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This volume typically includes the very first theatrical shorts produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises. You get to see the character evolve from a clever title sequence gag into a silent comedy icon.
Artistic Contributors and Production Notes The Pink Panther Cartoon Collection - Volume 1 ...
The collection covers the early collaborations between directors Friz Freleng and Hawley Pratt. Notable shorts include: (1964) – The Oscar winner. Pink Pajamas (1964) – The second theatrical short. This volume typically includes the very first theatrical
Modern releases of this volume boast 2K and 4K scans from the original 35mm negatives. The result is staggering. You can finally appreciate the texture of the Xerography (the process used to transfer drawings to cels) and the specific pastel palettes that defined the 1960s. The audio is equally impressive, with a restored mono track that lets Mancini’s bass line hit with the proper warmth. Notable shorts include: (1964) – The Oscar winner
The Pink Panther Cartoon Collection — Volume 1 captures a felicitous moment when mid-century visual design, jazz-infused scoring, and classical slapstick collided to produce a compact body of work that remains influential. The Panther’s silent, stylish trickery offers lessons in visual storytelling, timing, and character economy. As an archive, Volume 1 is both an entertaining suite of comedic shorts and a document of animation’s capacity to reinvent pantomime for modern tastes—remaining elegant, sly, and very, very pink.
The set opens with "The Pink Phink," which won the 1964 Academy Award for Animated Short Subject. This is the quintessential Panther short where he annoyingly paints a house blue while the Little Man tries to paint it pink. It sets the tone for the entire series.
He never tried to return the DVD. Not because he didn’t want to—but because every time he reached for the case, the Panther’s tail would curl around his wrist, gentle but firm, and a thought would slip into his mind: