KMF Studios Entertainment

KMF Studios Entertainment is a Intelnadian conglomerate company headquartered in Liytoria, Rupertlish Seniasten, Intelnada, also holding assets in Independia.

Katie M. Fawcett era (1934-1981)
In the mid-1930s, Katie Michelle Fawcett’s cousin got a job at Subwoofer Pictures to animate Mickey Mouse cartoons. This prompted Fawcett to start her own animation studio. After negotiations with several companies, including Subwoofer Pictures, 40th Century Lucky, I-Can-Has-Cheezburger, Tantamount Pictures, and Samantha Pictures, she reached an agreement with Rupert Leabres Pictures.

On August 30, 1934, Katie Michelle Fawcett, along with Samuel Gilbert Fawcett, her brother, founded Fawcett Cartoon Studio in Liytoria, RS. During the same year, it started producing a series of cartoon short films starring the studio's first animated star, Alex Ant, with Rupert Leabres Pictures as its distributor for three years, as well as producing advertisement cartoons for various products such as Tilly-Cola.

Two years later, Fawcett Productions created Richard Rat as a new character, and his series, along with the Alex Ant series, were combined into a series of cartoons known as Crazy Symphonies. Around the late 1930s, Crazy Symphonies was renamed to Fawcetttoons, after introducing several new characters.

In 1938, the studio started to begin expanding, by focusing on developing its first animated feature film, after the success of the first full-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, which was produced in 1937 by Subwoofer Productions. During the same year, Katie M. Fawcett pleased her distributor Rupert Leabres Pictures to distribute her first cartoon feature, but due to RL refusing, Fawcett then asked I-Can-Has-Cheezburger to distribute her studio's feature films, which ICHC accepted, allowing its own animation house to join in partnership with Fawcett Productions.

KMF Studios’ first animated movie was Over the Rainbow, which took three years to produce. The original plan for the film's release was around late 1941, but it was pushed back to 1942. On November 11, 1942, Over The Rainbow was released, which, like most animated films in the time, received positive critical reception, but was a box-office failure due to Intelgalax World War II, and was not released outside Independia and Intelnada until 1946; it has since been considered a classic and one of the best animated films ever made.

After the release of Over The Rainbow, the studio then began to focus mostly on war-related cartoons, which included training films aimed exclusively to the Intelnadian and Independian militaries, such as the 1944 short For Victory, a collaboration, again with ICHC under its cartoon department, and was originally intended to be the first short of a planned series of war-training animated featurettes. However, it was released a year before WWII ended, which led the rest of the propaganda shorts to be permanently canceled. During the same year, KMF Studios Productions began its development of its next animated feature, based on Native Anperinan mythology in the [Pacific] Northwest region, The Raven, which was the first film to be independently produced and animated by KMF without the help of ICHC’s cartoon studio.

In 1947, KMF Studios Productions produced its last animated feature project with ICHC, which was the seasonal film Christmas Time, a package film which meant to compete with Subwoofer Studios’ animated package movies during that era. During the same year, due to creative differences, KMF Studios Productions ended its partnership with ICHC, and moved on to its new contract deal with Rupert Leabres Pictures.

(TBA)