Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA construction worker destroys Bugs' home with a steam shovel and refuses to repair the damage.A construction worker destroys Bugs' home with a steam shovel and refuses to repair the damage.A construction worker destroys Bugs' home with a steam shovel and refuses to repair the damage.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (narração)
John T. Smith
- Hercules
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Skyscraper construction destroys Bugs Bunny's rabbit hole. Bugs get unceremoniously dumped by construction worker Hercules. Of course, Bugs is not going to take it lying down.
This is a classic Bugs cartoon. The premise is simple and that helps. All the turns are buried in my memory. I love the whole thing from start to finish. The heated rivet is terrific fun. Maybe, I would want a famous foil going against Bugs. Hercules is a rather generic hulking construction worker type. He doesn't automatically engender villainy. Maybe he should be a wolf. I don't know. It is hard to improve on a classic.
This is a classic Bugs cartoon. The premise is simple and that helps. All the turns are buried in my memory. I love the whole thing from start to finish. The heated rivet is terrific fun. Maybe, I would want a famous foil going against Bugs. Hercules is a rather generic hulking construction worker type. He doesn't automatically engender villainy. Maybe he should be a wolf. I don't know. It is hard to improve on a classic.
Revenge is the story, here, but one can hardly blame Bugs Bunny for extracting it. You see, Bugs was at home minding his own business when a big construction crane came down and dug out Bugs and his home. They were digging to presumably put up another big high-rise in the middle of the city.
Anyway, Bugs pleads with the crane operator to put he and his home back in the ground. The worker - a real tough-looking and tough-sounding thug - talks sweetly agrees - but then dumps Bugs to the ground and pours a pile of bricks on top of him, laughing sadistically as he does it.
Bugs throws a brick back at him with a telegram attached. The message says, "Okay, Hercules, you asked for it. Signed, Bugs Bunny." (The top of the telegram, by the way, reads "Eastern Onion.")
Bugs then makes life miserable for the construction worker, doing everything imaginable, some of it very funny. The poor man, at one point, is hovering on a teeter-totter 100 floors up, taking his clothes off trying to keep the totter balanced!
Anyway, Bugs pleads with the crane operator to put he and his home back in the ground. The worker - a real tough-looking and tough-sounding thug - talks sweetly agrees - but then dumps Bugs to the ground and pours a pile of bricks on top of him, laughing sadistically as he does it.
Bugs throws a brick back at him with a telegram attached. The message says, "Okay, Hercules, you asked for it. Signed, Bugs Bunny." (The top of the telegram, by the way, reads "Eastern Onion.")
Bugs then makes life miserable for the construction worker, doing everything imaginable, some of it very funny. The poor man, at one point, is hovering on a teeter-totter 100 floors up, taking his clothes off trying to keep the totter balanced!
This is the first of two cartoons where a thoroughly obnoxious and unlikable construction worker tramples on our stalwart hero, with generally hilarious results (though the construction worker was probably less than happy about it all). The second of the two, No Parking Hare, is slightly better, but both are marvelous and are well worth watching. This one is happily available. Recommended.
If we've seen enough Bugs Bunny cartoons, we should know that he doesn't let anyone walk all over him and get away with it. This is truly the case in "Homeless Hare", as a brutish developer digs up Bugs's rabbit hole to make room for a building. The rest of the cartoon pretty much consists of Bugs coming up with ways to punish the developer. Probably the best part is the whole sequence that looks as if it was designed by Rube Goldberg, namely because you think that one thing is going to happen, but something even funnier ends up happening! How did they come up with these things?!
Anyway, these cartoons are just plain great. I don't know how we got by without these.
As Daffy said in "Stupor Duck": Couldn't they find a better place to put a building?
Anyway, these cartoons are just plain great. I don't know how we got by without these.
As Daffy said in "Stupor Duck": Couldn't they find a better place to put a building?
A construction worker, who Bugs Bunny refers to as Hercules, has shoveled off his rabbit hole.He refuses to put it back.This means war! Homeless Hare from 1950 is a Merrie Melodies cartoon by Chuck Jones.Besides Mel Blanc we hear John T. Smith as a voice artist.This short has a lot of funny, zany stuff.We see Bugs playing with the elevator controls while the worker is inside the elevator.We see Bugs impersonating a building inspector, who orders the worker to make a high brick wall.We also see Bugs being knocked out.At the end we learn that a man's home is his castle.Not necessarily the most classic Bugs Bunny, but still very enjoyable.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe construction worker's final line, "I'm feelin' mighty low.", was the catchphrase of the late Candy Candido, a famous radio personality and musician.
- Erros de gravaçãoDuring the seesaw of bricks gag, Bugs takes off one brick, leaving two remaining, but there is only one brick remaining when Bugs finishes the gag.
- Citações
Bugs Bunny: Action, he says. Action he shall get.
- Versões alternativasSome TV prints remove the scene where Bugs drops a brick on Hercules' face.
- ConexõesEdited into Fifty Years of Bugs Bunny in 3 1/2 Minutes (1989)
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração7 minutos
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Coelho sem Lar (1950) officially released in Canada in English?
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