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Elmer Fudd is hunting ducks with his dog Laramore. After missing Daffy several times ("Confidentially, those hunters couldn't hit the broad side of a DUCK!" snickers Daffy to the audience) and leaving a duck-shaped hole in the clouds after each shotgun blast, Elmer manages to graze Daffy with a load of buckshot; this merely blows off his tail ...
Elmer and Bugs do a one-joke act cross-country, with Bugs dressed like a pinhead, and when he does not know the answer to a joke, Elmer gives it and hits him with a pie in the face. Bugs begins to tire of this gag and pulls a surprise on Fudd, answering the joke correctly and bopping Elmer with a mallet , which prompts the man to point his ...
Good Night Elmer is a 1940 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon short, directed by Chuck Jones, animated by Phil Monroe and written by Rich Hogan. [1] The short was released on October 26, 1940, and features Elmer Fudd .
This cartoon is the first in which the name Elmer Fudd was used, seen inscribed on the side of a scooter he is driving. However, the lobby card for The Isle of Pingo Pongo says, "Featuring Elmer". This cartoon was re-released into the Blue Ribbon Merrie Melodies program on September 11, 1943. On September 13, 1952, the cartoon was released ...
Recognizing Bugs's potential, Fudd offers him a role as his sidekick in a vaudeville act. They embark on a nationwide tour, with Fudd delivering punchlines to Bugs's comedic antics. However, Bugs grows weary of being the recipient of Fudd's jokes and takes matters into his own hands by delivering the punchlines himself.
Classic archenemies Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd have been at it since the 1930s. According to Fandom, Fudd appeared as Bugs’ villain in 37 out of the 168 classic Bugs Bunny cartoons, ...
The running gag in this cartoon involves an early prototype of Elmer Fudd, who is repeatedly seen taunting a lion in its cage. The narrator repeatedly warns him to stop; each time this occurs Elmer shies away and admits (in a Lou Costello impersonation) "I'm a ba-a-ad boy", but he always returns to his taunting. In the end, the lion is seen at ...
At the Elmer J. Fudd Corporation's boardroom, the mental health of their CEO, Elmer Fudd, is discussed; he thinks he is a rabbit, and the board decides to commit him to the Fruitcake Sanitarium. In a rabbit costume, Elmer encounters Bugs Bunny and, using a carrot as bait, lures him into the sanitarium.