What the heck?
[ranking: 21]
Disney may push the envelope a bit with cartoon villains. but in 1929, the company learned the hard way that making an entire cartoon about hell is a bad idea. Above, you'll find Satan feeding his three headed dog in the ultra-creepy "Hell's Bells."
50 Shades of Donald
[ranking: 9]
Let's just say that Donald's punishment methods, which he later uses on these African tribesmen in the 1954 film Spare the Rod, might raise a few eyebrows today. Ultimately, the depiction of the cannibalistic African natives was deemed so offensive that the cartoon was censored and cut down to about half its original length.
The Big Bad Wolf at His Worst
[ranking: 22]
This bad boy, entitled The Thrifty Pig, was made back in 1941 before the US had even entered WWII. Originally aimed at Canadian audiences, the film depicts a pig who is encouraged to fight back against this Third Reich-loving wolf by purchasing bonds.
The Most Disturbing Disguise Ever Caught on Film
[ranking: 5]
In 1934, Disney released a cartoon in which the Big Bad Wolf sports one of the most offensive disguises ever. In attempting to get the pigs to open the door, he appears as every bad Jewish stereotype in the book all rolled into one big caricature.
Donald Duck's Adventures in Occupied Germany
[ranking: 6]
First of all, we'd like to take a moment to wish you the best of luck in ever seeing Donald Duck the same way again after what you've witnessed here today. That's right, in the 1943 cartoon "Der Fuehrer's Face," Donald here jumps ship in order to join the National Socialist German Workers' Party.
But don't worry. In the end, it turns out the whole thing is a terrible dream designed to show kids exactly how horrible an idea it was.
From Grease to Guns
[ranking: 26]
So apparently grease can be used to make bombs? In this short film, the narrator stops Pluto from consuming some leftover grease so that he can instead show him how to use it to light up Third Reich members.
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