Mr. Bug Goes to Town was previewed on December 4, 1941, in advance of its scheduled Christmas release. While it was well received by critics, theater operators rejected it. The preview came three days before
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which signaled America's entrance into
World War II. Three weeks later, Barney Balaban initiated Max Fleischer's resignation. The Christmas release was later dropped, with another screening occurring in New York on December 30 for "the children of movie press folks." Paramount would finally release the film to the public in the United Kingdom on January 23, 1942, under the name
Hoppity Goes to Town. A California release, double billed with ''
Sullivan's Travels, followed on February 12, 1942, and on February 19 in New York City as a main attraction. The studio never officially acknowledge the Pearl Harbor attacks to be the reason for the delay, but nevertheless, the film would still become a financial failure. Paramount reorganized Fleischer Studios as
Famous Studios not long after. Before the film's release,
Walter Lantz,
Paul Terry, and
Leon Schlesinger all considered producing animated feature films, but after seeing this film's disappointing performance and the initial failures of
Walt Disney's
Pinocchio and
Fantasia (both 1940), they cancelled any potential animated feature projects.
Harlan Ellison described vivid memories of having to outwit his family in order to see
Mr. Bug Goes to Town for free on his birthday in his book ''
Harlan Ellison's Watching''. He credits his exploit as having fostered his rebellious nature rather than remaining a sweet obedient child. He never got to see the entire film until it came out on videocassette, and he watched it frequently throughout his adult life. Paramount later re-released
Mr. Bug as
Hoppity Goes to Town. The film cost $713,511 to make, but by 1946 had only made $241,000 back, and was withdrawn from circulation. In Japan, the film was released on December 19, 2009, as part of
Studio Ghibli's
Ghibli Museum Library. A DVD was released in April 2010 by
Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment in Japan, and it has been reported to be a restoration using NTA re-release elements. Recently,
Mr. Bug, along with many other Fleischer-produced cartoons (including the Fleischers' previous film, ''Gulliver's Travels''), was restored from the original three-strip negatives by the
UCLA Film and Television Archive, and a few art-house theaters have recently screened the restoration (which features the original titles). The film debuted on the
Turner Classic Movies channel on October 21, 2012, transferred from an original 35mm Technicolor release print owned by the
Museum of Modern Art Department of Film, for the first time on television in a special hosted by
Robert Osborne and
Jerry Beck dedicated to rare animated films, including ''
Gulliver's Travels'', Lotte Reiniger's
The Adventures of Prince Achmed, the
UPA cartoons, and the silent cartoons of 1907 to 1932 of the New York studios. The film appeared again on the channel in June 2015. In 2023,
Kino Lorber announced they would release the film on Blu-ray under license from Paramount Pictures, who did a 4K restoration of the feature, which was slated for early 2024 but was delayed. However, Kino Lorber spokesperson Frank Tarzi stated that the Blu-Ray release of
Mr. Bug was cancelled due to the transfer Paramount made containing massive amounts of
Digital Noise Reduction, and not meeting Kino Lorber's standards. == See also ==