
Bottles
Directed by Hugh HarmanA dark and stormy night in a drugstore. The druggist mixes a potion and falls asleep. The skull-and-crossbones on the bottle comes to life and drips the potion on the druggist, shrinking him. The baby bottles start crying (in three-part harmony). The druggist lights a lantern, then plays a perfume atomizer like bagpipes, bringing a bottle of Scotch Whiskey to life. Other bottles that come alive include smelling salts, bath salts, Listerine, perfume, india ink (doing a snake charmer bit with some Cobra toothpaste). A Dutch boy and girl go figure skating on a mirror, with help from some talcum-powder snow. The druggist wraps a pipe around himself and plays it as a tuba. The skull and crossbones hatch a nefarious scheme, helped by the witch hazel and spirits of ammonia ghosts. He gets sent through distilling apparatus and is otherwise mangled and then he wakes up.
Where to Watch Bottles
Bottles Trivia
Bottles was released on January 11, 1936.
Bottles was directed by Hugh Harman.
Bottles has a runtime of 10 min.
Bottles was produced by Hugh Harman, Rudolf Ising.
The key characters in Bottles are Old Druggist (voice) (Rudolf Ising), Junior Bottle / Vanishing Cream (voice) (Bernice Hansen), Asorbine Bottle / Hot Water Bottle (voice) (Delos Jewkes).
Bottles is a Horror, Animation, Musical film.
Bottles has an audience rating of 7.1 out of 10.







