Bugs Bunny is abducted by Marvin the Martian as an "earthling specimen". Heading home with rabbit all wrapped up, they are both in for an interstellar journey.Bugs Bunny is abducted by Marvin the Martian as an "earthling specimen". Heading home with rabbit all wrapped up, they are both in for an interstellar journey.Bugs Bunny is abducted by Marvin the Martian as an "earthling specimen". Heading home with rabbit all wrapped up, they are both in for an interstellar journey.
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Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (voice)
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Featured reviews
I personally find this very funny: Bugs Bunny has a very good character in this episode and Marvin is very entertaining and sweet (except of course when he wants to disintegrate Bugs Bunny). Also, I think the animation is very well done.
However, I found this episode perhaps a wee bit too short, but that is probably my only major dislike for this episode.
Lee Eisenberg and bob the moo did not like this episode all that much, although they do present good arguments for the reason they dislike this.
Reasons I like this more than Lee Eisenberg and bob the moo:
1. This is the first episode with Bugs and Marvin in I ever watched, so I do not have the same opinion as them.
2. I prefer a great deal of good quotes in a Looney Tunes episode rather than a great deal of slapstick gags.
In this episode, Bugs Bunny has been sent into space because he is "expendable". He meets Marvin the Martian and that is when the plot really turns...
I recommend this to people who like Looney Tunes characters talking a large amount and to anyone who loves anything about Looney Tunes. Enjoy! :-)
However, I found this episode perhaps a wee bit too short, but that is probably my only major dislike for this episode.
Lee Eisenberg and bob the moo did not like this episode all that much, although they do present good arguments for the reason they dislike this.
Reasons I like this more than Lee Eisenberg and bob the moo:
1. This is the first episode with Bugs and Marvin in I ever watched, so I do not have the same opinion as them.
2. I prefer a great deal of good quotes in a Looney Tunes episode rather than a great deal of slapstick gags.
In this episode, Bugs Bunny has been sent into space because he is "expendable". He meets Marvin the Martian and that is when the plot really turns...
I recommend this to people who like Looney Tunes characters talking a large amount and to anyone who loves anything about Looney Tunes. Enjoy! :-)
This is a real shame, that this cartoon isn't a classic for while it is entertaining it has too many flaws for me to consider it a classic. While the animation is very well done and detailed, the vocal characterisations of Mel Blanc are top notch and the music is beautiful, what let it down is that it is too talky. It is good that there is dialogue and all that, but there is too much of it. Consequently the jokes don't work as well as it should. Also it may be just me, but I found the dialogue rather hit and miss. There are some good lines like "wait a minute, are you out of your CottonTail mind?" and "because rabbits are expendable that's why" but Marvin is given very little to do because his dialogue isn't that much to go on. Overall, decent but it isn't a favourite of mine unfortunately. 7/10 Bethany Cox
10llltdesq
Most of the gags in this are verbal in nature, rather than sight gags (though it has a fair number of those as well) and Marvin may have more of the best lines than Bugs, particularly in the beginning. As is often the case, the title is a play on words-in this case, "mad as a March hare", which I believe was derived from Alice in Wonderland. Marvin's comments on "the flora and fauna of Earth likely would have delighted H. L. Mencken and Ambrose Bierce! The ending scene is beautiful, particularly the closing line. Great fun is had by all (well, not by Marvin, not at the end, anyway). Well worth watching. Most highly recommended.
I have read about how Warner Bros. closed the Looney Tunes department in 1963. That might have actually been a good choice, considering that they seemed to be running a little short of ideas by then. In "Mad as a Mars Hare", Bugs Bunny gets sent to Mars as an expendable astro-rabbit, but Marvin the Martian has no desire to have anyone else on his planet and starts plotting to get rid of Bugs.
Whereas previous Bugs-Marvin pairings focused on Bugs's gags aimed at Marvin, this one has a little too much talk. Don't get me wrong; any Chuck Jones cartoon is a good one - at least the ones that I've seen - but it seems like they could have had more than just the characters explaining their stories. And if I may say so, I must challenge what Bugs said about Mars making Siberia look like Miami Beach. I spent last autumn in Yekaterinburg, Russia (near Siberia) and had a great time there. Everything that I've heard about Miami and it's surrounding area make it sound very undesirable. If it makes me some sort of weirdo to prefer part of Russia to part of America, then so be it.
Anyway, "MAAMH" is an OK cartoon, but not great.
Whereas previous Bugs-Marvin pairings focused on Bugs's gags aimed at Marvin, this one has a little too much talk. Don't get me wrong; any Chuck Jones cartoon is a good one - at least the ones that I've seen - but it seems like they could have had more than just the characters explaining their stories. And if I may say so, I must challenge what Bugs said about Mars making Siberia look like Miami Beach. I spent last autumn in Yekaterinburg, Russia (near Siberia) and had a great time there. Everything that I've heard about Miami and it's surrounding area make it sound very undesirable. If it makes me some sort of weirdo to prefer part of Russia to part of America, then so be it.
Anyway, "MAAMH" is an OK cartoon, but not great.
Chuck Jones wins for Marvin and Bugs, using them freshly in this late cartoon. He wins against the horrible score by Bill Lava, even using it to advantage in the mechanical carrot scene. He wins against a limited set of backgrounds, and the wide-screen madness of movies in the early '60s. (Few pans, few camera movements, thick outlines for the characters.) He even wins against his own tendency for too much talk and too much exposition. He still draws well, he still has good writers, and he still has many good jokes. Even with the ending (no spoilers), which frightened me so when I was a child, I'd recommend this cartoon to almost everyone.
Did you know
- TriviaThe last of the four "Bugs goes to outer space" shorts, following Haredevil Hare (1948), The Hasty Hare (1952), and Hare-Way to the Stars (1958). It's also the last appearance of Marvin the Martian in the original theatrical shorts until Marvin the Martian in the Third Dimension (1996), though the character would later re-appear in Spaced Out Bunny (1980) and Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24 1/2th Century.
- Quotes
Bugs Bunny: [transformed into a giant Neanderthal rabbit] I'll tell ya this much: When I get back to Earth, old Elmer Fudd and the rest of those hunters are due for a big surprise!
- ConnectionsEdited into Fifty Years of Bugs Bunny in 3 1/2 Minutes (1989)
- SoundtracksYankee Doodle
Traditional
Details
- Runtime
- 7m
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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