The fourth wave of Walt Disney Treasures was released December 7, 2004. This is the only wave that comes in White cases, and is the final wave that is in double DVD cases. Starting with this wave, the side strap was replaced with seal wrap with stickers and the back was no longer printed on the tin but included as a card glued to the back.
Mickey Mouse in Black and White, Volume Two
This set covers the remaining Mickey Mouse cartoon shorts released in black and white.
175,000 sets produced.
The Barn Dance (1929)The Opry House (1929)When the Cat's Away (1929)The Barnyard Battle (1929)The Plowboy (1929)Mickey's Choo-Choo (1929)The Jazz Fool (1929)Jungle Rhythm (1929)Wild Waves (1929)Just Mickey (also known as Fiddling Around) (1930)The Barnyard Concert (1930)The Cactus Kid (1930)The Shindig (1930)The Picnic (1930)Traffic Troubles (1931)The Castaway (1931)Fishin' Around (1931)The Beach Party (1931)The Barnyard Broadcast (1931)The Mad Dog (1932)Barnyard Olympics (1932)"Mickey Mania: Collecting Mickey Merchandise": Maltin visits Bernie Shine, collector extraordinaire. They discuss what makes Mickey so appealing, then Shine takes us on a tour of his vast amassing of Mickey memorabilia from all over the globe, most of it dating back to the 1920s and 30s."Mickey's Portrait Artist: John Hench": Maltin interviews famed Disney artist John Hench about Mickey. Hench was the man in charge of painting Mickey for his birthdays throughout the years.Musical Farmer (1932)Trader Mickey (1932)The Wayward Canary (1932)Mickey's Pal Pluto (1933)Mickey's Mechanical Man (1933)Playful Pluto (1934)Mickey's Steamroller (1934)Mickey Plays Papa (1934)Mickey's Kangaroo (1935)The Haunted House (1929)The Moose Hunt (1931)The Delivery Boy (1931)The Grocery Boy (1932)Mickey in Arabia (1932)Mickey's Good Deed (1932)Mickey's Mellerdrammer (1933)The Steeple Chase (1933, wrong opening music, its plays Donald Duck theme)Shanghaied (1934)Mickey's Man Friday (1935)"Background paintings": Backgrounds of the various cartoon shorts on this set"Animation drawings": Drawings of the same cartoons, animating and storyboard"Mickey's Poster Archive": Posters for many of the shorts shown on this set"Mickey Mouse Fully Covered": Various merchandise covers, such as books, magazines and records"Mickey's Sunday Funnies": This section shows off the comic strips of the many Mickey adventures, complete with a biography of creator Floyd Gottfredson.This set covers the first half of Pluto's career.
110,000 sets produced.
1930The Chain Gang1935On Ice1937Pluto's Quin-puplets1939Beach Picnic1940Bone Trouble1941Pluto's PlaymateCanine CaddyLend a Paw1942Pluto, JuniorThe Army MascotThe SleepwalkerT-Bone For TwoPluto At the ZooBonus FeaturesThe Life and Times of Pluto: Maltin discusses Pluto's characteristics with current animator Andreas Deja, long-time animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, and animation historian John Canemaker.Pluto 101: Maltin again meets with Deja, who relates the value of studying classic cartoon shorts to aid in his ability to animate successfully. He then takes Leonard to the drawing board, where he shows how to bring Pluto to life from just one circle, the way he did in a sequence for the 1990 featurette The Prince and the Pauper.1943Pluto and the ArmadilloPrivate Pluto1944Springtime For PlutoFirst Aiders1945Dog WatchCanine CasanovaThe Legend of Coyote RockCanine Patrol1946Pluto's Kid BrotherIn DutchSquatter's RightsThe Purloined Pup1947Pluto's HousewarmingFrom the VaultPantry Pirate (1940)A Gentleman's Gentleman (1941)Bonus FeaturesPluto's Picture Book: This is the second half of the Disneyland episode, A Story of Dogs, which was aired as part of a promotion for Lady and the Tramp (the making of which the first half of this episode covers). The second half of this episode talks about Disney's first canine star, using a picture book, from which Pluto leaps and into which Pluto looks while Walt narrates and we get a look at some of the highlights of Pluto's career.Pluto's Pal Fergy: This is a mini-biography about "the man behind the mutt": Norman Ferguson, who helped bring the dog to life. This talks about Ferguson not only creating Pluto, but also some of the other things at Disney he did.GalleriesPluto On Paper: Several Pluto comic strips are shown, as are Pluto book and magazine covers. The comics are designed masterfully so one can actually read along frame by frame.Pluto's Posters: Posters for many of the cartoons presented on this set are depicted.Background Paintings: The backdrops for a small handful of the cartoons presented are shown.Animation Drawings: A host of drawings, storyboard and otherwise, for the same small handful of cartoons as in the "Background Paintings" section.This set contains the first week of the Mickey Mouse Club program, originally broadcast October 3–7, 1955.
130,000 sets produced.
Fun With Music Day (Monday)Guest Star Day (Tuesday)Anything Can Happen Day (Wednesday)Bonus FeaturesThe Leader of the ClubGalleriesInside the ClubhouseSpreading the Word: Mouseke-PromotionSketching the IdeasCircus Day (Thursday)Talent Round-Up Day (Friday)Bonus FeaturesMouseke-MemoriesThe Mouseketeers Debut at DisneylandOpening Sequence in Color