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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueCommando Daffy Duck goes behind enemy lines and causes havoc for a Nazi German officer and his troops.Commando Daffy Duck goes behind enemy lines and causes havoc for a Nazi German officer and his troops.Commando Daffy Duck goes behind enemy lines and causes havoc for a Nazi German officer and his troops.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Mel Blanc
- Daffy Duck
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
- …
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This is a good cartoon, and a good example of wartime humor - which by 1943, when the war was really beginning to bite back home in the US, had quite an edge.
The phone booth gag is "Is that you, Mert?" a fossilized gag phrase from the period, taken from "Fibber McGee and Molly". It was a catch phrase that audiences of the period would react to as a conditioned response. If you like old cartoons, it helps to be familiar with old-time radio of the period, because the cartoons mined radio for gags constantly (and Mel Blanc was a star in both, as a regular on the number one-rated Jack Benny show). The cartoons are full of show catch phrases, advertising slogans, and caricatures of movie and radio stars and minor characters.
The pinup picture is startling. I remember glimpsing it on my VHS copy and grabbing the remote to rewind and slow-motion. It is quite explicit, and seems like it could have got Friz Freleng in hot water at the time. You can see on the back wall at the first appearance of "Shulz", when he marches across the bunker floor to report.
For real unvarnished Freleng/Warner Brothers wartime humor, check out the "Private Snafu" series, which were intended for distribution to the troops only.
The phone booth gag is "Is that you, Mert?" a fossilized gag phrase from the period, taken from "Fibber McGee and Molly". It was a catch phrase that audiences of the period would react to as a conditioned response. If you like old cartoons, it helps to be familiar with old-time radio of the period, because the cartoons mined radio for gags constantly (and Mel Blanc was a star in both, as a regular on the number one-rated Jack Benny show). The cartoons are full of show catch phrases, advertising slogans, and caricatures of movie and radio stars and minor characters.
The pinup picture is startling. I remember glimpsing it on my VHS copy and grabbing the remote to rewind and slow-motion. It is quite explicit, and seems like it could have got Friz Freleng in hot water at the time. You can see on the back wall at the first appearance of "Shulz", when he marches across the bunker floor to report.
For real unvarnished Freleng/Warner Brothers wartime humor, check out the "Private Snafu" series, which were intended for distribution to the troops only.
Having just watched Donald Duck as a Nazi in one cartoon I decided to continue the Duck/propaganda theme and watch this Daffy Duck cartoon – my favorite of the two animated ducks. This one sees Daffy in the role of an Allied Forces commando trying to infiltrate enemy lines while at the same time Herr Von Vulture is on his last warning to stop such incursions.
I was looking forward to this because very early on we see that it is "zany" Daffy, which is my preferred version of his character and one I find very funny usually. I say usually because the comedy here is just a little bit too obvious and I didn't find it quite as funny as I should have done. Some moments are quite clever but mostly it is hammer-hitting as the majority of the action (although the final stroke is a good one). It is a shame because the characters are good – Daffy is in good form and Von Vulture is a funny creation, even if a little obvious. Works as a piece of propaganda but for zany, crazy Daffy, the material here is just too close to "ordinary" to work.
I was looking forward to this because very early on we see that it is "zany" Daffy, which is my preferred version of his character and one I find very funny usually. I say usually because the comedy here is just a little bit too obvious and I didn't find it quite as funny as I should have done. Some moments are quite clever but mostly it is hammer-hitting as the majority of the action (although the final stroke is a good one). It is a shame because the characters are good – Daffy is in good form and Von Vulture is a funny creation, even if a little obvious. Works as a piece of propaganda but for zany, crazy Daffy, the material here is just too close to "ordinary" to work.
From the characters, it would appear that this episode was the prompt for the situation comedy, "Hogan's Heroes".
I have always been a big Looney Tunes fan, and especially of Daffy. Daffy-The Commando is not quite one of my favourites, I'd personally put Duck Amuck, the Hunting Trilogy and Duck Dodgers in the 24.5 Century over this, however it is a very interesting, very funny and very bold cartoon.
The animation is beautiful, especially in the detailed backgrounds and ravishing colours. The music has energy and is fitting with the style of music at the time, the dialogue as always is fresh and funny and the gags are great with the standout being the fight over a nickel in the phone booth.
Story-wise it is exciting and interesting from a historical perspective. For its time, it is quite bold especially with the ending, which could account for why it was apparently banned, but rather than be offended by the boldness I appreciated it.
Daffy has always been one of my favourite cartoon characters due to his manic and zany persona even with some greediness creeping in in some of the cartoons but to me this didn't make him less likable, and he is on top form here. The support characters are also memorable, as well as the brilliant vocal talents of Mel Blanc.
Overall, a great cartoon. 10/10 Bethany Cox
The animation is beautiful, especially in the detailed backgrounds and ravishing colours. The music has energy and is fitting with the style of music at the time, the dialogue as always is fresh and funny and the gags are great with the standout being the fight over a nickel in the phone booth.
Story-wise it is exciting and interesting from a historical perspective. For its time, it is quite bold especially with the ending, which could account for why it was apparently banned, but rather than be offended by the boldness I appreciated it.
Daffy has always been one of my favourite cartoon characters due to his manic and zany persona even with some greediness creeping in in some of the cartoons but to me this didn't make him less likable, and he is on top form here. The support characters are also memorable, as well as the brilliant vocal talents of Mel Blanc.
Overall, a great cartoon. 10/10 Bethany Cox
The Nazi leader is given the job of keeping commandos out of his territory. Daffy is a commando (for whatever reason). He is at his manic best as he launches a full scale assault on the bad guy. A good deal of propaganda here in the midst of the U.S. involvement. The little guy Schultz is the victimized enlisted man who is constantly being hit over the head with a giant hammer. Daffy seems to understand that this is really unfair. It's action packed.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe very realistic animated image of Adolf Hitler was rotoscoped.
- GaffesSchultz is standing in the third room (the one with the recessed ceiling-light) of Von Vulture's bunker prior to his turning around to march out the front door and operate the floodlight, yet in the next shot, Schultz is standing just inside the first room (the one with the table and the bench with the communications equipment), right next to the connecting-doorway to the second room (the one with the poster of the almost-nude "Kaiserhof" girl).
- Citations
[Repeated line]
Von Vulture: Schultz!
- Versions alternativesSome prints of this film apparently do not have the text of the "translations" on the cards that Daffy holds up.
- ConnexionsEdited into Bugs & Daffy: The Wartime Cartoons (1989)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Looney Tunes #12 (1942-1943 Season): Daffy the Commando
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée7 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Daffy le héros (1943) officially released in Canada in English?
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