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(Removed Category:Walter Lantz, added a link to the page Walter Lantz -- Walter Lantz is not an example of a Wartime Cartoon, he made Wartime Cartoons) |
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* Similarly, in ''One Meat Brawl'', a groundhog emerges from his hole on Groundhog Day and is immediately fired on by a pack of hunters. Retreating to safety, he blames it on "meat shortages". The cartoon debuted post-WWII (1947), but rationing was sill fresh enough in the public mind to be played as a gag.
* Frank Tashlin's ''Plane Daffy'' stars the duck in a squadron of carrier pigeons. As the resident woman-hater, he's sent out to deliver an important message without being seduced by Nazi spy [[Mata Hari|Hatta Mari]], who's managed to claim 28 of the previous pigeons.
* ''[[Any Bonds Today?]]'' was a 1942 [[Propaganda Piece|propaganda film]] commissioned by the United States Department of the Treasury to Warner Bros., featuring Bugs, Elmer and Porky singing and dancing to promote war bonds. It would later be [[Overshadowed by Controversy]], and is known more for its [[Values Dissonance]] in the form of Bugs Bunny donning blackface.
=== [[Walter Lantz]] ===
* Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B
* 21$ A Day (Once A Month)
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=== Columbia Cartoons ===
* Screen Gems made several wartime shorts, most notably "Song of Victory", which features an allegory of how [[World War
=== Others ===
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[[Category:Military and Warfare Tropes]]
[[Category:The Golden Age of Animation]]
[[Category:The Forties]]
[[Category:Animation Genres]]
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