The driving force behind the cartoons was American-born George Moreno Jr., late of the Fleischer Studios, who settled in England and launched British Animated Productions (B.A.P.), making a bold attempt at creating homegrown Technicolor cartoons for British cinemas. Unfortunately, the project collapsed quickly when wartime restrictions on foreign products were lifted and the market was instantly flooded with American-made cartoons.
 The fourth and final Bubble and Squeek title, OLD MANOR HOUSE, has our heroes seeking refuge
from a typical monster-movie-style wind and rain storm inside the title’s
“creepy place”, occupied by a belligerent, monocle’d and mustachioed rodent
named Colonel Rat. Clocking in just short of 7 minutes, it’s a brisk and manic
affair with Bubble and his car subjected to frights that include a nice cameo
of a Frankenstein Monster — an absolute requisite character in any scary Old
Manor House. Identified as “Frankie Stein’, with forehead wingnut bolts, the
Monster moves mechanically, utters a dainty “Boo!”, and exits through the wall,
leaving his distinctive silhouette in classic cartoon cutout.
The fourth and final Bubble and Squeek title, OLD MANOR HOUSE, has our heroes seeking refuge
from a typical monster-movie-style wind and rain storm inside the title’s
“creepy place”, occupied by a belligerent, monocle’d and mustachioed rodent
named Colonel Rat. Clocking in just short of 7 minutes, it’s a brisk and manic
affair with Bubble and his car subjected to frights that include a nice cameo
of a Frankenstein Monster — an absolute requisite character in any scary Old
Manor House. Identified as “Frankie Stein’, with forehead wingnut bolts, the
Monster moves mechanically, utters a dainty “Boo!”, and exits through the wall,
leaving his distinctive silhouette in classic cartoon cutout.  


 



2 comments:
Awesome, never heard of this!
There was a "Frankie Stein" character that Ken Reid drew during the '60s in the British comic book "Wham!"
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