Warner Bros. and MGM were the pioneers. In Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry , bubbles often accompanied drowning sequences (which were, paradoxically, hilarious). Sound designers like used actual water recordings but sped them up or reversed them to create a "rubbery" quality.
Warner Bros. and MGM were the pioneers. In Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry , bubbles often accompanied drowning sequences (which were, paradoxically, hilarious). Sound designers like used actual water recordings but sped them up or reversed them to create a "rubbery" quality.