Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen the circus arrives they put the lion's cage right over Bugs' rabbit hole.When the circus arrives they put the lion's cage right over Bugs' rabbit hole.When the circus arrives they put the lion's cage right over Bugs' rabbit hole.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (voix)
- …
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A savage, undisciplined lion has been put behind bars for a circus carnival. He suddenly notices a hole on the floor of his cell, then sticks his nose into this hole to snuff it. At first he thinks Bugs Bunny's home is belong to a camel; yet when he wakes Bugs up from his sleep hoisting him up to the ground, there he meets with Bugs, his next trainer.
If you ever wonder how Bugs would turn a savage lion into a Hawaiian hula dancer with traditional skirts on, you should watch this cartoon. Director Bob McKimson offers endless laughters by means of absurd and unexpected demonstrative humour.
The signature scenes include:
1/ the look of Bugs Bunny's home, cross-referencing to Donald Duck with the B.B. name acronym on the headboard of Bugs's bed
2/ Bugs Bunny's short journey with the mine hoist climbing up to the ground floor
3/ When Nero the Lion calls his friend the Elephant for help, Bugs uses a toy mouse to scare the Elephant; since the Elephant needed a broom to outpower that toy mouse, he uses Nero as a broom!
4/ Bugs becoming a clown with the proper costume and make-up and the practical clown jokes that he makes
5/ the trapeze scene while Nero chasing after Bugs
6/ the famous Human Cannonball scene after which Nero the Lion starts dancing Hawaiian Hula
The magic moments which keep Acrobatty Bunny fresh at all times in our memory:
1/ When Bugs comes out of his bunny hole, he thinks he's in the Pinocchio tale; and starts acting to save Pinocchio out of the giant whale's stomach
2/ When the Lion roars to scare him, Bugs replies back to him with roaring
3/ Bugs arguing with the Lion for he's making so much noise, then finding a piece of wood to rub it against the iron bars while singing in order to make more noise than him
4/ Wearing rubber heels at the circus, Bugs starts to bounce like toy rabbits and causes Nero to bounce!
Those are the 10 main reasons that keeps Acrobatty Bunny as a Bugs Bunny classic and can be found in the "Bugs Bunny Classics' MGM/UA Video (1989)"
If you ever wonder how Bugs would turn a savage lion into a Hawaiian hula dancer with traditional skirts on, you should watch this cartoon. Director Bob McKimson offers endless laughters by means of absurd and unexpected demonstrative humour.
The signature scenes include:
1/ the look of Bugs Bunny's home, cross-referencing to Donald Duck with the B.B. name acronym on the headboard of Bugs's bed
2/ Bugs Bunny's short journey with the mine hoist climbing up to the ground floor
3/ When Nero the Lion calls his friend the Elephant for help, Bugs uses a toy mouse to scare the Elephant; since the Elephant needed a broom to outpower that toy mouse, he uses Nero as a broom!
4/ Bugs becoming a clown with the proper costume and make-up and the practical clown jokes that he makes
5/ the trapeze scene while Nero chasing after Bugs
6/ the famous Human Cannonball scene after which Nero the Lion starts dancing Hawaiian Hula
The magic moments which keep Acrobatty Bunny fresh at all times in our memory:
1/ When Bugs comes out of his bunny hole, he thinks he's in the Pinocchio tale; and starts acting to save Pinocchio out of the giant whale's stomach
2/ When the Lion roars to scare him, Bugs replies back to him with roaring
3/ Bugs arguing with the Lion for he's making so much noise, then finding a piece of wood to rub it against the iron bars while singing in order to make more noise than him
4/ Wearing rubber heels at the circus, Bugs starts to bounce like toy rabbits and causes Nero to bounce!
Those are the 10 main reasons that keeps Acrobatty Bunny as a Bugs Bunny classic and can be found in the "Bugs Bunny Classics' MGM/UA Video (1989)"
A circus moves on Bugs Bunny's home.He goes up from his cozy hole, and finds himself from a lion's cage.So starts a chase between a lion and a bunny.Nero the Lion wants to eat the bunny, but it's easier roared than done.At least when that bunny happens to be Bugs.Acrobatty Bunny is a Looney Tunes short from 1946.It's directed by Robert McKimson.Mel Blanc's voice work is as good as always.The movie, even though not lasting very long, manages to have several funny gags.Like when the lion uses the elephant to get inside the cage, where Bugs is.But Bugs uses a fake mouse to frighten the elephant, and he hits it using the lion.Or Bugs the clown trying to make the lion laugh, using unorthodox methods.And what about the lion as a cannonball! It's a riot!
Once again, Bugs Bunny sacred home is violated by careless people. This time the traveling circus put a lion's cage right over the rabbit's hole. So Bug's has to come out of the hole and face Nero (that's the name of the lion), which he does in his usual hilarious style. After a slow and rocky beginning to the cart, it keeps getting better and better and winds up being quite hilarious. Nero the lion turns out to be a pretty good foil for Bugs and that turns this short into a highly memorable one, if still shorn of a classic. This animated short can be found on Disk 1 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 3.
My Grade: A-
My Grade: A-
You've got a good point there, Nero.
Perhaps best known for being the first Looney Tune to end with "That's All, Folks!" combined with the Looney Tunes theme music, this 1946 cartoon, in which Bugs Bunny takes on a lion and briefly an elephant at a circus, might not exactly have me in stitches, but it is perfectly amusing and well-made all the same. Overall, I do derive a strange amount of pleasure from watching Bugs torment the poor lion, and Acrobatty Bunny has several highlights, such as Bugs' lawbreaking elevator to the surface, and the scene in which he dresses as a clown and, indeed, puts the lion in the stitches that he failed to put me in.
Perhaps best known for being the first Looney Tune to end with "That's All, Folks!" combined with the Looney Tunes theme music, this 1946 cartoon, in which Bugs Bunny takes on a lion and briefly an elephant at a circus, might not exactly have me in stitches, but it is perfectly amusing and well-made all the same. Overall, I do derive a strange amount of pleasure from watching Bugs torment the poor lion, and Acrobatty Bunny has several highlights, such as Bugs' lawbreaking elevator to the surface, and the scene in which he dresses as a clown and, indeed, puts the lion in the stitches that he failed to put me in.
The "good news" is that the circus is in town. The "bad news" is that's right over Bugs Bunny's underground home. He wakes up as his place shakes like an earthquake hit it, when workers pound stakes into the ground and elephants stomp by, etc.
To be more specific, the lions' cage is place exactly over Bugs' hole. The lion sniffs food, and by process of elimination, figures out it's a rabbit. Bugs, curious what all the racket is about, winds his way through the tunnel and winds up in the lion's mouth.
I'll say for thing for BB: he is totally fearless, at least in this cartoon, and at least for 30 seconds. When he comes to his senses, he runs like crazy and we get a lion-versus-a rabbit battle the rest of the way. Once again, Bugs faces dumb opponent, one he calls "Nero," but lion is fierce and Bugs will need all his wits and somewhat-fake bravado to fend off this beast.
About half the gags are stupid and the other half funny, but always fast-moving, colorful and good enough to recommend. I mean, it's not everyday you can see a lion on a trapeze, or doing a hula dance!
To be more specific, the lions' cage is place exactly over Bugs' hole. The lion sniffs food, and by process of elimination, figures out it's a rabbit. Bugs, curious what all the racket is about, winds his way through the tunnel and winds up in the lion's mouth.
I'll say for thing for BB: he is totally fearless, at least in this cartoon, and at least for 30 seconds. When he comes to his senses, he runs like crazy and we get a lion-versus-a rabbit battle the rest of the way. Once again, Bugs faces dumb opponent, one he calls "Nero," but lion is fierce and Bugs will need all his wits and somewhat-fake bravado to fend off this beast.
About half the gags are stupid and the other half funny, but always fast-moving, colorful and good enough to recommend. I mean, it's not everyday you can see a lion on a trapeze, or doing a hula dance!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first Bugs Bunny cartoon directed by Robert McKimson.
- GaffesWhen Bugs begins bouncing on his rubber heels, he turns a considerably paler shade of gray.
- Citations
Bugs Bunny: Iron bars do not a prison make... but they sure help, eh, Doc?
- ConnexionsEdited into Fifty Years of Bugs Bunny in 3 1/2 Minutes (1989)
- Bandes originalesLaugh, Clown, Laugh
(uncredited)
Music by Ted Fio Rito
Lyrics by Sam Lewis and Joe Young
Sung by Mel Blanc (as Bugs Bunny)
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Détails
- Durée8 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Acrobatty Bunny (1946) officially released in Canada in English?
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