Looney Tunes And Merrie Melodies Hq Project › (Confirmed)

What makes the HQ Project unique is its bifurcated structure. Unlike previous attempts to preserve classic animation (which focused solely on streaming or limited theatrical releases), this initiative splits its resources into two equally critical halves:

1. The Physical Archive (Burbank, CA) Located on the historic Warner Bros. Ranch lot—on the actual site where the original Termite Terrace once stood—the new Jones-Freleng Preservation Center is a climate-controlled, state-of-the-art vault. For decades, the original negatives for hundreds of shorts were stored in disparate salt mines and commercial storage units. The HQ Project has consolidated over 1,100 original shorts (from Sinkin’ in the Bathtub (1930) to Another Froggy Evening (1995)) into one location.

Archivists are employing a process called “wet-gate scanning” on the original nitrate and acetate negatives, a method that fills in scratches optically before digital conversion. Furthermore, the physical wing includes a public gallery opening in Q4 2026, featuring original storyboards, cel setups, and the actual recording equipment Mel Blanc used to voice nearly 90% of the male characters. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies HQ Project

2. The Digital Vault (Streaming + Interactive) Recognizing that physical access is limited, the digital arm of the project is arguably more revolutionary. Warner Bros. has partnered with the Internet Archive and a proprietary AI model dubbed “Schlesinger-1” to rebuild missing frames and repair color timing.

The centerpiece of the digital HQ is a new standalone app simply called "The Vault." For a monthly subscription, users gain access to: What makes the HQ Project unique is its bifurcated structure

The Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies HQ Project is more than a restoration. It is a declaration that the slapstick, the anarchy, and the sheer joyful stupidity of a cross-dressing rabbit outsmarting a hunter is high art. By the time the project wraps in 2028, over 1,000 cartoons will be saved from the dustbin of history.

So the next time you see Bugs casually munch a carrot and say, "Eh, what's up, doc?"—remember that someone spent 400 hours digitally reconstructing the carrot's original orange hue from a faded nitrate negative. And that, folks, is truly "all, folks." Keywords integrated: Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies HQ

For updates on the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies HQ Project, including early access to restored shorts, sign up for the Warner Bros. Animation Archive newsletter.


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Many popular shorts (e.g., certain Daffy Duck and Speedy Gonzales entries) were omitted from the official DVD sets or released in poor quality. The HQ Project has filled these gaps.