Walt Disney Treasures: Wave Six

The sixth wave of Walt Disney Treasures was released on December 19, 2006. It contains four separate DVD sets.

More Silly Symphonies

This set contains all Silly Symphonies not released on the first volume in Wave One. Leonard Maltin mentions in the intro that the original title cards to most of these shorts are presumably lost, and therefore, new title cards had been recreated making a close approximation of how they originally looked. However, these title cards weren't used on the initial pressings of this set.[1] Also, the cartoon The Night Before Christmas was an edited version, missing footage of toys resembling Amos 'n Andy. Replacement discs were initially issued which corrected the errors on the original copies. From the Disney website, customers can call an 800 number to request replacement copies. Unlike the first volume, this was never released in a Region 2 format (except in Japan, which uses the NTSC video system).

A total of 65,000 sets were produced.

Disc one

From the vault

(*) = with optional original ending

Bonus features

  • Various audio commentaries by noted historians

Disc two

(*) = when the DVDs were reissued, "The Night Before Christmas" was moved to "From the Vault" section on the set.

From the vault

Bonus features

  • Silly Symphonies Rediscovered featurette
  • Animators at Play Rare film of a studio softball game from 1930, narrated by Leonard Maltin
  • Galleries
  • Various audio commentaries by noted historians
  • Easter egg: French language track on Little Hiawatha

The Complete Pluto, Volume Two

This second volume of Pluto cartoons completes the collection started in Walt Disney Treasures: Wave Four. It also includes three cartoon shorts starring Figaro from the feature film, Pinocchio and Minnie Mouse appears in two of them. This was never released in region 2 (except in Japan).

A total of 65,000 sets were produced.

Disc one

  • Rescue Dog (1947)
  • Mail Dog (1947)
  • Pluto's Blue Note (1947)
  • Bone Bandit (1948)
  • Pluto's Fledgling (1948)
  • Pluto's Purchase (1948)
  • Bubble Bee (1949)
  • Pluto's Surprise Package (1949)
  • Pluto's Sweater (1949)
  • Pueblo Pluto (1949)
  • Sheep Dog (1949)

Bonus features

  • Master class: Animator Randy Cartwright discusses "Bone Trouble"
  • Master class: Animator Andreas Deja discusses "Hawaiian Holiday"
  • Pluto's process: A deconstruction of Pluto's Judgement Day
  • Pluto's process: Pencil test reel for Pluto's Judgement Day

Disc two

  • Camp Dog (1950)
  • Food for Feudin' (1950)
  • Pests of the West (1950)
  • Pluto and the Gopher (1950)
  • Pluto's Heart Throb (1950)
  • Primitive Pluto (1950)
  • Puss Cafe (1950)
  • Wonder Dog (1950)
  • Cold Storage (1951)

From the vault

  • Cat Nap Pluto (1948)
  • Cold Turkey (1951)
  • Plutopia (1951)

Bonus features

  • Bath Day (1946)
  • Figaro and Frankie (1947)

From the vault

  • Figaro and Cleo (1943)
  • Gallery: Pluto backgrounds
  • Gallery: Pluto in progress
  • Gallery: Pluto published

The Hardy Boys: The Mystery of the Applegate Treasure

This volume features the first of the two Hardy Boys serials that were shown on the Mickey Mouse Club.

A total of 65,000 sets were produced.

In the late 1950s, Disney contracted with the Stratemeyer Syndicate and Grosset & Dunlap to produce two Hardy Boys TV serials, starring Tim Considine and Tommy Kirk.

The first of the serials, The Mystery of the Applegate Treasure, was aired on The Mickey Mouse Club in 1956 during the show's second season. To appeal to the show's audience, the Hardy Boys were portrayed as younger than in the books, seeming to be 11 or 12 years old. The script, written by Jackson Gillis, was based on the first Hardy Boys book, The Tower Treasure, and the serial was aired in 19 episodes of 15 minutes each with production costs of $5,700.

The main characters are Tim Considine as Frank Hardy and Tommy Kirk as Joe Hardy.

Disc 1

Mickey Mouse Club (complete episode) 1 October 1956 includes: The Mystery of the Applegate Treasure: An Introduction

  • The Stranger (2 October 1956)
  • A Real Case (3 October 1956)
  • The First Clue (4 October 1956)
  • The Fugitive (5 October 1956)
  • Applegate's Gold (8 October 1956)
  • Dig for Treasure (9 October 1956)
  • A Pirate's Chest (10 October 1956)
  • Boys in Trouble (11 October 1956)
  • The Female Detective (12 October 1956)


Bonus Feature: From Dixon to Disney featurette

Disc 2

  • Iola's Bravery (15 October 1956)
  • Footsteps in the Tower (16 October 1956)
  • The Prisoner Speaks (17 October 1956)
  • A Strange Confession (18 October 1956)
  • A Golden Clue (19 October 1956)
  • The Final Search (22 October 1956)
  • The Tower's Secret (23 October 1956)
  • Never Say Die (24 October 1956)
  • Boys in Danger (25 October 1956)
  • The Tower Treasure (26 October 1956)


Bonus Feature: The Hardy Boys Unmasked featurette and Production galleries


A second serial, The Mystery of Ghost Farm, followed in 1957, with an original story by Jackson Gillis. Note: the second serial has not been released as a Walt Disney Treasures set.

Your Host, Walt Disney

This volume features four original, uncut broadcast episodes from the Disneyland television series (one of which is repeated from "Disneyland USA" released in Walt Disney Treasures: Wave One), as well as other television specials produced in a similar fashion and the host is Walt Disney.

A total of 65,000 sets were produced.

Disc one

  • "Where Do the Stories Come From?" (1956)
  • "The Fourth Anniversary Show" (1957)
  • "Kodak Presents Disneyland '59" (1959)

Bonus features

  • "My Dad, Walt Disney": Interview with Diane Disney-Miller, Walt's daughter
  • Photo galleries
  • Easter egg: A portion of the "Fourth Anniversary Show" shown in color. To access, go to "Program Selection", then select "Where do the Stories Come From?" Move the cursor to the right to highlight an arrow on the other side of the title and press enter.

Disc two

  • "Backstage Party" (1961)
  • "Disneyland 10th Anniversary" (1965)

Bonus features

  • "I Captured the King of the Leprechauns" (1959)
  • Disneyland USA at Radio City Music Hall: Live introduction to a showing of "Disneyland, USA" featuring an in-person Mickey Mouse interacting with Walt on screen
  • Working with Walt: Memories from actors and actresses who were children during their time working at the Disney studio
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References

  1. Sharp, Matthew (July 28, 2007). "Walt Disney Treasures - More Silly Symphonies - Disc comparison". Retrieved November 30, 2010.
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