AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
1,1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaGo back billions of years to the dinosaur age with Caspar Caveman and his pet dino, Fido. Caspar spots Daffy in a lake and hunts him but Daffy just keeps outsmarting him.Go back billions of years to the dinosaur age with Caspar Caveman and his pet dino, Fido. Caspar spots Daffy in a lake and hunts him but Daffy just keeps outsmarting him.Go back billions of years to the dinosaur age with Caspar Caveman and his pet dino, Fido. Caspar spots Daffy in a lake and hunts him but Daffy just keeps outsmarting him.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
Mel Blanc
- Daffy Duck
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Jack Lescoulie
- Casper Caveman
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Daffy Duck & the Dinosaur employs some good, solid gags, but I'm not a huge fan of the early, manic-like Daffy. I thought the real star of the show was Casper Caveman, who is supposedly a caricature of Jack Benny (I'll take Paul Penna's word for it, because I really don't know!) Nevertheless, Casper had some great mannerisms and was just a funny, unsuspecting victim of Daffy's crazy plans. Speaking of crazy plans, the ending was also quite funny and refreshing when Daffy gets a little too caught up in his scheme. Overall, this is a good, solid Daffy Duck cartoon. It's not the funniest out there, but it definitely has its moments.
My IMDb Rating: 8/10
My IMDb Rating: 8/10
For no particular reason our story is laid in the stone age"-millions and billions and trillions of years ago-probably before any of you people were even born.
A caveman called Casper Caveman is hungry and wants some breakfast,he gets a craving for duck so he gets his pet dinosaur Fido to help him find one,they eventually find a duck and it turns out to be Daffy Duck.
****/*****
4/5 STARS
A Truly UNDERRATED AND MISUNDERSTOOD CLASSIC
-DILLON HARRIS
A caveman called Casper Caveman is hungry and wants some breakfast,he gets a craving for duck so he gets his pet dinosaur Fido to help him find one,they eventually find a duck and it turns out to be Daffy Duck.
****/*****
4/5 STARS
A Truly UNDERRATED AND MISUNDERSTOOD CLASSIC
-DILLON HARRIS
The animation may be rather dated, the story a little sparse and the pace rushed in places, but Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur is a pleasant enough cartoon. Daffy is funny and manic here, as are a vast majority of the gags and the ending is an unexpected surprise. The music is lovely, and the dialogue good. Casper the Caveman comes very close to stealing the show with his mannerisms and all that and is very reminiscent of Jack Benny, not only with the voice but the dialogue as well. I have to say though Fido is adorable, for a dinosaur he really is a cutie. I loved it when he got hit by the thing that was meant for Daffy and he starts dancing.
Overall, pleasant enough but a somewhat rudimentary entry in the Looney Tunes canon. 7/10 Bethany Cox
Overall, pleasant enough but a somewhat rudimentary entry in the Looney Tunes canon. 7/10 Bethany Cox
I'm not remotely a fan of Chuck Jones, but this is one of his better efforts. The premise is intriguing: Daffy Duck (or one of his ancient ancestors) was alive 'trillions' of years ago, and crossed paths with a hungry caveman.
Casper Caveman has a pet apatosaurus named Fido, who is drawn and animated as one of Chuck Jones's usual insufferably twee critters. However, I laughed out loud when the dinosaur tags along behind his prehistoric master. Two-legged Casper and four-legged Fido each have a distinctive gait, and when they walk in unison the visual counterpoint of their movements is very funny.
For some reason, many Warners toons of this period begin with a multi-plane shot, apparently hoping to convince audiences that they can be just as 'arty' as Disney's cartoons. However, the very crude multi-plane pan near the beginning of this toon (more of a 'bi-plane'; only two planes!) is not remotely as impressive as Disney's multi-planes in 'The Old Mill' and elsewhere.
This cartoon violates the laws of physics even more than usual for Termite Terrace standards, with objects and characters able to pause in midair and change direction ditto.
Various sources have stated that the character Casper Caveman in this cartoon is a caricature of Jack Benny. Well, yes and no. The vocal performance (by Jack Lescoulie) expertly copies Benny's distinctive delivery and some of his catchphrases ('Good night, folks.'), and Jones's animation even duplicates a few of Benny's gestures. However, the character as drawn simply doesn't look like Benny, neither facially nor physically. I wonder if this was an attempt to avoid a lawsuit. Or perhaps it was down to the fact that Jack Benny (who had already made some film appearances dating back to the late 1920s) was at this point best known as a radio star, so movie audiences might not be sure of what he looked like.
An advertisement for 'Duckies' in this toon is a parody of a contemporary real-world ad for 'Luckies', i.e., Lucky Strike Cigarettes, which were the long-term sponsor of Jack Benny's radio show. (He had better luck with his next sponsor, Jell-O.)
A nice try at a slight variation of the usual Warners formula, and I'll rate this one 7 out of 10.
Casper Caveman has a pet apatosaurus named Fido, who is drawn and animated as one of Chuck Jones's usual insufferably twee critters. However, I laughed out loud when the dinosaur tags along behind his prehistoric master. Two-legged Casper and four-legged Fido each have a distinctive gait, and when they walk in unison the visual counterpoint of their movements is very funny.
For some reason, many Warners toons of this period begin with a multi-plane shot, apparently hoping to convince audiences that they can be just as 'arty' as Disney's cartoons. However, the very crude multi-plane pan near the beginning of this toon (more of a 'bi-plane'; only two planes!) is not remotely as impressive as Disney's multi-planes in 'The Old Mill' and elsewhere.
This cartoon violates the laws of physics even more than usual for Termite Terrace standards, with objects and characters able to pause in midair and change direction ditto.
Various sources have stated that the character Casper Caveman in this cartoon is a caricature of Jack Benny. Well, yes and no. The vocal performance (by Jack Lescoulie) expertly copies Benny's distinctive delivery and some of his catchphrases ('Good night, folks.'), and Jones's animation even duplicates a few of Benny's gestures. However, the character as drawn simply doesn't look like Benny, neither facially nor physically. I wonder if this was an attempt to avoid a lawsuit. Or perhaps it was down to the fact that Jack Benny (who had already made some film appearances dating back to the late 1920s) was at this point best known as a radio star, so movie audiences might not be sure of what he looked like.
An advertisement for 'Duckies' in this toon is a parody of a contemporary real-world ad for 'Luckies', i.e., Lucky Strike Cigarettes, which were the long-term sponsor of Jack Benny's radio show. (He had better luck with his next sponsor, Jell-O.)
A nice try at a slight variation of the usual Warners formula, and I'll rate this one 7 out of 10.
Caspar Caveman and his pet dinosaur go hunting for breakfast, and guess whom they come across! Of course, Daffy isn't going to get caught so easily, especially since he conveniently has a number of tricks up his sleeve.
I guess that Daffy Duck was a relatively new character when this cartoon came out, but they sure did some funny stuff with him. I think that my favorite scene was when Caspar Caveman slingshots a rock at Daffy, and Daffy escapes it, and it ends up conking the dinosaur on the head and the dinosaur does a dazed dance. "Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur" is what people mean when they talk about classic cartoons!
I guess that Daffy Duck was a relatively new character when this cartoon came out, but they sure did some funny stuff with him. I think that my favorite scene was when Caspar Caveman slingshots a rock at Daffy, and Daffy escapes it, and it ends up conking the dinosaur on the head and the dinosaur does a dazed dance. "Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur" is what people mean when they talk about classic cartoons!
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe first Daffy Duck cartoon directed by Chuck Jones.
- Citações
Casper Caveman: Gee, am I hungry. I could eat a saber-tooth tiger, well anyway, half of one!
- Versões alternativasA fade to black between two scenes near the end of this cartoon appears to be gone in the re-mastered print. This is the version shown on Cartoon Network.
- ConexõesFeatured in Så er der tegnefilm: Episode #1.8 (1980)
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- El Pato Lucas y el Dinosaurio
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração8 minutos
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Patolino e o Dinossauro (1939) officially released in Canada in English?
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