User:Renamed user 12euhfu3hf98238h98923h894/sandbox/rejects

Dinner Time (1928 film)
Dinner Time is a 1928 animated short film which was directed by Paul Terry and John Foster. The film was one of the first sound-on-film animated short film to be released into the general public, before Steamboat Willie, which is claimed by many to be the first sychronised film.

The film is part of the then-silent cartoon series entitled Aesop's Film Fables. It would then be changed to the name Aesop's Sound Fables.

A Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight
A Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight is a 1930 animated short film which is presented by Max Fleischer and was directed by Dave Fleischer. The film, which was originally released by Paramount Pictures, features a sing-along version to Theodore August Metz and Joe Hayden's "There'll be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight", a song that was originally published in 1896.

The film showcases a party at a barn near the town-hall, which is attended to by a plethora of mouses at night, some of whom get drunk.

Copyrighted on the 1st of August 1930, and released on the same day, the film is part of the "follow the bouncing ball" series entitled Screen Songs, these set of films would invite the audience to sing that-said song, and would also instruct the audience on how to do it.