IMDb RATING
6.1/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
The characters of Looney Tunes are all babies and live with Granny.The characters of Looney Tunes are all babies and live with Granny.The characters of Looney Tunes are all babies and live with Granny.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
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Nicole Oliver
• 2004–2005
Peter Kelamis
• 2004–2005
Kathleen Barr
• 2004–2005
Colin Murdock
• 2004–2005
Featured reviews
Frankly, I'm really mad at all of those who have bashed this show with bad reviews. "Baby Looney Tunes" is to me, a really good show. The show features our beloved "Looney Tunes" characters like Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Taz, and Lola Bunny (from "Space Jam" for those who don't know) as babies. Each episode features one, or some of the little tykes getting into a situation, but in the end, their nanny (If you want to describe it that way) Granny (BRILLIANT!!!) helps solve the problem that the little tykes got into.
Overall, I like the show. I think it's cute, and I think it's great to see our "Looney Tunes" characters shown as babies. Sure some will say it rips off "Muppet Babies" (A GREAT show from my youth), but so what? This show's great!!
This gets a 10/10.
Overall, I like the show. I think it's cute, and I think it's great to see our "Looney Tunes" characters shown as babies. Sure some will say it rips off "Muppet Babies" (A GREAT show from my youth), but so what? This show's great!!
This gets a 10/10.
I think that one should think of these shows (the old-timey Looney Tunes and Baby Looney Tunes) as two different shows.
The latter is a cutesy, gentle kind of cartoon that gives good messages to tots--but, also, to kids of all ages, because we never outgrow our need for learning lessons.
It's what you would call a sweet cartoon--and I would rather have kids exposed to sweet cartoons like this that also happens to have wonderful animation than that same tired stuff that they also show on the Cartoon Network that is woodenly-animated and sparse in meaningful plot.
The Looney Tunes I grew up with (I'm 51 years old) are the traditional ones, and they're full of slapstick, current event comedy that adults can appreciate on their own level (make that historical events for most of us), and amazing animation.
They're very fun and looney as the name implies, but they also exercise your mind as you keep on your toes for getting the double meanings.
Looney Tunes and others of their ilk also were music appreciation mini-courses, as they used a lot of classical, jazz, and other musical genres as background music at times and as part of the actual plot at other times.
Sadly, I see very little of those cartoons in the calibre of Looney Tunes, Tom & Jerry, Popeye, Rocky & Bullwinkle, etc. shown on The Cartoon Network.
And Baby Looney Tunes--while given a somewhat bigger piece of the pie--only represents a small portion of what's on there.
There are other really cute and funny cartoons on this network, but it seems as if most of it is made up of those very woodenly-animated, same old plot kind of cartoons.
They're of the animae type--which people tout as being something really special--but it's the most primitive of this type of cartooning to the place that all the different cartoons kinda go together.
The latter is a cutesy, gentle kind of cartoon that gives good messages to tots--but, also, to kids of all ages, because we never outgrow our need for learning lessons.
It's what you would call a sweet cartoon--and I would rather have kids exposed to sweet cartoons like this that also happens to have wonderful animation than that same tired stuff that they also show on the Cartoon Network that is woodenly-animated and sparse in meaningful plot.
The Looney Tunes I grew up with (I'm 51 years old) are the traditional ones, and they're full of slapstick, current event comedy that adults can appreciate on their own level (make that historical events for most of us), and amazing animation.
They're very fun and looney as the name implies, but they also exercise your mind as you keep on your toes for getting the double meanings.
Looney Tunes and others of their ilk also were music appreciation mini-courses, as they used a lot of classical, jazz, and other musical genres as background music at times and as part of the actual plot at other times.
Sadly, I see very little of those cartoons in the calibre of Looney Tunes, Tom & Jerry, Popeye, Rocky & Bullwinkle, etc. shown on The Cartoon Network.
And Baby Looney Tunes--while given a somewhat bigger piece of the pie--only represents a small portion of what's on there.
There are other really cute and funny cartoons on this network, but it seems as if most of it is made up of those very woodenly-animated, same old plot kind of cartoons.
They're of the animae type--which people tout as being something really special--but it's the most primitive of this type of cartooning to the place that all the different cartoons kinda go together.
I was born in the good times - the Bugs Bunny/Roadrunner Show ran from 9:00AM until 10:30AM every Saturday morning. Life was good.
Now, all I've got is some brat named Caliou and other assorted Disney characters to offer my 3 year old. Thanks to Baby Looney Tunes, I can introduce her to the characters I love so much. Since she got into Baby Looney Tunes (which wasn't hard), she loves to watch the true animated shorts with me.
Bottom line: Taken on its own, it's pretty bad. In the Looney Universe, it's a great introduction to all our favorites.
Now, all I've got is some brat named Caliou and other assorted Disney characters to offer my 3 year old. Thanks to Baby Looney Tunes, I can introduce her to the characters I love so much. Since she got into Baby Looney Tunes (which wasn't hard), she loves to watch the true animated shorts with me.
Bottom line: Taken on its own, it's pretty bad. In the Looney Universe, it's a great introduction to all our favorites.
I get it, Warner Bros. just needed something new to paste the Looney Tunes on to make a profit and while the intentions of the program are fine and all...It just doesn't really fit these characters at all. The Looney Tunes were not exactly designed as pure hearted characters who were particularly aspirational moral gurus for audience to connect with, they were a stark contrast to Disney's animation and made to be more wild, over the top, and edgier(hence why so many of the classic animated shorts happened to show right before gangster films and action serials). When it ran on television reception was pretty mixed, I recall the general mindset being that it was well intended and the lessons being taught were just fine but it was all pretty out of character for those familiar with the franchise. Okay for a toddler.
Once again here we have another good show and yet people want to over analyze this show.. This show was never intended to be a spin-off to the space jam movie.. And it's very obvious that the creators didn't intend for it to be otherwise we would have lola on there.. I could see everyones complaint if this was a highly respected anime series where we're dealing with story lines but this is just a cartoon series.. I can't think of a warner bros cartoons series that had a storyline that followed the series through-out.. Last, this cartoon airs at 8am (central here) so it's kinda obvious that it's directed towards an audience that either didn't watch space jam or was too young to remember the movie to realize that something doesn't match up there..All in all I like the show.. I find it very funny and calming and to me that counts more..
Did you know
- TriviaWarner Bros. Animation's first preschool television program.
- Alternate versionsSyndicated version cuts out the musical numbers shown between episodes and adds different commercial segues featuring some of the character's voices.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 33rd Annual Daytime Emmy Awards (2006)
- How many seasons does Baby Looney Tunes have?Powered by Alexa
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