It's funny how Oswald's cartoons managed to fall into the public domain in the mid 20th century and yet it's 2022 and Mickey's cartoons are still in copyright. Imagine trying to keep cartoons that are nearly 100 years old.
I love seeing Oswald the lucky rabbit cartoons bring back memories because its really special how people love him even though he was abandon and stole from Walt Disney but then someone from the company somehow brought him back
@@PathPainter Well there were also Blu-ray rereleases of Oswald cartoons sometimes after Disney got the rights to him again so there's a good chance that there's some late 2000's kids that grew up with one of them since the Oswald Blu-ray discs were released in 2007 if I remember correctly
@@sethhorst6158 Disney doesn’t own exclusive rights to Oswald, the character has been in public domain since the 1950s because Trolly Trouble was never renewed before all the 1970s copyright rework laws created via Disney’s influence. Granted, Disney does own any newer depictions of Oswald that they created. However, they cannot dispute the OG design, or anyone else’s reimagined version based off of Trolly Trouble.
@@elliew.979 no. The kids were the ones in the beginning. If you look closely at the faces of the passengers, you will notice they are all different animals with similar bodies.
No it's been in the public domain for decades since Universal/Lantz who owned the short at the time failed to renew the copyright. Only All Wet til this January was still copyrighted. Plus currently you still have all the 1928 and beyond Oswald shorts that are still under copyright including the last Disney ones and the first batch of Charles Mintz shorts next year.
Mickey's Choo Choo (1929) is almost identical to this one... Mickey does the same thing with the oil and his train. He uses it as a Deodorant. And the trains it's also having difficulties climbing a mound. I love the wheels of this wagon. What an awesome Cartoon.
I'm seeing that old cartoon characters had a characteristic vehicle... -Mickey Mouse: Steamboat -Oswald The Lucky Rabbit: Trolley -Bendy the Demon: Train/Locomotive -Felix the Cat: ¿?
this was actually the second oswald short but first to release the first short ever created was poor papa and poor papa was released the following year in 1928
The only luck Oswald had was surviving the crash. But now he has a destroyed trolley, lots of unsatisfied passengers, and will probably this will all come out of his wages.
Se não fosse pelo jogo de wii "Disney Epic Mickey" de 2010 e o presidente da disney na época que a empresa recuperou o personagem, o oswald não seria tão conhecido, lembrado e amado hoje em dia, o personagem até os início dos anos 2000 tava esquecido e guardado numa gaveta lá na universal, ele até o surgimento do pica pau tinha sido redesenhado estilo universal, pra distanciar do design do walt disney, depois do pica pau o oswald virou um coadjuvante nas histórias do passarinho, sério e história do oswald é um pouco triste na era universal, hoje ele voltou a ter seu reconhecimento e muitos o amam hoje.
Possibly but keep this in mind. Yes Walt directed, wrote, and was one of the animators in this short, it's unclear without proof that Walt did animated that specific scene. After all, you had other uncredited animators like Hugh Harman, Ub Iwerks, Friz Freleng, Carmen Maxwell, Les Clark, Norm Blackburn, Rolin Hamilton, and Ben Clopton. Point is while it's possible Walt animated that scene it's also possible that he didn't. He didn't work on this short exclusively after all.
People believe Steam Boat Willy was the first Disney animation ever, when it was just the first successful Disney animation :) Oswald was the first character to star in any Disney show! (People also think Oswald or Mickey were the first animations in general; that's very incorrect, too. Though they made animation popular, animation goes as far back as the 1800s, I believe..)
I prefer this to todays "perfect" hi-tech computer animation! Like Disney's "Toy Story" or something, with 3 dimensional animation and everything is perfect, ect. These primitive cartoons are somehow more accessable.
The greatest feeling in the world is watching ALL things Disney while relaxing at your hotel room at Disney World while on summer vacation. For an extra feeling, rub sun screen lotion on your arms for that extra summer vacation smell.
No, since 1955. Universal who owned the short at the time didn't renew it. Though I think All Wet was the only 1927 Oswald short that did get it's copyright renewed but as of today that short entered public domain. Maybe Poor Papa as well since it was produced in 1927 as well.
Let's just say that Walt and his staff had legendary animators at the studio at the time. Ub Iwerks, Hugh Harman Friz Freleng, Rudolph Ising, Les Clark, among others though Ising didn't animate this short.
It was something that they'd play in theaters. Nitrate film was a pretty effective way of displaying films at that time compared to what came before it. Though they take a lot of effort to preserve and one nitrate film can become dangerous if it starts to decay. I'm glad they has ways to preserve these Oswald cartoons and even restore some of them, though sadly there are still lost Oswald cartoons and ones that remains partially found likely due to damaged parts of the film strips that couldn't be saved.
Yes it's in the public domain like every 1927 Oswald short. You can't just use the Oswald trademark like the font of his name or his full name since that's still considered trademark by Disney. Oswald Rabbit for example OK. Or Oswald the Rabbit or you could change the font. You just need to be careful on how you choose on how to name him for trademark reasons.
This was truly Oswald's Best Official Cartoon Episode of all time...And that's what made him a star in the first place.
@wetdryer animates The second to be produced, the first was "poor papa"
@wetdryer animates It OK ^u^
Awesome & fanatic cartoon!
This is Oswald The Lucky Rabbit’s finest hour!
Happy anniversary to Oswald!
Best video ever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@Bucky749 ikr
The copyright for this short was expired in 1955, thus falling into the public domain.
Mickey would like to disagree with that
Well, Mickey can’t stay out of the public domain forever.
Steamboat Willie goes into public domain in 2024 I think
@@zachatck64 Yep, though I heard Disney is trying to find a way to prevent that from happening
It's funny how Oswald's cartoons managed to fall into the public domain in the mid 20th century and yet it's 2022 and Mickey's cartoons are still in copyright. Imagine trying to keep cartoons that are nearly 100 years old.
0:47 oswald: *puts child behind him*, *sprays the child with oil or something*
the child: I AM NOW A ROTATING RABBIT
That's right I've heard the story
THIS MUSIC BRINGS ME BACK TO WHEN I FIRST GOT MY OSWALD DVD
2:22 the vibe I get when people obliviously crowd and obstruct the walkways in stores, airports, tourist attractions, etc.
Words can't describe how excellent this cartoon is!! :)
I like your profile.
I love seeing Oswald the lucky rabbit cartoons bring back memories because its really special how people love him even though he was abandon and stole from Walt Disney but then someone from the company somehow brought him back
Yeah memories from fnf
@@PathPainter Well there were also Blu-ray rereleases of Oswald cartoons sometimes after Disney got the rights to him again so there's a good chance that there's some late 2000's kids that grew up with one of them since the Oswald Blu-ray discs were released in 2007 if I remember correctly
@@sethhorst6158 Disney doesn’t own exclusive rights to Oswald, the character has been in public domain since the 1950s because Trolly Trouble was never renewed before all the 1970s copyright rework laws created via Disney’s influence. Granted, Disney does own any newer depictions of Oswald that they created. However, they cannot dispute the OG design, or anyone else’s reimagined version based off of Trolly Trouble.
5:10 animation error moment
yeah
Yo vi el error también en la piena
I’ve found legends that still watches these old cartoons, yall are cool
@@lian5173 legends like Oswald never die :)
I just love these old cartoons where objects where so alive and kinda elastic xD
X2
..
That technique is called "Rubber hose"
Either Oswald's tall or the animals are incredibly small
The animals are small, Oswald is a bit pudgy
Replying to a year old comment,, but those are his kids if I’m not mistaken
@@elliew.979 no. The kids were the ones in the beginning. If you look closely at the faces of the passengers, you will notice they are all different animals with similar bodies.
97 years later and this cartoon still hits hard 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Ninety-five years ago today, people watched this short for the first time in theaters.
to think this is just a sequence of frames, single drawings is mind blowing
One of my favorite Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoons.🙂
This is now in the public domain!
Been in the public domain since 1955 far as the short itself
Oswald himself is in the public domain
This short goes public domain on September 5, 2023.
No it's been in the public domain for decades since Universal/Lantz who owned the short at the time failed to renew the copyright. Only All Wet til this January was still copyrighted. Plus currently you still have all the 1928 and beyond Oswald shorts that are still under copyright including the last Disney ones and the first batch of Charles Mintz shorts next year.
THE DAY IS JANUARY 1, 2023. TROLLEY TROUBLES WITH OSWALD THE LUCKY RABBIT IS IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN, LET’S GO
It already was Universal who owned the short at the time didn't renew it in 1955.
Happy 95th Birthday to Oswald the Lucky Rabbit!
Happy 95th Anniversary, Oswald.
95 years makes Oswald a public domain character.
we really need Epic Mickey 3…
A very unpopular opinion
But I say the older the cartoon the better it is
Rubber Hose is the best animation, hands down!
True
Mickey's Choo Choo (1929) is almost identical to this one...
Mickey does the same thing with the oil and his train. He uses it as a Deodorant.
And the trains it's also having difficulties climbing a mound.
I love the wheels of this wagon.
What an awesome Cartoon.
Yeah
I'm seeing that old cartoon characters had a characteristic vehicle...
-Mickey Mouse: Steamboat
-Oswald The Lucky Rabbit: Trolley
-Bendy the Demon: Train/Locomotive
-Felix the Cat: ¿?
Os desenhos antigos são tão bons de assistir quanto os desenhos de agora
Oswald is awesome!!!!
this was actually the second oswald short but first to release the first short ever created was poor papa and poor papa was released the following year in 1928
Oswald meets Mugman
The only luck Oswald had was surviving the crash. But now he has a destroyed trolley, lots of unsatisfied passengers, and will probably this will all come out of his wages.
And here's were all the GOOD LUCK BEGAN
5:30 So we just leaving everyone else stuck in the bottom lmao
Oswald committed homicide on innocent trolley riders for fact that he didn’t even care about them
Every one already fell off
Happy 95th birthday Oswald.
I miss these cartoons
Are you like 90+ years old
Love old shows
OMG... I've seen a Porky version of this!!! WB bit off of Oswald! Wow!
I like how Oswald has helper rabbits
Ahem those are his children
Happy 95th birthday to the older brother of Mickey Mouse.
“im not that old” oswald 2021
No
@@hahafunnichannel what u mean
@@Allu7DaysBan just...I don't like when people refer to things that are fanmade on an official piece of content...
we need some talented animator to do an fan animation with plane crazy mickey and oswald the lucky rabbit
PLANE CRAZY MICKEY GUY
Love it
This needs a new opening logo for the Walt Disney Animation Studios for future.
That cow was the best 😄👏🏻 Also, how could Oswald pass between all the guys inside....
are you really questioning the logic of a 1920s cartoon?
Xd
, xd
Imagine one person watched this and is still alive
Imagine, If This Was A Merrie Melodies Short Of 1933
Oswald is the train rabbit and Mickey is the steamboat mouse. This gave me a idea to draw. :troll:
Uh oh
Me encanta este cortometraje
Mucho
I love Oswald
Me too sucks they abandoned him and just tried to not talk about it
This is now public domain.
Happy 95th birthday to Oswald!
I Love oswod
Se não fosse pelo jogo de wii "Disney Epic Mickey" de 2010 e o presidente da disney na época que a empresa recuperou o personagem, o oswald não seria tão conhecido, lembrado e amado hoje em dia, o personagem até os início dos anos 2000 tava esquecido e guardado numa gaveta lá na universal, ele até o surgimento do pica pau tinha sido redesenhado estilo universal, pra distanciar do design do walt disney, depois do pica pau o oswald virou um coadjuvante nas histórias do passarinho, sério e história do oswald é um pouco triste na era universal, hoje ele voltou a ter seu reconhecimento e muitos o amam hoje.
Eu me importo?🥶💀💀💀💀💀
12 months Mickey.
Oswald is cool 😎
Oswald is now in the public domain, but his blue pants and the "Lucky Rabbit" name are NOT. Disney also still keeps the trademark for him.
Though in the case of most of the 1927 shorts they already been in the public domain since 1955.
Trouble with the trolley, eh?
Pony 1925 Oswald 1927 Mickey Mouse 1928
My fav part 3:02
Wow I like this animation
Oswald
3 Little Mickeys Mouses
Prior to Oswald Disney attempted to rip off Felix the cat with a character named Julius cat who looked suspiciously like Felix
I could see mickey in the tower 1:22
Oh shit
Hey wait, aren't the little rabbits his 400 children?
420 to be exact.
This isn't a joke.
epic flashback
As Seen on The Dumbo Show
Awesome
Sorry for watching without your permission
4:20 here it comes
!
1:34 okay, who made that railroad?
Oh it was Walt disney
Walt Disney
well, we've gotta get a time machine to go back to the 1920's to get one of those trolleys that can expand like that...
Disney
Possibly but keep this in mind. Yes Walt directed, wrote, and was one of the animators in this short, it's unclear without proof that Walt did animated that specific scene. After all, you had other uncredited animators like Hugh Harman, Ub Iwerks, Friz Freleng, Carmen Maxwell, Les Clark, Norm Blackburn, Rolin Hamilton, and Ben Clopton. Point is while it's possible Walt animated that scene it's also possible that he didn't. He didn't work on this short exclusively after all.
well was a legend
The cow is prototype Clarabelle Cow.
That means Clarabelle was the first Mickey Mouse character
I love the cow part because it good music
😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀
Osi love oswald
Walt Disney Oswald logo comercial
muy bueno oswald
FUNNY AND CUTE
Happy 95 years of existing old lucky rabbit
he’s entered the public domain at 95 years old
@@aaronlane8276that's one mess right there
@@themoonman143 And it’s all Disney’s fault for not wanting to part with Mickey Mouse’s exclusivity
@@aaronlane8276 which the original cartoon short will lose copyright
People believe Steam Boat Willy was the first Disney animation ever, when it was just the first successful Disney animation :)
Oswald was the first character to star in any Disney show!
(People also think Oswald or Mickey were the first animations in general; that's very incorrect, too. Though they made animation popular, animation goes as far back as the 1800s, I believe..)
Far as the company's origins you have go to the Alice Comedies that was it's processor.
Julius & Pete would like to have a word with you.
I prefer this to todays "perfect" hi-tech computer animation! Like Disney's "Toy Story" or something, with 3 dimensional animation and everything is perfect, ect. These primitive cartoons are somehow more accessable.
The greatest feeling in the world is watching ALL things Disney while relaxing at your hotel room at Disney World while on summer vacation. For an extra feeling, rub sun screen lotion on your arms for that extra summer vacation smell.
😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀😀
Dude’s foot is detachable?
2:59
4:20 you all signed the wavers right?
Oswald Mario
Es casi tan bueno como steamboat willie🐰🐭
What
Basically the user said if my tablet translator is right that this short is almost as good as Steamboat Willie.
@@stephenholloway6893 You are right 😉
how do you still renember him
Mickey Mouse doesn't hold a candle to Oswald the Lucky Rabbit or Felix the Cat for that matter.
Unpopular Opinion: Oswald >>>>>>> Mickey
i think this is why Oswald is kissing her own feet because Oswald is love her life and her body
Ah, yes. Oswald’s female.
0:54 error incoming i forgot the ear, 4:24 our hand white, 5:11 and he's forgot "my leg!"
woah
So as of today, this public domain, right?
No, since 1955. Universal who owned the short at the time didn't renew it. Though I think All Wet was the only 1927 Oswald short that did get it's copyright renewed but as of today that short entered public domain. Maybe Poor Papa as well since it was produced in 1927 as well.
だいすき
How did they have this in 19 27
Let's just say that Walt and his staff had legendary animators at the studio at the time. Ub Iwerks, Hugh Harman Friz Freleng, Rudolph Ising, Les Clark, among others though Ising didn't animate this short.
It was something that they'd play in theaters. Nitrate film was a pretty effective way of displaying films at that time compared to what came before it. Though they take a lot of effort to preserve and one nitrate film can become dangerous if it starts to decay. I'm glad they has ways to preserve these Oswald cartoons and even restore some of them, though sadly there are still lost Oswald cartoons and ones that remains partially found likely due to damaged parts of the film strips that couldn't be saved.
anyone gonna question HOW THEY GOT THIS FOOTAGE?!?!?!?!?!?!?!!??!?!!?!?
I assume it came from the Disney Oswald DVD.
The cartoon shown here is ripped from a 2007 Walt Disney treasures DVD, theirs a small section at the end about who supplied the flim print
Oswald da wabbit, eh?
Isso isso isso!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jajajajan oswal so much funny
so can someone remake this short or
Yes it's in the public domain like every 1927 Oswald short. You can't just use the Oswald trademark like the font of his name or his full name since that's still considered trademark by Disney. Oswald Rabbit for example OK. Or Oswald the Rabbit or you could change the font. You just need to be careful on how you choose on how to name him for trademark reasons.