VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,7/10
2444
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaBugs plays every defensive position against the Gashouse Gorillas.Bugs plays every defensive position against the Gashouse Gorillas.Bugs plays every defensive position against the Gashouse Gorillas.
Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (voce)
- …
Bea Benaderet
- The Statue of Liberty
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Frank Graham
- Commentator
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- …
Tedd Pierce
- Announcer - First scene
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
The Sportsmen Quartet
- Vocalists
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Classic Bugs Bunny short, directed by Friz Freleng and written by the great Michael Maltese. It's an exciting day at the ball field as the Gas-House Gorillas are playing the Tea Totallers. Things aren't going the Totallers' way, so Bugs steps in and takes on the Gorillas single-handed. Hilarity ensues. It's quite simply one of the best baseball cartoons ever made. Possibly even THE best. Solid voice work, nice music, and excellent animation. Love the colors. The cartoon moves at a fast pace and all of the gags connect well. As I said, it's a classic. Any Looney Tunes fan worth their salt will have seen it at least a few times. I've lost count of how many times I've seen it since childhood but it never gets old to me.
Baseball Bugs (1946)
**** (out of 4)
This here has always been one of my favorite Looney Toons. Bugs is at a baseball game where he starts heckling a team of outlaws who soon forces the bunny to play them. I'm not sure how many times I've watched this in my life but I remember as a kid I'd always stop was I was doing whenever I heard the sports commentators intro. I think there are plenty of non-stop jokes in this from the umpire being hit over the head and then apologizing for calling a strike to the final out with Bugs taking a trip across the city to get to a ball.
**** (out of 4)
This here has always been one of my favorite Looney Toons. Bugs is at a baseball game where he starts heckling a team of outlaws who soon forces the bunny to play them. I'm not sure how many times I've watched this in my life but I remember as a kid I'd always stop was I was doing whenever I heard the sports commentators intro. I think there are plenty of non-stop jokes in this from the umpire being hit over the head and then apologizing for calling a strike to the final out with Bugs taking a trip across the city to get to a ball.
The Tea Totallers is not a good ball team. The average age of the players is about 93--or 93 and a half as one player tells us in his best Lou Costello imitation. The Gas-House Gorillas is not a good ball team either. Everyone on it is an enormous, bullying reprobate. Contemptuous, too. A player grounds an umpire into the ground with his fist. The overconfident jerks even dance a conga line around the bases. Bugs Bunny picks the wrong team to boo. When he shouts that he could take on the Gorillas all by himself with one hand tied behind his back, they take him up on it, except for the hand-tying. Now it's the Gorillas against Bugs on first, Bugs on second, Bugs on third, Bugs pitching, Bugs catching; and it's no match. That is, the Gorillas are no match for our wily Bugs.
Friz Freleng and Michael Maltese give us several unforgettable moments: the screaming liner to left field; Bugs the catcher encouraging Bugs the pitcher with "That's the old pepper, boy"; Bugs's unique method for stealing a base; and even the Statue of Liberty imitating a typical woman fan of the day: "That's what the man said, you heard what he said, he said that!" Mel Blanc's voice talents, as usual, rival Bugs Bunny's one-man show. Treg Brown gives us several hilarious sound effects, such as what accompanies Bugs's wind-up pitch and what we hear when a Gorilla blows cigar smoke in Bugs's face. Carl Stalling writes a score worthy of Bugs and baseball.
This short is available on the "Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume One," Disc 1.
Friz Freleng and Michael Maltese give us several unforgettable moments: the screaming liner to left field; Bugs the catcher encouraging Bugs the pitcher with "That's the old pepper, boy"; Bugs's unique method for stealing a base; and even the Statue of Liberty imitating a typical woman fan of the day: "That's what the man said, you heard what he said, he said that!" Mel Blanc's voice talents, as usual, rival Bugs Bunny's one-man show. Treg Brown gives us several hilarious sound effects, such as what accompanies Bugs's wind-up pitch and what we hear when a Gorilla blows cigar smoke in Bugs's face. Carl Stalling writes a score worthy of Bugs and baseball.
This short is available on the "Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume One," Disc 1.
...if you want to see Bugs in a sports milieu. You'll see Bugs takes care of his own business as opposed to kidnapping a popular, talented athlete to do it for him. You won't see Bugs nabbing Joe DiMaggio, say, to help him against the Gashouse Gorillas. But I digress.
I think the comments on this toon are a bit too analytical. The fact is this is a classic and just plain fun; a toon that I always enjoyed as a kid (and I wasn't even a baseball fan at the time).
Notice how the Gorillas start out as the visiting team, then end up as the home team. Also, note how Bugs, when following the Gorillas' would-be game-ending long fly to try and catch it, gets off the cab that's "going the wrong way" and gets on a bus that appears to be heading in the same direction. These "bloopers" were probably due to error and/or a limited budget but they only add to the hilarious charm of this classic cartoon.
I think the comments on this toon are a bit too analytical. The fact is this is a classic and just plain fun; a toon that I always enjoyed as a kid (and I wasn't even a baseball fan at the time).
Notice how the Gorillas start out as the visiting team, then end up as the home team. Also, note how Bugs, when following the Gorillas' would-be game-ending long fly to try and catch it, gets off the cab that's "going the wrong way" and gets on a bus that appears to be heading in the same direction. These "bloopers" were probably due to error and/or a limited budget but they only add to the hilarious charm of this classic cartoon.
This is the one you remember from when you were growing up and watching Saturday morning "Bugs Bunny and Roadrunner" cartoons. I recently watched this cartoon a 15 years at least since I last saw it and laughed out loud at all the pranks that Bugs pulled out of his hat. I know I must have used some of these jokes when I was playing baseball as a kid.
And the cameo at the end of America's perennial first lady was a hoot - and Bugs goes and lampoons her on the spot!
Classic is the only word for this one.
And the cameo at the end of America's perennial first lady was a hoot - and Bugs goes and lampoons her on the spot!
Classic is the only word for this one.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAmong the ads on the fence is one for "Mike Maltese, Ace Detective" featuring a picture of Michael Maltese (the writer of "Baseball Bugs") with a fedora and a pistol.
- BlooperHalfway through the cartoon, the scoreboard shows the Gas-House Gorillas after four innings with the following scores: 10 + 28 + 16 + 42 for a total of 96 runs. Yet, in the bottom of the ninth, the announcer gives the score as "Gas-House Gorillas: 95 points. Bugs Bunny: 96."
- Citazioni
Bugs Bunny: Watch me paste this pathetic palooka with a powerful paralyzing perfect pachydermus percussion pitch.
- ConnessioniEdited into His Hare Raising Tale (1951)
- Colonne sonoreThe Umbrella Man
(uncredited)
Music by Vincent Rose and Larry Stock
Played when the Gashouse Gorilla sees angels
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione7 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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Divario superiore
By what name was Baseball Bugs (1946) officially released in Canada in English?
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