Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWhen Daffy hears that the Klondike trading post is paying good money for furs, Bugs' pelt becomes endangered.When Daffy hears that the Klondike trading post is paying good money for furs, Bugs' pelt becomes endangered.When Daffy hears that the Klondike trading post is paying good money for furs, Bugs' pelt becomes endangered.
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- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Bugs Bunny
- (Synchronisation)
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This and many of the other mid to late 60s WB cartoons reflects the end of the Golden Age of Cartoon Shorts. I suppose changing tastes and sense of humor were emerging, although I at age 33 consider most of the old '40s and '50s toons very ageless and appealing, clever, political at times, aimed at an adult audience, wrought with violence of the very playful kind and therefore harmless to any child who has common sense.
But these later '60s cartoons aren't nearly as appealing. Gone are the classic musical quilts of Carl Stalling and Milt Franklyn, replaced by Bill Lava's less inspiring "'60s beach" music. Gone is the good humor and wit that carried audiences through tough times like WWII. This violent, hateful Daffy, with not a bit of humor about him, probably did little to comfort those upset with the crisis in Southeast Asia.
Getting too political for my own good, I will stop here. All I can say is, I'm sure glad those old classic cartoons of early WB glory are still on the Cartoon Network!!!
This short is just not very good at all. In fact, it is a contender for the worst Bugs Bunny short of the original series. The animation is just so stiff and lifeless. You could tell that they had budget problems and the visuals look bland at best. Bugs and Daffy just look too basic and robotic. The human designs are just flat out ugly to look at. There just isn't a lot of that energy most Looney Tunes shorts have. Bugs and Daffy are both unlikable. Bugs is just too cocky here and borderline mean-spirited in this short for me to root for him. Daffy on the other hand wants to kill Bugs over his fur. Really? One, he could have shot one of the bears that would give him more fur. Two, Daffy hunting is just completely out of character for him and not in a good way. He is just as mean-spirited as Bugs and feels like this short was made by someone who hated Daffy. It's really bad when you end up rooting for the bear to maul both of them. As far as the jokes go, some of them gave me a chuckle, but there was nothing funny in this short that you wouldn't have seen in better Bugs vs hunter shorts. The gags are very repetitive and predictable. Also, it is a bit shorter than the other shorts, but that might be a good thing. Mel Blanc's voice work is the one thing that this short has going for it. He did a great job as he always does with the characters.
The Iceman Ducketh is such a weak short. It just reeks of mediocrity, especially when you compare it with other shorts. Bugs and Daffy both deserve better than this. It's not that it's unwatchable, which it's not, but it is just not worth it. Anything this short does, nearly every other Bugs Bunny and/or Daffy Duck short does a million times better. There no real reason to watch this, unless you really want to see why the 60's was not the best decade for Looney Tunes.
Despite a clever little reference in the title, this cartoon is actually not up to a great deal. The animation is average at best and it gives the characters a real cheap feel to see them so basically drawn. It gave me the impression that the cartoon was rushed together and maybe not given as much care and attention as it should have had. Both Daffy and Bugs look very basic, like they have no touches to them but have just been traced from a more complex drawing!
The plot is average, personally I wasn't really feeling the whole Daffy as a hunter thing and it didn't really work for me. It isn't used to nay great effect and Bugs wasn't really as slippery and funny as he can be. A big problem for me was the characters of the two leads they didn't seem to actually have any. Certainly neither was really used well and they could easily have been any old character for all the uniqueness either brought to the piece.
Overall the quality of animation should ring bells it shows a lack of care which can also be seen in the plot, the characters and the comedy. Funny title, not much else.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis was the last Warner Bros. theatrical cartoon featuring Bugs and Daffy together until Box Office Bunny (1990) in 1991, and the last Bugs Bunny short that Chuck Jones worked on, though he was fired at an early stage of production and replaced by Phil Monroe .
- PatzerAt the start, when Daffy sees the trappers being paid for their pelts, the line is out the door. When Daffy goes to check it out, suddenly the trappers are all gone and no one is at the Trading Post.
- Zitate
Bugs Bunny: [as Daffy levels his rifle at Bugs] Er, uh, do I understand that you bear some sort of antipathy toward me?
Daffy Duck: [determined] Antipathy, nothin'! I'm after that fur coat!
[Daffy feels Bugs' fur]
Daffy Duck: [impressed] Say, that's the softest pelt I've ever felt!
Bugs Bunny: Do you really like it? I get all my suits from the same tailor as the Duke of Windsor. I always get a good fit from him.
Daffy Duck: [levels his gun at Bugs again] Never mind the sales pitch! Just skin the rabbit!
Bugs Bunny: [pushing Daffy's gun away from him] Eh, give me a sporting chance, doc.
Daffy Duck: [angry] Stop fiddling with my rifle! I want to shoot you where it won't show!
- VerbindungenFeatured in Happy Birthday Bugs (1990)
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Laufzeit
- 7 Min.
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1