June 10, 2008
Eveready Harton in Buried Treasure, One of the First Pornographic Cartoons Ever Made

Posted by Andrew Hearst

Created anonymously by a group of professional animators in about 1929, the silent short Eveready Harton in Buried Treasure is a gleeful exploration of the penetrative arts. The four-and-a-half-minute short follows the travails of the uncomfortably well-endowed title character as he wanders a barren landscape in search of satisfaction. Along the way, he encounters a self-pleasuring maiden, various sexually aroused animals, a surprised husband, and a donkey-humping farmer, whom Harton challenges to a duel. A penis duel.

Eveready Harton in Buried Treasure is one of the earliest examples of an animated porn film. According to its Wikipedia page, several famous animators supposedly made the short for a private party in honor of the pioneering animator Winsor McCay, whose work greatly influenced Walt Disney and is still held in high esteem by Maurice Sendak, Chris Ware, and other luminaries.

This totally isn’t safe for work, so be careful.

I’m pretty sure the intertitles in this copy are not the originals.

The Wikipedia page includes this backstory quote from Disney animator Ward Kimball: “The first porno-cartoon was made in New York. It was called ‘Eveready Harton’ and was made in the late 20’s, silent, of course—by three studios. Each one did a section of it without telling the other studios what they were doing. Studio A finished the first part and gave the last drawing to Studio B. … Involved were Max Fleischer, Paul Terry and the Mutt and Jeff studio. … A couple of guys who were there [at the party] tell me the laughter almost blew the top off the hotel where they were screening it.”





Thoog

June 11, 2008

4:28 PM


I saw this at a cartoon film festival years ago. the name is Everyready “Hardon” - with a d, not a t. That makes sense. “Harton” doesn’t.

Andrew Hearst

June 11, 2008

4:58 PM


I did see that alternate spelling in a couple of places, and it’s more logical. But “Harton” is the more common spelling in online references to the film, and it appears that that was the name used in the original…

Matt Sheridan

June 11, 2008

7:57 PM


…Meanwhile, the film itself clearly says “Horton”. What gives?

Marla

June 11, 2008

9:52 PM


Wow, his dick was hairy all the way to the tip. Weird.

Keal

June 12, 2008

12:46 AM


My favorite part was when he pulled out his dick wheelbarrow.

Crapulent

June 12, 2008

3:02 AM


To Marla: That wasn’t hair, they were cactus needles.

richpee

June 12, 2008

3:10 AM


According to wikipedia, it’s Eveready Harton in Buried Treasure, also known as Eveready Harton, Eveready, Buried Treasure, or Pecker Island. Whereas the title isn’t the most pertinent part of this, I would point out that “Harton” sounds like a name that is a play on words (clever) as opposed to going for a more obvious joke, “Hardon,” which doesn’t sound as much like a name (not so clever).

For my money, I’d rather watch this than Steamboat WIlly.

peter

June 12, 2008

7:27 AM


been trying to find the felix movies for ages

passin'thru

June 12, 2008

11:48 AM


The farmer wasn’t humping a cow- it was either a donkey or a mule. (Probably a mule.)

travis

June 12, 2008

11:58 AM


matt, the titles aren’t in the original film. so what the film says doesn’t matter.

MirKat

June 12, 2008

1:47 PM


i was more bothered that he bit a dick fresh from the donkey. :|


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