Bosko the Talk-Ink Kid

1929 NR 5m 5.6

A cartoonist draws Bosko, who promptly comes to life.

A cartoonist named Rudolf Ising sits at his drawing board, smoking a cigarette and crumpling up his latest drawing. He tries a new drawing, and this time he produces Bosko, a caricatured Negro boy with a simple, rounded design. Once finished, Bosko becomes animate on the paper. "Well, here I is," he declares to the mildly surprised cartoonist. "And I shore feel good!" Bosko proceeds to dance, play the piano--and sing. But his singing is so bad that the cartoonist sucks Bosko back into his ink pen and then pours him into his inkwell. But the end of this demo reel proves that Bosko can't be beaten so easily.

Bosko the Talk-Ink Kid background

Info about Bosko the Talk-Ink Kid

Studio(s): Harman-Ising Productions

Originally Released: May 01, 1929

Production Country: United States

Genres: Animation, Comedy, Family, Short