VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,1/10
3353
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaBugs Bunny retaliates against the pompous opera star who does him violence.Bugs Bunny retaliates against the pompous opera star who does him violence.Bugs Bunny retaliates against the pompous opera star who does him violence.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (voce)
- …
Nicolai Shutorev
- Giovanni Jones
- (voce (canto))
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Long Haired-Hare may be the only cartoon short with the distinction of incorporating a hilarious, epic lesson in harmonic physics as a climatic punch-line.
If you were to ask me, "Who do you prefer, Daffy or Bugs?", I would immediately say Daffy. However, I do have to admit that sometimes Bugs Bunny can put on a very good performance and this is one of them.
In this, Bugs Bunny is playing a number of instruments on a hillside and singing. At the bottom of the hill, a famous opera singer is trying to practise for a big concert later on. He is constantly distracted by Bugs and takes revenge mercilessly. Bugs is determined to have HIS revenge...
I like this because of the plot, the humour, the opera and singing.
I recommend this to people who like Bugs Bunny in anything and who can bear with opera. Enjoy! :-)
In this, Bugs Bunny is playing a number of instruments on a hillside and singing. At the bottom of the hill, a famous opera singer is trying to practise for a big concert later on. He is constantly distracted by Bugs and takes revenge mercilessly. Bugs is determined to have HIS revenge...
I like this because of the plot, the humour, the opera and singing.
I recommend this to people who like Bugs Bunny in anything and who can bear with opera. Enjoy! :-)
When I try to decide which is the best Looney Tunes cartoon ever, it's a shoo-in between "Long-Haired Hare" and "What's Opera, Doc?". In "Long-Haired Hare", Bugs Bunny is singing some songs and playing instruments to accompany them, when overstuffed opera singer Giovanni Jones smashes Bugs' instruments and ties him up. Bugs affirms to the camera "Of course you realize this means war." So, when Jones is performing at the Hollywood Bowl, Bugs plays all sorts of tricks on him. Best of all are the hand directions. This is a veritable triumph-of-the-underdog story. You just can't go wrong with the classic Bugs Bunny cartoons. Perfect.
Here Bugs takes his revenge on an opera singer named Giovanni Jones and does so with hilarious consequences. The last few minutes are absolutely priceless and one of my all time favourite endings in a Looney Tunes cartoon. Mel Blanc is brilliant as Bugs and Nicolai Shutorov gives a bravura singing performance as Giovanni(though when I first saw this cartoon I could've sworn it was Nelson Eddy). The animation is wonderful, the music is a joy, the gags come by thick and fast and there are a lot of them. In case you are wondering, when Bugs is walking between the orchestra and the members are whispering "Leopold", that is a reference to Leopold Stokowski. Overall, this is a real jewel for Looney Tunes and opera fans and I am both. 10/10 Bethany Cox
Having just got the "Loony Tunes Golden Collection"(which i HIGHLY recommend, by the way), I'm going to try to comment on most if not all of the cartoons individually. As such the starting statement might seem redundant for those whom read multiple reviews of them, for this i apologize.
Bugs finds a new enemy in Opera singer,Giovanni Jones, when his banjo playing disgruntles the guy. Giovanni gets the first few punches in, but Bugs pays him back in spades later that night. Very funny. The DVD has commentary by Historian Micheal Barrier on this short.
DVD Extras: Disk 1: an introduction by Chuck Jones; The Boy of Termite Terrice part 1; clips from the films "Two Guys from Texas" and "My Dream is Yours", both with Bugs cameos; Bridging sequences for an episode of "the Bugs Bunny show"; the Astro Nuts audio recording session; 2 vintage trailers; "Blooper Bunny: Bugs Bunny 51st and a half anniversary" with optional commentary with writer Greg Ford & stills gallery
Bugs finds a new enemy in Opera singer,Giovanni Jones, when his banjo playing disgruntles the guy. Giovanni gets the first few punches in, but Bugs pays him back in spades later that night. Very funny. The DVD has commentary by Historian Micheal Barrier on this short.
DVD Extras: Disk 1: an introduction by Chuck Jones; The Boy of Termite Terrice part 1; clips from the films "Two Guys from Texas" and "My Dream is Yours", both with Bugs cameos; Bridging sequences for an episode of "the Bugs Bunny show"; the Astro Nuts audio recording session; 2 vintage trailers; "Blooper Bunny: Bugs Bunny 51st and a half anniversary" with optional commentary with writer Greg Ford & stills gallery
Lo sapevi?
- QuizLeopold Stokowski never conducted with a baton. This is the reason why Bugs Bunny, impersonating Stokowski, promptly breaks the baton before conducting, and conducts using such dramatic hand gestures.
- BlooperWhen Bugs Bunny fills the throat sprayer with liquid alum, he tightens the top counterclockwise, which would loosen the top. He should turn the top clockwise, which would tighten the top.
- Versioni alternativeApparenty sometimes aired without a sequence in which Bugs, dressed up as a bobby-soxer, tricks the opera singer into signing an autograph book with a stick of dynamite.
- ConnessioniEdited into Il coniglio di Siviglia (1950)
- Colonne sonoreA Rainy Night in Rio
(uncredited)
Music by Arthur Schwartz
Lyrics by Leo Robin
Sung by Bugs Bunny (Mel Blanc) while playing the banjo
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 8min
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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