PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,9/10
676
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El doctor está haciendo una operación y Lucas es su ayudante. Las cosas empiezan bastante tranquilas, con Lucas pidiendo silencio de varias maneras.El doctor está haciendo una operación y Lucas es su ayudante. Las cosas empiezan bastante tranquilas, con Lucas pidiendo silencio de varias maneras.El doctor está haciendo una operación y Lucas es su ayudante. Las cosas empiezan bastante tranquilas, con Lucas pidiendo silencio de varias maneras.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Mel Blanc
- Daffy Duck
- (voz)
- (sin acreditar)
- …
Sara Berner
- Switchboard Operator
- (voz)
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
Obviously, the creative process means that you don't necessarily start out perfectly. As one of Daffy Duck's earliest appearances, "The Daffy Doc" is a prime example. Daffy plays an orderly who, after some mishaps, gets thrown out of an operating room. Determined to find a patient, he enlists Porky Pig (against the latter's will). Since Daffy is quite literally a "quack", the operation involves no anesthetic.
The cartoon seems a little less than what we're used to with the Looney Tunes cartoons, but it's still pretty funny. The best part is Daffy's (and later Daffy's and Porky's) unpleasant experience with the iron lung; it shows how "inflation" is more than an economic term.
I wouldn't be surprised if, when people first watched this cartoon, they forgot that the country was going through a depression.
The cartoon seems a little less than what we're used to with the Looney Tunes cartoons, but it's still pretty funny. The best part is Daffy's (and later Daffy's and Porky's) unpleasant experience with the iron lung; it shows how "inflation" is more than an economic term.
I wouldn't be surprised if, when people first watched this cartoon, they forgot that the country was going through a depression.
Surreal and fascinating, it's not terribly funny by todays standards, but still unusual . Daffy is a "quack" doctor who helps to operate on a patient by using various bits of machinery and artillery , before being kicked out and making a patient out of Porky Pig. Daffy hasn't matured in voice , design, or attitude, and Porky is almost a cameo, but the operation and the parts where parts of Daffy inflate after iron lung treatment are classics. Still surreal.
"The Daffy Doc" is one of the earliest Daffy Duck films, having appeared in late 1937 in his first. Here in "The Daffy Doc", Daffy is a doctor who is about as competent and normal as you'd expect for Daffy in the 1930s! In other words, he's totally Daffy!
When the story begins, Dr. Daffy is assisting with an operation but is soon thrown out because of his hijinks....not that the attending doctor, Dr. Quack is much better! So, daffy goes in search of a patient of his own...and that means bashing the unsuspecting Porky over the head and hospitalizing him!! And, according to Dr. Daffy, poor Porky needs surgery!
This is a generally very good and screwy cartoon. But I can understand why the filmmakers did NOT like the ending...it was pretty tack considering the serious polio epidemic and making fun of this and the Iron Lung is about as funny as cancer. As a result, I'm dropping the score a bit due to the ending. Otherwise, it's pretty funny and quite weird.
When the story begins, Dr. Daffy is assisting with an operation but is soon thrown out because of his hijinks....not that the attending doctor, Dr. Quack is much better! So, daffy goes in search of a patient of his own...and that means bashing the unsuspecting Porky over the head and hospitalizing him!! And, according to Dr. Daffy, poor Porky needs surgery!
This is a generally very good and screwy cartoon. But I can understand why the filmmakers did NOT like the ending...it was pretty tack considering the serious polio epidemic and making fun of this and the Iron Lung is about as funny as cancer. As a result, I'm dropping the score a bit due to the ending. Otherwise, it's pretty funny and quite weird.
8tavm
This was yet another Bob Clampett-directed cartoon he made for Warner Bros. (or more accurately, independent producer Leon Schlesinger since he hadn't sold his studio to the distributor yet) which featured both Porky Pig and Daffy Duck. Actually, despite featured billing, Porky has way less screen time than the mallard who basically replaces him as the Looney Tunes star though initially, they team up quite a bit during this time. Anyway, Daffy is a doctor's assistant who just is not suitable for the job (neither is his boss when we find out what he's fixing) so he searches for his own patient. Guess who's the unlucky guy? In summary, The Daffy Doc has plenty of visual laughs if you're so in the mood. This was on the Marx Brothers' disc that has Room Service (the A side this cartoon is on) and At the Circus.
One thing I personally enjoy about these 1930s cartoons are the corny signs that always are posted everywhere. For instance, in the first scene here, we arrive at the "Stitch In Time" hospital, where the sign adds, "As We Sew, So Shall Ye Rip." Yeah, they make you wince with their puns, play-on-words and just plain corniness, but I enjoy them. You'll see this kind of written, dated humor all over in this cartoon, from the Operating Room to Daffy Duck's driver's license plate.
This black-and-white early Looney Tunes cartoon features both Daffy and Porky Pig in the same story. Porky doesn't enter the cartoon until the final two minutes. Daffy, who had booted out of the operating room, goes to find a patient of his own. Poor Porky.
Overall, a decent cartoon full of slapstick, silliness and cornball material: in other words, perfect for early Daffy Duck. I enjoyed this but I like young kids would like this a lot more.
This black-and-white early Looney Tunes cartoon features both Daffy and Porky Pig in the same story. Porky doesn't enter the cartoon until the final two minutes. Daffy, who had booted out of the operating room, goes to find a patient of his own. Poor Porky.
Overall, a decent cartoon full of slapstick, silliness and cornball material: in other words, perfect for early Daffy Duck. I enjoyed this but I like young kids would like this a lot more.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesNeither Robert Clampett nor Chuck Jones cared much for this short, not because they thought it was bad, but because it used an iron lung as a gag prop at a time when polio deaths were on the rise.
- PifiasWhen Daffy says "Hey, chum" to Porky while hiding behind a door, his lips do not move.
- Citas
Dr. Quack: [preparing to operate] I must have it quiet!
Daffy Duck: [reading signs aloud as he holds them up] SHHH! Shut yo' mouf! Zol zayn sha! Silence is FOO! Hoo-HOO!
- Versiones alternativasThis cartoon was colorized in 1968 by having every other frame traced over onto a cel. Each redrawn cel was painted in color and then photographed over a colored reproduction of each original background. Needless to say, the animation quality dropped considerably from the original version with this method. The cartoon was colorized again in 1995, this time with a computer adding color to a new print of the original black and white cartoon. This preserved the quality of the original animation.
- ConexionesFeatured in Warner Bros. Cartoons Golden Jubilee Starring Daffy Duck (1985)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y añadir a tu lista para recibir recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
- Duración7 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugerir un cambio o añadir el contenido que falta