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| Hold Anything | |
|---|---|
| Title card | |
| Directed by | Hugh Harman Rudolf Ising |
| Produced by | Hugh Harman Rudolf Ising |
| Starring | Bernard B. Brown Rochelle Hudson (both uncredited) |
| Music by | Frank Marsales |
| Animation by | Isadore Freleng Norm Blackburn |
| Color process | Black-and-white |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures The Vitaphone Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 6:22 |
| Language | English |
Hold Anything is a 1930 American comedy short film directed by Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising. It is the third film in the Looney Tunes series featuring Bosko. [2] It was released as early as August 9, 1930. [1] [a] It is loosely based on the lost film Hold Everything , one of whose songs, "Don't Hold Everything", features prominently in the cartoon. It was animated by Isadore "Friz" Freleng and Norman Blackburn.
Bosko works on a construction site with several mice resembling Mickey Mouse, playing music while drilling screws. As the mice march to the beat of the music, a mouse zones off and is left behind, only to fall onto a saw. Bosko toys with the mouse on the saw and temporarily decapitates it, much to its chagrin. The mouse is unintentionally eaten by a nearby goat, both of which unwillingly lift Bosko up a metal beam. Bosko spots his girlfriend, Honey, working in a nearby office building. After some brief flirtation, Bosko jumps down into Honey's office, pulls out a piece of sheet music, places it in Honey's typewriter, and begins playing "Don't Hold Everything" on the typewriter like a piano. The goat, tired of Bosko's antics, leaves his post and attempts to eat a steam engine, inflating and beginning to float upward. Bosko reaches out the window and begins playing the goat like a calliope. The goat begins to float away, and as Bosko hangs on for his life, he accidentally grabs onto a set of udders and gets sprayed with milk, distracting him enough to lose his grip and fall onto a set of bricks. Bosko inexplicably divides into six miniature Boskos and begins playing the bricks as a xylophone before he reforms to his usual self and the cartoon irises out.