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Tommy Tucker's Tooth is a live-action short film by Walt Disney at his short-lived Laugh-O-Grams studio in Kansas City from 1922. The film was one of two commissioned by Kansas City Dentist Thomas B. McCrum. It earned the Laugh-O-Gram studio $500.
Tommy Tucker's Tooth is a live-action short film by Walt Disney at his short-lived Laugh-O-Grams studio in Kansas City from 1922. The film was one of two commissioned by Kansas City Dentist Thomas B. McCrum. It earned the Laugh-O-Gram studio $500.
The film's focus on basic dental hygiene and the importance of individual responsibility for one's health is a universally accepted educational message, lacking any explicit partisan political alignment.
This 1937 animated short features generic cartoon characters without explicit racial or gender characteristics that deviate from mainstream representation of the era. The narrative is purely educational, focusing on dental hygiene, and does not engage with or critique traditional identities or incorporate any DEI themes.
This 1937 Walt Disney animated short, 'Tommy Tucker's Tooth,' is a public health film promoting dental hygiene. It features no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, as its narrative is solely focused on a boy's experience with tooth decay and a visit to the dentist.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Tommy Tucker's Tooth is an original animated short film from 1922. It does not adapt characters from prior source material, historical records, or previous installments where a character's gender was established and then changed.
This 1922 animated short features original characters created for the film. There is no prior source material, historical record, or previous installment establishing the race of any character before this production, thus precluding a race swap.
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