Poster

Cold War ()


Reference View | Change View


George Geef gets sent home from work to tend to his cold.

Director:
Reviews:

Photos and Videos

Cast

Edit
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Bill Anderson ...
Boss (uncredited)
...
George Geef's Shouts and Yells (uncredited)
Bob Jackman ...
George Geef (uncredited) (voice)
James MacDonald ...
Vocals (uncredited)
...
Mrs. Geef (uncredited)
Jack Rourke ...
Narrator (uncredited)

Directed by

Edit
Jack Kinney ... (direction)

Written by

Edit
Dick Kinney ... (story) &
Milt Schaffer ... (story)

Produced by

Edit
Walt Disney ... producer (uncredited)

Music by

Edit
Joseph Dubin ... (as Joseph S. Dubin)

Sound Department

Edit
George Lowerre ... sound engineer (uncredited)

Visual Effects by

Edit
Jack Boyd ... effects animation

Animation Department

Edit
Ed Aardal ... animation
Hugh Fraser ... animation
Wolfgang Reitherman ... animation
Art Riley ... background artist
John Sibley ... animation
Al Zinnen ... layout
Cliff Nordberg ... animator (uncredited)
Crew believed to be complete

Production Companies

Edit

Distributors

Edit

Special Effects

Edit

Other Companies

Edit

Storyline

Edit
Plot Keywords
Genres
Parents Guide Add content advisory for parents »
Certification

Additional Details

Edit
Also Known As
  • Guerre froide (France)
  • Zimna wojna (Poland)
  • Attenti Al Raffreddore! (Italy)
  • Bacilusháború (Hungary)
  • グーフィーのかぜひき (Japan, Japanese title)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 7 min
Country
Language
Color
Aspect Ratio
Sound Mix

Did You Know?

Edit
Trivia When Goofy shrieks when it's hot, Pluto's screaming sound is heard. See more »
Movie Connections Edited into A Salute to Father (1961). See more »
Crazy Credits At the opening title of the cartoon, George Geef sneezes in a brief audio moment before the narrator explains about the common cold. See more »
Quotes [towards the end, Goofy has fully recovered from the cold and is back at work two weeks later]
Narrator: And so, two weeks later, Mr. Geef's cold has run its natural course and once again, Mr. Geef felt just like a human being. Mr. Geef was firmly convinced that a cold is nothing to be sneezed at.
See more »

Contribute to This Page


Recently Viewed