Talk:Tom and Jerry: The Legend of Frosty the Snowman/@comment-25208648-20190104002208/@comment-68.224.57.136-20190104040236

You're welcome, but I'm not so sure if I can be able to compare your artwork with the right scenes from The Legend of Frosty the Snowman (2004, 2005).

Fortunetely for Tom and Jerry's direct-to-DVD, theatrical and television crossovers with the Rankin/Bass holiday classics (1964–present), Curious George (2006), Ambassador Magma (The Space Giants in North America) (1966–1967), Dragon Ball (1986–present), Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures (1987–1988), and Sesame Street (1969–present) as timeline sequels to Tom and Jerry: The Movie (1992), I have collected 111 out of 114 cartoons produced by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from 1940 to 1958, so that you can cut-out the characters and their actions from each cartoon. Tom and Jerry's martial arts movements can be seen in Rembrandt Films' The Tom and Jerry Cartoon Kit (1962), Hanna-Barbera's The Wacky World of Sports and Gopher Broke on The Tom and Jerry Show (1975), and Warner Bros. Animation's The Karate Guard (2005). In case 14 feature-films aren't enough, I'll bring the list of the cartoons and more for the comparision rights of reusing animation and live-action references.

That is all. Thank you, and remember... This is the final week of the holidays: the Christmas season right here in the United States of America (Monday, November 19, 2018 – Sunday, January 6, 2019).