AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
1,1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaBugs is working as part of an outdoor display in a department store window when the store manager decides to have him stuffed as part of the Taxidermy department.Bugs is working as part of an outdoor display in a department store window when the store manager decides to have him stuffed as part of the Taxidermy department.Bugs is working as part of an outdoor display in a department store window when the store manager decides to have him stuffed as part of the Taxidermy department.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (narração)
- …
Dave Barry
- Store Manager
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
This is an above-average pre-1948 Bugs Bunny cartoon, one of my earlier favorites.
The story is better than the majority, plus it's completely new. Bugs is the innocent victim here. Often, he antagonizes the predator as well. But here he chooses evasive action.
The animation is great, I like the way they drew the manager. Bugs Bunny is basic, he still has to evolve quite a bit. The store is done in great detail. Kudos to the team.
The ending is great, and the jokes are good throughout: Bugs dresses not only as a woman, but both hunter and quarry run through different departments, wearing appropriate clothing when they reappear. That sequence was great.
Bugs manages to outwit his foe, but there's a nice twist in the tail at the end, with great penultimate and closing jokes.
The manager's character is huge, about fifteen times the size of Bugs, and the perfect foil. But he's not nearly as dim-witted as he seems. Bugs has reason to be genuinely insecure about his safety.
Hare Conditioned (1945) is a great cartoon, and I certainly recommend it.
The story is better than the majority, plus it's completely new. Bugs is the innocent victim here. Often, he antagonizes the predator as well. But here he chooses evasive action.
The animation is great, I like the way they drew the manager. Bugs Bunny is basic, he still has to evolve quite a bit. The store is done in great detail. Kudos to the team.
The ending is great, and the jokes are good throughout: Bugs dresses not only as a woman, but both hunter and quarry run through different departments, wearing appropriate clothing when they reappear. That sequence was great.
Bugs manages to outwit his foe, but there's a nice twist in the tail at the end, with great penultimate and closing jokes.
The manager's character is huge, about fifteen times the size of Bugs, and the perfect foil. But he's not nearly as dim-witted as he seems. Bugs has reason to be genuinely insecure about his safety.
Hare Conditioned (1945) is a great cartoon, and I certainly recommend it.
10Hitchcoc
Bugs does rabbit demonstrations at a department store. Unfortunately, the taxidermy department needs a rabbit, and the manager decides to have Bugs stuffed and put on display. This leads to a mano a mano (mano a rabbito) chase where each gets in his licks. This is very clever and its non stop action nevers rests.
Hare Conditioned isn't an absolute classic for me, but it is enormously entertaining and definitely worth watching more than once. The story is a well-constructed one, not the most effective one there is, but it works very well. But there were many other elements that made Hare Conditioned so enjoyable. The animation is wonderful, with lively backgrounds and imaginative colouring, and the music is fun and jaunty. The dialogue has a constant sense of fun, and the visual gags are very clever. The antagonist here is a strong(and big) one, while Bugs is still witty, intelligent and somewhat arrogant here as well, both are brilliantly voiced by Mel Blanc. Overall, if you love Bugs Bunny, I think you'll love this. 10/10 Bethany Cox
10Mister-6
Is it a good idea to use live animals for department store window displays?
No, and here's why....
In "Hare Conditioned" the sale that Bugs is helping promote is over and the store manager (Nelson) is transferring him to a new department: taxidermy. Naturally, Bugs objects and the fun begins.
using nearly every department in the store (children's wear, sports, shoes, costumes, women's nightgowns - don't ask.), Bugs comes out on top at every turn, even referring to the manager as "The Great GilderSNEEZE". Even when trapped in the confines of an elevator, Bugs makes the best of the situation.
Director Jones is on top of his pictorial game as always, as are Blanc (as Bugs, natch) and Nelson (the manager - who DOES sound like radio mainstay Gildersleeves - go ask your grand-parents).
And a sage word of advice: when confronted by a fuzzy-looking woman wanting to try on bathroom slippers, always check her ears.
Ten stars for "Hare Conditioner", the best argument yet for animal labor laws.
No, and here's why....
In "Hare Conditioned" the sale that Bugs is helping promote is over and the store manager (Nelson) is transferring him to a new department: taxidermy. Naturally, Bugs objects and the fun begins.
using nearly every department in the store (children's wear, sports, shoes, costumes, women's nightgowns - don't ask.), Bugs comes out on top at every turn, even referring to the manager as "The Great GilderSNEEZE". Even when trapped in the confines of an elevator, Bugs makes the best of the situation.
Director Jones is on top of his pictorial game as always, as are Blanc (as Bugs, natch) and Nelson (the manager - who DOES sound like radio mainstay Gildersleeves - go ask your grand-parents).
And a sage word of advice: when confronted by a fuzzy-looking woman wanting to try on bathroom slippers, always check her ears.
Ten stars for "Hare Conditioner", the best argument yet for animal labor laws.
10paulo20
This, along with "Hare Tonic," ranks as one of the best Bugs cartoons, indeed one of the best Bugs, ever. There are some comments about how Bugs in these cartoons is "basic," meaning, I guess, that he is as yet not fully developed. I actually prefer this "basic" version from the mid-40s (Chuck Jones' was the best version) who is actually more rabbit-sized and far more amusing than the eventual long-legged version who towered over Yosemite Sam and Daffy Duck. The latter-day Bugs came to be too suave and sophisticated for my liking. Also check out "Hair Raising Hare" (1946) and "Rabbit Punch" (1948) for great examples of classic Bugs and classic Chuck Jones.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe department store manager (voiced by an uncredited Dick Nelson) is a parody of The Great Gildersleeve, a character played by Harold Peary in the radio program "Fibber McGee and Molly". Gildersleeve was so popular he was spun off into his own radio show, "The Great Gildersleeve", as well as a series of feature films and a TV series (The Great Gildersleeve (1954)). Bugs comments on this fact when he says he sounds like "Dat guy on da radio, da Great Gildersneeze."
- Erros de gravaçãoAt some point during the outrageous elevator gags, the manager turns around and they forgot to draw his moustache in. This occurs after the upside-down Bugs passes by, and the manager turns to face the 'camera'.
- Citações
Bugs Bunny: [In drag, posing as a customer] I'd like to see something nice in a pair of bedroom slippers.
Gildersleeve: Confidentially, so would I. He-he-he-he-he.
- ConexõesFeatured in Så er der tegnefilm: Episode #2.16 (1980)
- Trilhas sonorasOh, You Beautiful Doll
(uncredited)
Music by Nat Ayer
Played when Bugs chases the manager out of the Lingerie Department
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 7 min
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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