpiece is an extravaganza of sight and sound! See the music come to life...

Introducing Hellarious: a once-in-a-lifetime feature collection that brings together seven of the mo...

A beautiful girl, Snow White, takes refuge in the forest in the house of seven dwarfs to hide from h...

Within the confines of a massive wall, a group of children plays as if there were no tomorrow

American cartoons are the starting point for Martin Arnold's new work. Sequences of short films form...