Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rhapsody Rabbit is a 1946 American animated comedy short film in the Merrie Melodies series, directed by Friz Freleng and featuring Bugs Bunny. [1] The movie was originally released to theaters by Warner Bros. Pictures on November 9, 1946. [ 2 ]
Rhapsody Rabbit; Walky Talky Hawky; My Favorite Duck; Hair-Raising Hare; The Old Grey Hare; Directed by Larry Jackson. The only Looney Tunes compilation film with no new animation; bridging sequences are all live-action documentary. Only Looney Tunes film originally distributed by United Artists.
Lumber Jack-Rabbit: September 26 LT Chuck Jones: DVD: Looney Tunes Super Stars' Bugs Bunny: Hare Extraordinaire (cropped to widescreen) Blu-Ray: Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Collection (correct aspect ratio) First and only 3D WB cartoon until 2010's Coyote Falls; 105 Duck! Rabbit, Duck! October 3 MM Chuck Jones: DVD: Looney Tunes Golden ...
After following the rabbit tracks to a burrow, Elmer tries to lure Bugs out with a carrot. This works, at least with Bugs' hand, and Elmer initially succeeds in getting a handcuff around the rabbit's wrist. Somehow, though, Bugs works his arm free of the cuff – out of sight in his burrow – and attaches a bomb in its place.
Bugs Bunny: Superstar is a 1975 Looney Tunes documentary film narrated by Orson Welles and produced and directed by Larry Jackson. [1] It was the first documentary to examine the history of Looney Tunes with its animated cartoon characters, as well as the first Looney Tunes film to not be distributed by Warner Bros..
June 8: Bob Clampett's Porky Pig and Sylvester the Cat cartoon Kitty Kornered is first released, produced by Warner Bros. Cartoons. [13]June 22: Friz Freleng's Hollywood Daffy premieres, produced by Warner Bros. Cartoons, in which Daffy Duck visits Hollywood and meets and impersonates celebrity actors.
Daniel Goldmark writes, "While almost every studio in Hollywood took on Liszt's "Second Hungarian Symphony" at one time or another, Warner Bros. did it twice — both times with Friz Freleng directing. (Rhapsody Rabbit, 1946, was the other.) What sets this version apart from all the others is that, while it keeps the spirit of a concert or ...
Looney Tunes Go Hollywood: Termite Terrace unit’s passion for sending up the Hollywood of the time and explains the stories behind many of the toons’ delicious parodies, how they expanded into even the musical scores for those pictures, and the tradition of spoofing celebrities that lives on in the movie references in cartoon shows today.