Bugs Bunny: La película de Bugs Bunny
Segunda película de los Looney Tunes compuesta por cortos de los personajes enlazados mediante nuevas secuencias de animación. Dividido en tres partes: en la primera Yosemite Sam hace un…Segunda película de los Looney Tunes compuesta por cortos de los personajes enlazados mediante nuevas secuencias de animación. Dividido en tres partes: en la primera Yosemite Sam hace un…Segunda película de los Looney Tunes compuesta por cortos de los personajes enlazados mediante nuevas secuencias de animación. Dividido en tres partes: en la primera Yosemite Sam hace un…
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Bugs Bunny
- (voz)
- …
- Big Bad Wolf
- (voz)
- …
- Granny
- (voz)
- Satan
- (voz)
- Lawyer
- (voz)
- …
- Narrator (The Unmentionables)
- (metraje de archivo)
- (voz)
Reseñas destacadas
If you are a fan of throwback episodes of the Looney Tunes like Yosemite Sam/Bugs Bunny, Sylvester/Tweety or Bugs Bunny/Daffy Duck, then I strongly suggest that you watch this movie if you haven't already. You won't be disappointed!
I love the Warner Brother cartoons a great deal and will use any excuse I can get to watch the cartoons if I'm around - whether it be a hangover cure or entertaining kids when babysitting, I'll generally give them a try and find them funny. With this being a `proper' movie I felt I needed no such excuse and decided to sit and just watch it. Very quickly I realised that this cartoon was a barely concealed attempt to just show about 8 or 9 cartoons that had been edited together to roughly fit within each act. Of these cartoons, 4 or 5 are worth seeing, 1 or 2 are pretty poor and 2 are really great so, for my money, the film was just about worth watching. I have seen most of these cartoons before and my reviews are up for them on their specifics pages so I won't review them aside from my last comment, however what spoils them is the modern touches.
Most of the linking stuff is poor at best and doesn't really work. The animation is of a noticeably lower quality and it is forced to fit the cartoons they had available. The `stories' are pretty poor and it would have been much better just to do this as a sort of flashback film where the cartoons are just honestly presented rather than twisted. The cartoons are trimmed to fit the story but, worse than this, there are points where they have been undated to get rid of violence. The worst is the bit where Bugs throws a can up to shot it and ends up shooting Sam in the face - here they remove that and have him shot the can full of corks. Rubbish.
Overall this is just about worth seeing because the majority of the cartoons are enjoyable. However the presentation spoils some of them and is really stupid and disrespectful to the material. If this is your only way to see these cartoons then it is worth it but the question would be why not just go out and rent any of the dvd/video compilations that already exist and enjoy them as they were rather than as part of this last compilation.
Then, we go the compilations: Yosemite Sam tries to kill Bugs but keeps getting sent to Hell (Satan is only too happy about this); Bugs becomes a cop and busts gangsters Rocky and Mugsy; and then, an Oscars-style awards ceremony at which the characters arrive in the most ostentatious limos imaginable. Nominees include the wolf and three little pigs ("Three Little Bops"), Sylvester and Tweety ("Birds Anonymous"), and others. But sure enough, Daffy believes that he and only he can win...or can he? I guess that if I have a problem with what they portray here, it's that the whole thing seems sort of like self-congratulation. Then again, the Looney Tunes cartoons often made fun of Hollywood - just look at "The Scarlet Pumpernickel" - so they might be poking fun at the pomp and opulence inherit in the numerous award ceremonies every year.
Overall, I pretty much liked "TLLLBBM". As far as I'm concerned, as long as they still had Mel Blanc providing the characters' voices, it was worth seeing. Still, I can't help but wonder why they stressed Friz Freleng's cartoons; they should have had at least something about Chuck Jones's works.
All in all, pretty worthy.
I admit I quite liked Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie's story structure, which is done in the equivalent of three acts. Act 1 involves Yosemite Sam and the Devil. I confess I dislike Devil's Feud Cake as a cartoon intensely finding it unfunny, unoriginal and little more than recycled material. However, it served perfectly as a premise and in the context of this film, and the result is actually is an entertaining, well-timed and in general well-edited segment, if rather high on predictability.
Act 2 focuses on Bugs and Rocky. For me this was the least effective of the segments making up the film's structure. Nothing's wrong with it as such, it is very clever and funny and less predictable than the previous segment. What lets it down, is that as an overall segment it is not as well-timed or edited. What elevates it though are the spoofs based on the Untouchables and the Goose that Laid the Golden Egg, which were among the highlights of the film.
To coin the phrase save the best until last. That is the case with the last act. Using an Oscar awards ceremony as the premise of the segment, it is quite a vicious but overall hilarious satire. And also I think the best animation of the film is in this segment.
The animation is mostly good, more in the cartoons featured than in the links, but there are some inconsistencies. The links sometimes do look cheap and lack the feel of the original shorts, something they'd perfect later. While the cartoons are beautifully animated mostly, there is one exception, and that's Devil's Feud Cake, it does look cheap compared to the rest and in all honesty despite having a cool idea and that it has Bugs and Sam in it it is one of the main reasons why I don't like that cartoon.
The music however is absolutely wonderful, the writing funny and witty and the sight gags in general fresh and inventive. The cartoons(Devil's Feud Cake excepted) range to good to outstanding, High Diving Hare and Birds Anomynous belonging in the outstanding category, while the characters are delightful. Bugs is undoubtedly the star, but that is not to dispute Rocky and Yosemite who are both excellent as well. The voice acting especially from Mel Blanc is brilliant. All in all, nice and entertaining but it was lacking a tad for me. 7/10 Bethany Cox
As I mentioned before, this film is a showcase of Friz Freling's best work while working for Warner Brothers Pictures. The difference however, between this and Jones' film is that story arcs are inserted in between the different shorts specifically chosen for this feature film. Because of this, the movie is split into three separate acts: "Satan's Waiting'", which focuses on Yosemite Sam's numerous failed attempts at catching/destroying Bugs, "The Unmentionables", which focuses primarily on shorts featuring the gangster Rocky, and finally "The Oswald Awards", which focuses on a fictional award ceremony specifically made for cartoon characters. In-between the shorts are animated story arcs made for the movie that are also directed by Freling, which is always welcome. However, a person who has viewed many a Looney Tunes short will notice that some of the shorts have been edited either for time constraints or to blend in with the current scenario, which I can understand. Thankfully, all of these shorts in their complete form can be found on numerous Looney Tunes compilation DVDs and Blu-Rays.
The main question is this, however, does this work in the movie's favor? The answer is a definite yes, because this is the studio's own special way of saying "thanks" to one of their own for their dedication and hard work that got them to where they're at today as a motion picture studio that specializes in entertaining audiences of all ages, and since Looney Tunes shorts are viewed by both children and adults all over the globe, this would work extremely well as a family feature. As a fan of animation myself, I really dug this flick. Anyone who is a dedicated fan of the Looney Tunes franchise will most likely enjoy this flick for what it is, and it is also a great addition for family movie nights.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesIn Act I, "Satan's Waitin'", Yosemite Sam is reading a newspaper on a billboard with the headline: "Local Widow Inherits $50 Million Dollars." However, the text of the article describes the making of the movie "RETREAT? HELL!" (1952). Here is what it says: Camp Pendleton October 12, 1951 "Yes, it was a bit tough." That was the general, if somewhat conservative, opinion of those who had a hand in the messy business of "snowing in" the little curved valley here at camp Pendleton for "RETREAT? HELL!" When the last tubful of the salt and lime mix had been sprayed onto the hillside. We could finally stand back and view the effect created by our many days of hard labor, and it's doubtful if there was one among us who regretted those seemingly endless days of hauling, mixing and spraying, and the resulting bloodshot eyes, aching backs and lime-filled pores. Thanks be for ol' "Doc" Stufflebeam and his little black bag during those [Text continues below screen]... ... was a little more than a narrow, bumpy trail. In a few days our "cat" drivers, Gil Richardson and Walt Tucker, had leveled off a five-acre area for our base camp and over 3 miles of wide, well-graded roads. From then on the water trucks manned by Ray Dunlap and Bill Miller and the dump trucks by Paul Edgerly and Bill Dawson made good use of them hauling salt, lime and gypsum to the "snowbirds." As work progressed, trucks of all sizes and descriptions arrived by twos and threes bringing the material for the little Korean hut and huge artificial rock to be built on the breakwater on the beach at Camp Del Mar across the highway. From as far away is San Francisco came salt, lime and "gyp." [Text continues below screen.]
- PifiasBugs Bunny say that Friz Freleng won 5 Academy Awards and 2 Emmy Awards. He didn't won 5 Academy Awards and 2 Emmy Awards. He won an Academy Award and 3 Emmy Awards.
- Citas
Yosemite Sam: Any one of you lily livered, bow legged varmints care to slap leather with me? In case any of ya get any idears, ya better know yer dealin' with. I'm the hootiness, tootiness, shootiness, bob tailed wildcat in the west.
[Sam fires his gins at the ground as they lift him in the air]
Yosemite Sam: I'm the fastest gun, north, south, east, a-aaaa-and west of the Pecos. I'm the...
Bugs Bunny: Ah-hhhh shut up!
- Créditos adicionalesBefore the end credits, Bugs Bunny chomps on a carrot and appears in the little hole and says, "Eh, dat's all, folks!" Then Porky Pig appears and says, "Hey! *I'm* supposed to sa-e-sa-sa-I'm s'posed-ta that's *my* line!" Bugs says, "Well, say it den!" Porky starts stuttering, "Eh, th-th-th, eh, th-th-th..." The hole closes on him like a door and Porky says, "Dirty guys!"
- Versiones alternativasCBS edited 12 minutes from this film for its 1984 network television premiere.
- ConexionesEdited from Clavados de altura (1949)
- Banda sonoraArkansas Traveler
(uncredited)
Music by Sanford Faulkner
Played when the banner of Doughnut Center is shown
From Viuda en peligro (1953)
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Looney Tunes Presents the Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 19 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1