AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,7/10
1,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaBugs and Daffy are vaudevillians competing for praise from the audience. They love Bugs no matter what; just the opposite for Daffy.Bugs and Daffy are vaudevillians competing for praise from the audience. They love Bugs no matter what; just the opposite for Daffy.Bugs and Daffy are vaudevillians competing for praise from the audience. They love Bugs no matter what; just the opposite for Daffy.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artista
Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (narração)
- …
Avaliações em destaque
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are a dancing double act in a vaudeville theatre. However Daffy is not content for equal billing and wants to have all the glory for himself. He challenges Bugs that whatever he can do, Daffy can do better. Bugs does his stuff on stage to great acclaim from the audience, but everything Daffy tries is greeted with all the appreciate of a f*rt in a lift. As the stakes continue to rise, Daffy increasingly pulls out all the stops.
I love Daffy Duck a great deal but much prefer him when he is in full-on wacky mode rather than the more greedy duck of his later cartoons. In this short we see Daffy being his greedy self but him being pushed to crazy limits reminds me of whom he once was. The material is not that good when I think about it and some of the gags are a little under whelming but it still manages to be pretty amusing. The ending is OK but it has been done elsewhere to better effect with Porky Pig and a wolf.
What makes this short work past the average material is the characters. Bugs' delivery is pretty fun although he isn't really his usual tricky self - all he's doing is being a good dancer. Daffy is also good and it is his jealous rage that makes the material much better than it should be. His big finish is not as good as he deserved but up till that point he is funny even if he is not the Daffy that I prefer.
Overall this is enjoyable enough but that's it. The material is average enough and is pretty thin but thankfully the two famous characters both do good work to make it better than it really is.
I love Daffy Duck a great deal but much prefer him when he is in full-on wacky mode rather than the more greedy duck of his later cartoons. In this short we see Daffy being his greedy self but him being pushed to crazy limits reminds me of whom he once was. The material is not that good when I think about it and some of the gags are a little under whelming but it still manages to be pretty amusing. The ending is OK but it has been done elsewhere to better effect with Porky Pig and a wolf.
What makes this short work past the average material is the characters. Bugs' delivery is pretty fun although he isn't really his usual tricky self - all he's doing is being a good dancer. Daffy is also good and it is his jealous rage that makes the material much better than it should be. His big finish is not as good as he deserved but up till that point he is funny even if he is not the Daffy that I prefer.
Overall this is enjoyable enough but that's it. The material is average enough and is pretty thin but thankfully the two famous characters both do good work to make it better than it really is.
Fun Bugs and Daffy short directed by Friz Freleng. This one has Bugs and Daffy both performing at a theater, where Daffy is upset to learn that Bugs is getting top billing. When he's told this is because Bugs is the bigger star, Daffy sets out to upstage his rival. A very funny series of gags follows as Daffy tries one thing after another to get over with the crowd. The animation is good, with bright colors and nicely-drawn characters and backgrounds (although the backgrounds are of that slightly sketchy, slightly off-kilter style that was becoming popular in the mid-to-late '50s). Excellent voice work from the great Mel Blanc. The music is bouncy and lively. This is a fun short that any fan of Bugs or especially Daffy will like. The Bugs/Daffy rivalry was rarely funnier than it is here.
Daffy Duck is in a vaudeville act with Bugs Bunny which he detests because of all the accolades that Bugs gets, and the lack of them that he gets. Which leads him to drastic measures to win the audience over. Some re-used famous gags cause this short to be less than what it could have been, but using the old saying that "any Looney Tunes is Good Looney Tunes", I can't really dislike this one either. This animated short can be seen on Disc 4 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 2 and also features an optional commentary by Greg Ford (as well as vintage sound clips and unused musical scores)
My Grade: B-
My Grade: B-
. . . or element of entertainment naturally, while others are doomed to fail miserably no matter how hard they try. One can think of Harold Hill or the yoyo salesman, or the red-faced buffoon and the geriatric debate opponent, or Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. The first mentioned in each of the above pairings seems to be the inevitable winner, while the latter member of these duos appear to be eternally cursed. Mr. Hill can sell bassoons to igloo builders as he turns the librarian into a sadder but wiser gal, and transforms the school board into a barbershop quartet. On the other hand, he who rhymes with "T" stands for fool. Daffy usually falls into this category, as well.
Daffy Duck has an oversized opinion of himself. He is incensed that Bugs Bunny has the top billing over him. He intends to prove his stardom over Bugs in their performance. The applause says otherwise. Daffy challenges Bugs and he tries so very hard to no avail. He tries attempted murder and finally the ultimate stunt.
The xylophone gag is a classic although it is the second time used against Bugs. Looney Tunes keeps going back to this iconic gag over and over again. Bugs is basically playing this one straight while Daffy is going all out Daffy. That is what sells this. Daffy being so Daffy is so fun.
The xylophone gag is a classic although it is the second time used against Bugs. Looney Tunes keeps going back to this iconic gag over and over again. Bugs is basically playing this one straight while Daffy is going all out Daffy. That is what sells this. Daffy being so Daffy is so fun.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe exploding musical instrument scheme is the same in three Warner Brothers cartoons. The musical score is "Those Endearing Young Charms". In order, they are, first is Disputa Acirrada (1951), as Yosemite Sam tried to get rid of Bugs Bunny, with a piano. Second is Show Infernal (1957), as Daffy Duck tried to get rid of Bugs Bunny, with a xylophone. Then in Rushing Roulette (1965), the rivals were Wile E. Coyote and the Roadrunner. Wile E. Coyote set up a piano, and after the Roadrunner played a 'sour note', Wile E. played the correct theme. The very same musical note, approximately the seventh note to the tenth note, is the note, that is not played correctly, every time and when correctly played, by the schemer, instead gets the explosion occurred to the note.
- Erros de gravaçãoFor his dance, Daffy asks the orchestra to play "E-flat, from the top." The orchestra proceeds to play in B-flat.
- Citações
Daffy Duck: There can only be one explanation for white tile in a dressing room.
[Daffy turns a sign around on door, that reads MEN]
Daffy Duck: And that's it.
- Versões alternativasOn Nickelodeon, the climax involving Daffy's fatal stunt mixture was edited thus: Daffy swallows all of the explosives and then "shakes well", but blows up before he can light and swallow the match (which is what ultimately blows him up in the short's unedited form).
- ConexõesEdited into Entrevista com Pernalonga (1960)
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração7 minutos
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Show Infernal (1957) officially released in Canada in English?
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