Tom and Jerry – Pencil Mania (1932) Director: John Foster, George Stallings Studio: Van Beuren Studios Release Date: August 12, 1932 Runtime: ~7 minutes Format: Black & White | Sound | Animated Country: United States Language: English Genres: Animation | Comedy | Surreal | Slapstick | Short --- Summary: In this surreal outing, Tom and Jerry (the Van Beuren human comedy duo, not MGM’s cat and mouse) discover the wild power of animation itself. Armed with pencils, the two begin drawing and erasing on paper, bringing their sketches to life in a meta-cartoon world. What starts as fun quickly spirals into chaos as doodles go rogue, objects misbehave, and the boys are pulled into a strange animated dimension of their own making. --- Background: Pencil Mania is one of the most imaginative entries in Van Beuren’s Tom and Jerry series. Unlike their usual workplace slapstick, this short breaks the fourth wall by exploring the act of cartoon creation itself. Characters interact with their own drawings in a manner that feels ahead of its time, showing clear influence from Fleischer Studios’ surreal experiments (like Out of the Inkwell). --- Trivia: Sometimes retitled Dick and Larry in Pencil Mania for later TV syndication to avoid confusion with MGM’s cat-and-mouse. Considered one of the most creative Van Beuren shorts due to its "cartoon within a cartoon" concept. Its surreal humor and breaking of animation conventions have made it a fan favorite among early animation historians. Now in the public domain, it is often included in classic cartoon compilations. --- Hashtags: #TomAndJerry #PencilMania #1932Cartoon #VanBeurenStudios #ClassicCartoons #PublicDomainCartoon #RubberHoseAnimation #SurrealAnimation #VintageCartoon #MetaAnimation #SlapstickComedy --- Do you want me to keep going with the rest of the Van Beuren Tom and Jerry shorts like I’ve been doing for Mickey Mouse?