Template:Infobox Hollywood cartoon

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An Infobox Hollywood cartoon may be used to summarize information about an American-produced theatrical animated short film. It was created for use by Wikipedia:WikiProject American animation.

Please do not make major changes to the infobox, such as the addition of new fields (e.g. MPAA ratings), without proposing and discussing it on the talk page first. Thank you.

Duck Amuck
Looney Tunes (Daffy Duck) series
Example.png
The title card of Duck Amuck
Directed byCharles M. Jones
Produced byEddie Selzer
Story byMichael Maltese
Voices byMel Blanc
Music byCarl Stalling
Animation byBen Washam
Ken Harris
Lloyd Vaughan
Layouts byMaurice Noble
Backgrounds byPhilip DeGuard
StudioWarner Bros. Cartoons
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date(s)February 28, 1953 (USA)
Color processTechnicolor
Running time7 min
LanguageEnglish

Usage

{{Infobox Hollywood cartoon
| cartoon_name      = 
| series            = 
| image             = 
| image_size        = 
| caption           = 
| director          = 
| producer          = 
| story_artist      = 
| narrator          = 
| voice_actor       = 
| musician          = 
| animator          = 
| layout_artist     = 
| background_artist = 
| studio            = 
| distributor       = 
| release_date      = 
| color_process     = 
| runtime           = 
| country           = 
| language          = 
| preceded_by       = 
| followed_by       = 
}}
  • Cartoon Name: The official title of the film, as spelled onscreen or in official production documents.
  • Series: The short film series to which the short belongs. For blanket series such as Looney Tunes and Terrytoons, notate the starring character(s) of the short alongside the series title, for example Terrytoons (Mighty Mouse) series instead of just Terrytoons series.
  • Image and Caption: All you need for the image code is the name of the image file without the "Image:" at the front. Each image is automatically formatted to a maximum width of 200 pixels. The image for the infobox should be a poster, the main title card (if it has artwork depicting the characters), or a clear screenshot of the characters. The caption should identify the characters depicted, and explain where the image came from.
  • The credits for Director(s), Producer(s), Story(board) artist(s), Narrator, Voice actor(s), Musician(s), Animator(s), Layout artist(s) and Background artist(s) should identify the persons credited onscreen, as well as others who were not credited. Cast and crew should ideally be credited as they were in the original onscreen titles (for example, Charles M. Jones instead of Chuck Jones for most of his films). Voice actors and musicians are optional fields.
  • Studio: The animation studio/company who made the film, if it is not the same as the distributor. For example, all "Warner Bros." cartoons released before 1944 were produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions. This field is optional.
  • Distributor: The company who released the film.
  • Release date: The release date for each country, followed by the country name in parenthesis: February 15, 1991 (USA)
  • Color process: Type of film stock used to make the film. For most cartoons, this should be filled only with one of the following choices: black and white, Sepia tone, Technicolor, Technicolor (two-color), Cinecolor, Polacolor, or Metrocolor. For more modern (post-1970) cartoons, "Color" will suffice.
  • Runtime: The running time of the cartoon, rounded to the nearest minute.
  • Country: The country of the film's origin.
  • Language: The language spoken in the film. If it is a silent film, type "Silent".
  • Preceded by: If the film is part of a series, insert the film that preceded it in the series.
  • Followed by: If the film is part of a series, insert the film that followed it in the series.

Microformat

The HTML mark up produced by this template includes an hCalendar microformat, which makes the event details parsable by computers, either acting automatically to catalogue article across Wikipedia, or via a browser tool operated by a person, to (for example) add the subject to a calendar or diary application. For more information about the use of microformats on Wikipedia, please see the microformat project.

Dates will only appear if you use {{Start date}} or {{End date}} (use the former for single dates).

hCalendar uses HTML classes including:

  • attendee
  • contact
  • description
  • dtend
  • dtstart
  • location
  • organiser
  • summary
  • vevent

See also


it:Template:Infobox Hollywood cartoon pt:Predefinição:Cinema/Hollywood cartoon