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Bugs Bunny and Friends (2000)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice) (archive footage)
Bugs Bunny Cool, collected, carrot-chomping Bugs Bunny outsmarts all adversaries. He's inordinately brainy and zany, an Academy Award winner for "Knighty Knight Bugs" and known the world over for his signature line "What's Up, Doc?"
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Yankee Doodle Cricket (1975)
Character: Tucker the Mouse / Rattlesnake / Bald Eagle (voice)
The War of Independence has begun, and Tucker the Mouse, Harry the Cat and Chester C. Cricket are indispensable to the American colonies' effort to free themselves from the rule of the despotic English king. Harry and Tucker help Thomas Jefferson write the Declaration of Independence. Chester creates the tune for "Yankee Doodle Dandy." And all the animals--including John and Marsha, the lightning bugs--help Paul Revere spread the message that the British are coming. [Plot summary written by J. Spurlin.]
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Hysterical Highspots in American History (1941)
Character: Crow's Nest Lookout / Christopher Columbus / Ponce De Leon / Pilgrims / Dog / Real Estate Salesman / Cat / Paul Revere / Minutemen / Robert Fulton / Old Man / Telegraph Operator / Thomas Edison / Recording Voice
A comical twist on the history of America.
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Tweety's S.O.S. (1951)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Ship Captain (voice)
Sylvester Cat stows away aboard a seagoing passenger liner to try and catch Tweety Bird, who is guarded by his mistress, Granny. Sylvester becomes seasick and runs to the sickbay for a remedy. Tweety mixes nitro into the medicine before Sylvester drinks it. When Granny hits Sylvester with her broom, he is blown sky-high.
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The Gold Brick (1943)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
A fairy encourages Snafu to duck out of his training regime for his own reasons.
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It's Murder She Says... (1945)
Character: Pvt. Snafu (voice)
A haggard mosquito complains how tough life is with the military taking the proper precautions against malaria infection.
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Private Snafu Presents Seaman Tarfu in the Navy (1946)
Character: Seaman Tarfu / Dispatcher / Dog / Sailors / Lady / Japanese Soldier (voice)
Private Snafu (Situation Normal All Fucked Up) presents his brother Tarfu (Things Are Really Fucked Up) who was a carrier pigeon keeper and has joined the Navy
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The Woody Woodpecker Polka (1951)
Character: Woody Woodpecker's Laugh (voice) (archive sound)
For a chance at free food at a barn dance, Woody Woodpecker dresses as a girl to fool ticket taker Wally Walrus.
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The Fella with a Fiddle (1937)
Character: Fiddling Mouse (voice)
A mouse fakes blindness and plays his fiddle; he returns home, where it becomes apparent he's rich. The tax collector arrives, and he pulls various levers and presses buttons to make his home look like a shack. The tax collector can't catch him. A cat sees this and tries baiting a trap with a gold coin; that fails, but a gold crown on his tooth lures the mouse in. Or does it? The mouse telling this story to his grandchildren looks oddly familiar...
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Life Begins for Andy Panda (1939)
Character: N/A
Walter Finchell, the tattletale gossip of the jungle, broadcasts from the treetop that Mr. and Mrs. Panda were presented with a baby boy, whom Mrs. Panda names Andy. All the birds and animals go to the Panda's home to welcome the new arrival. As Andy grows, Mr. Panda takes Andy for a walk in the jungle to get him acquainted with Mother Nature and point out some of the perils
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Fish Fry (1944)
Character: (voice)
An alley cat attempts to steal the goldfish Andy Panda just bought from a pet shop, but the fish proves too clever for him.
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The Bandmaster (1947)
Character: N/A
Andy Panda goes to the circus, and the circus turns into a circus where a girl aerialist is rescued by her own false teeth; the acrobats and jugglers mangle each other; a girl trapeze artist loses her wig as a rope-spinning act goes haywire; and the drunken high-wire walker finds himself surrounded by pink elephants.
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Porky's Last Stand (1940)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / Ferdinand (voice) (uncredited)
Porky and Daffy run a diner. The eggs come from chickens kept on the premises. A customer orders a hamburger, and Daffy discovers the mice have gotten to the meat first and left a note. He spots a calf outside and goes after it but ends up having to fight off a large bull. Meanwhile, Porky is preparing an order of two eggs, but one of them is actually a baby chick, who runs away. Daffy manages to sic the bull on Porky, who does some acrobatics to escape until Daffy lures the bull back to him. The bull finally crashes into the diner.
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The Major Lied 'Til Dawn (1938)
Character: Elephant (voice)
We open on a big game hunter telling a little boy (a caricture of child star Freddie Bartholomew) stories about hunting in the jungles of Africa. He tells him a story about a day he was hunting there. The game hunter gets help from African natives to catch some animals, with some odd results. Sight gags include an elephant who can't remember something he was supposed to do, and the game hunter riding a elephant and having to "shift gears" like an automobile to get up a steep hill.
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The Bookworm (1939)
Character: Raven / Racket-Buster (voice) (uncredited)
Three witches need a worm to complete their potion; they dispatch a raven to catch one, and he goes after a bookworm. He chases the worm into the horror section, where the monsters attack but soon, Paul Revere rides Black Beauty to the rescue, along with the Police Gazette, and other assorted war heroes; eventually, the Boy Scouts build a match-stick bridge, leading the worm to safety.
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Dreams on Ice (1939)
Character: Scrappy (voice) (uncredited)
A Color Rhapsody cartoon in which children flood the house then proceed to go to sleep.
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Fagin's Freshman (1939)
Character: Piano Conductor / Hogan (voice)
Momma's singing "Three Little Kittens" with her brood, but Blackie thinks it's for sissies and he'd rather listen to crime dramas on the radio. Momma sends him to bed, where he dreams of venturing out. He sees a sign looking for boys, no experience needed. It's Fagin's school, where he trains boys to steal. The cops raid the place. In the shootout, the phone rings; Fagin answers and passes the message on to a cop: bring home a pound of butter. Blackie dives out a window, gets tangled up in a curtain, and wakes up, tangled in his blanket; he runs downstairs and joins in "Three Little Kittens."
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Art Gallery (1939)
Character: Laughing Cavalier / Henry VII / Town Crier (voice) (uncredited)
An art museum, on a dark and stormy night. The statue of Nero comes to life and tries to burn the nearby painting of Rome but his matches go out. He tries to get a set of "hear no evil" monkeys to take the matches from a still life, but they refuse and he teases them. The other artworks come to their defense. Nero plays hurt, and gets the monkeys to help; after they stumble around in the still life for a while, they get drunk on lighter fluid and start breathing flames, which they combine with the fluid to act as a flamethrower. Soon, the museum is ablaze and all the paintings are either sounding the alarm or coming to fight the fire.
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The Good Egg (1939)
Character: Chicken (voice)
A hen adopts an abandoned egg which hatches into a turtle. The baby turtle becomes the butt of all the real chicks' jokes until danger threatens.
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Calling Dr. Porky (1940)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
A dog thinks he is being chased by small pink elephants, and goes to the hospital. While Porky is working on medication, the pink elephants find him and cause havoc. Porky finally gives him some medication, that only works temporarily, but then sees them again. He rushes back in and is once again ill.
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Malibu Beach Party (1940)
Character: Winchester / Crab (voice) (uncredited)
Jack Bunny (a spoof of Jack Benny) invites Hollywood celebrities to his Malibu house for a party.
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Shop Look & Listen (1940)
Character: Little Blabbermouth (voice)
J.T. Gimlet's department store is closed, and the mice are going on a tour, led by the same W.C. Fields mouse as in Little Blabbermouse. First, the shoe department, where we see mules, both red and green, who pop out of the box and bray at us. Next, the artworks: Whistler's Mother proves to be a good whistler herself; The Thinker is puzzling over his tax return; a painting that starts with two Indians becomes The Last of the Mohicans. In housewares, an automatic ashtray deals with a cigar (prompting a string of babble from Blabbermouse). An automated poker table plays the whole game, complete with the requisite ace-up-the-sleeve. And finally, the gift-wrap department, which includes one robot to measure out ribbon and another to wrap packages. This prompts another string of babble from Blabbermouse, which gets *him* wrapped up (and, when that's not enough, slapped with a "Do Not Open Until Xmas" sticker on his mouth).
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Pilgrim Porky (1940)
Character: Porky Pig
The Pilgrims, led by captain Porky Pig, set sail from Plymouth for America. We get a series of ocean sailing blackout gags, including a running bit between our narrator and the cook, looking for a fish suitable for dinner, a singing trio interrupted by seasickness, flying fish (in airplanes). Then, The Rains Came. A collision with an iceberg is narrowly averted. Land is sighted. The pilgrims are welcomed by Chief Sitting Bull.
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Porky's Midnight Matinee (1941)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
Working backstage at a theater, Porky frees a little ant he finds in a cage, only to learn that it's a rare and valuable trained pygmy ant.
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The Field Mouse (1941)
Character: Grandpa (voice)
It's about these children mice on a farm doing work for their mama and grandpop. The mom catches one of her offspring, Herman, sleeping late and wakes him up by spanking him. After he cries to Grandpa, the ground starts shaking. The tractor is on the way!
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Hoola Boola (1941)
Character: Cannibals (voice)
Jim Dandy lands on a tropical island and falls in love with a beautiful maiden. Soon a tribe of cannibals kidnap him. A Puppetoon animated short film.
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Gopher Goofy (1942)
Character: Gophers, Farmer (uncredited)
A homeowner is enjoying his lovely lawn and garden when it's invaded by a couple of gophers with Brooklyn accents. The homeowner attacks, but the gophers outsmart him at every turn: They duck his hoe and shotgun. He gasses them with helium, and they float away -- causing a crow to throw away his bottle. The inflated gophers hit a tree and fall to earth. The gardener fishes for the gophers under his hat; they substitute a tomato, and he cries, thinking he's squished a gopher. Next, he tries the garden hose; the gophers stop the flow until there's a huge blast of water, which they direct back at the homeowner. He hits the ground and starts burrowing himself, surfacing in his fountain.
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Nutty News (1942)
Character: Various (voice) (uncredited)
Elmer Fudd narrates a newsreel (but is never seen on screen). A hunter uses a moose call; the moose answers back using a hunter call. A barber uses an invention to startle a boy. A man uses a rear-view mirror to guard his hat while eating, but that's not all he should have guarded. In a laboratory, we see how rabbits multiply: 2x2=4, etc. Fireflies are having a blackout. An artist uses his thumb to get the proportions correct as a model is posing. A baby chick follows along as ducks take their first swim. In the South, the traffic signs read "No U-All Turns." A baseball pitcher throws a dollar across the Potomac, but it gets only halfway; his Scotty dog explains that a dollar doesn't go as far. A fox hunt: the dogs run in circles, because the lead dog is romancing the fox. A new department store is about to be built, and it's already attracted a protestor. Finally, we see a series of battleships, all in the rain except the U.S.S. California, in bright sunshine.
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The Daffy Duckaroo (1942)
Character: Daffy Duck / Little Beaver / Others (voice) (uncredited)
Singing cowboy Daffy retires to the Painted Desert (still wet). He falls for an Indian maiden with a Brooklyn accent, but her very large boyfriend catches them. Daffy dresses in drag, which fools him for a while until Daffy's wig falls off. The boyfriend chases Daffy into the Petrified Forest (where Daffy freezes and breaks tomahawks). The Indian sends smoke signals from a phone booth and his tribe attacks Daffy, trapping him under his house trailer.
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Flop Goes the Weasel (1943)
Character: Baby Chick (voice)
While Mammy is gone to catch a worm for her about-to-hatch egg, a weasel steals the egg for his breakfast. When the egg hatches, the blabbermouth chick initially mistakes the weasel for his Mammy.
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How War Came (1941)
Character: Hitler
An animated documentary describing the involvement of Japan, Italy and Nazi Germany as the aggressors and instigators of World War II.
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Meatless Flyday (1944)
Character: Air Raid Warden (voice)
A spider tries a number of tricks to catch a fly. A sugar cube on a string fails when the fly cuts the string. The fly does a trapeze act to taunt the spider, but the spider acts as the fly's catcher; the fly gives him a hotfoot. Buckshot dipped in candy coating fails when the spider's magnet also attracts a cupboard full of dangerous cutlery. The spider spots the fly disguised as the bride atop a wedding cake, and disguises himself as the groom. They chase through an electrical conduit, lighting a neon sign, until an air-raid warden shouts "Put out that light!" They return through the conduit, and the spider catches the fly. He's about to carve up the fly when the fly points to the calendar, declaring September 27 to be "meatless Tuesday."
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Jasper Goes Hunting (1944)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice / uncredited)
Jasper is hunting in the jungle with his friend the Scarecrow. Along the way, they run into Bugs Bunny, making a rare cameo in a non-Warner Bros. production.
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The Return of Mr. Hook (1945)
Character: Sailors
Seaman Hook has big plans for after the war, mostly involving rushing home and marrying his sweetie. So do his fellow seaman, but theirs involve buying bonds.
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The Eager Beaver (1946)
Character: Beaver Foreman / Beavers / Baby Hawk (voice)
Anxious to get to work with the big guys damming the river before the flood hits, a little beaver keeps getting in the way of their work. Finally, the foreman sends him off to chop down that big tree "way over there." Meanwhile, the flood rushes closer and closer.
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Nothing But the Tooth (1948)
Character: Porky Pig / Native American (voice)
Porky Pig travels by horse-pulled, covered wagon to California to join in the 1848 Gold Rush and is ambushed by a diminutive, large-nosed, nasal-voiced, ever-so-polite Mohican with glasses, who wants to scalp the west-bound pig.
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The Pink Blueprint (1966)
Character: Pink Panther Sneezing/Little Man Screaming (voice) (uncredited)
At a building site, the Pink Panther finds a blueprint for the construction of a generic home and replaces it with a pink-colored plan for an ultra-modern house. When the little man on the building site rejects the Pink Panther's pink blueprint and continues his original project, the panther decides to construct his preferred house on the same site, using the man's materials. The accident-prone Pink Panther sneezes a swarm of nails in the direction of the little man's backside and unleashes an out-of-control power saw that splits the man's ladder in two. The Pink Panther dyes his pink plan blue and slips it in the man's pocket, and the man then appears to unwittingly build the house to the Pink Panther's design. The carpenter has the last laugh, however, when the whole "fancy" front section of the house tips forward and falls on the ground, revealing the plain cape-style house that the carpenter had initially been attempting to build.
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Pickled Puss (1948)
Character: Cat Scream (voice) (archive footage)
The cat and mouse are in their usual game of chase-and-pursue until the mouse hides in a pickled-herring barrel. The cat gets intoxicated from inhaling the fumes and immediately becomes the mouse's newest best friend. He defends the mouse from a mean alley cat, and the mouse invites him to come home with him. There, the mouse takes care of him and sobers him up, and the cat immediately begins to chase him again. He reaches the barrel again and regains his newest best friend. Charlie Chaplin deserves an (uncredited) story listing.
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The Winning Ticket (1938)
Character: John Silver (voice) (uncredited)
John Silver's ship has been repossessed; the Captain and the Kids have won $100,000 in a lottery. Silver dresses as an old lady and pretends to faint on the Captain's porch. He is taken inside and soon finds the winning ticket. Meanwhile, the kids spotted him outside and dress themselves as a young lady and come on to Silver, eventually handcuffing him to a batch of fireworks.
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The Carpenters (1941)
Character: Mr. Teewilliger, Clancy (voice)
Carpenters Clancy, Mr. Teewilliger and Herman bumblingly struggle to build a house with disastrous results.
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A Haunting We Will Go (1939)
Character: Lil' Eightball (voice)
The introduction of Lantz's little black-boy character, L'il Eight Ball, finds him going to bed in his small cabin and being visited by a baby ghost. He avers he is not afraid, and his isn't, so the little ghost transports him to a haunted mill where the adult ghosts hang out. They run the little hero through all the standard ghost tests and, while he is shaken, he still will not admit to being scared.
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Silly Superstition (1939)
Character: Lil' Eightball
Lil' Eightball tries to disprove superstition, but comes into conflict with a lion, which is defeated by his tiny dog.
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Wanted: No Master (1939)
Character: Count Screwloose (voice)
Count Screwloose and J.R. the Wonder Dog share a house. Screwloose hogs all the pancakes at breakfast, so to get even, the dog pastes a picture of a pretty woman over the hag advertising for a husband. Screwloose answers the ad, and soon finds himself chased by the spinster, who keeps telling the minister to wait. They finally get married, and the dog thinks he's going to get a meal to himself when the Screwloose family, including all the kids, moves in.
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Bugs Bunny! That Wacky Wabbit (1942)
Character: Bugs Bunny
The lovably rambunctious rabbit takes center stage in this collection of cartoon capers gathered from digitally remastered footage. Hopscotching from one outlandish adventure to the next, the brash bunny wisecracks his way through "Wailroad Wabbit," "This Hare's Fresh," "Ham Nite," "Bleak Beak," "Bugs, Bugs Go Away!" "Sport Legends," "Funny Fables," "I Go for Spinach," "The Wabbit's Wacky," "The Termitenator" and "Popeye the Plumber Man."
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Mouse Meets Lion (1940)
Character: Monkey (voice)
A little mouse is having a great day tramping through the jungle. Seeing a sleeping lion, he pulls his whiskers as a joke and wants to be friends. The lion is angry and starts to eat the tiny mouse. The mouse explains, "I ran away from home. I just found out my father was a rat." He tells the lion that if he will let him go, he will repay the favor. The lion scoffs, but he agrees. When the lion is caught in a trap with hunters coming, the mouse helps to get him out, but he falls in himself while doing so. The lion rescues the mouse, and they romp through the jungle, now as real friends.
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Romeo in Rhythm (1940)
Character: Milkman Crow / Henry Morton Stanley Crow (voice) (uncredited)
This cartoon is by Rudy Ising, and is the last of a long line of black animal musicals done at MGM in the late 30s and early 40s.
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Mrs. Ladybug (1940)
Character: Brush Salesman / Spider (voice) (uncredited)
A mother ladybug has too many children to handle, so she puts out an ad for a maid to help with the chores. A big black spider dresses up as a maid to get in the door.
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Man of Tin (1940)
Character: Wrestler (voice)
This was a Columbia cartoon starring the human boy Scrappy in which the leading character is an assistant to a mad scientist character who creates a robot but despite electrifying him, the robot won't work.
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Hurts and Flowers (1969)
Character: Vocal effects
Roland is a flower child; Rattfink is "a weed." Roland keeps growing, picking, and sniffing flowers; Rattfink keeps attacking Roland, but the attacks either fail or backfire. Among the gags: As Roland plays the harp, Rattfink tries to discourage him by drumming. When that fails, he inverts the drum to reveal a beehive; the bees attack, the harp strings send Roland back into a fountain, and the bee-stung Roland still presents Rattfink with a flower. Rattfink air-drops a bag of flour on Roland; the resulting cloud of flour engulfs RF's plane, and he crashes into a building. Finally, Roland is in a jam session; Rattfink paints a can of nitroglycerine to look like a drum, but slips on a banana peel and explodes. Roland puts a flower on his grave; Rattfink's ghost hurls it at Roland.
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Looney Tunes Super Stars Daffy Duck: Frustrated Fowl (2010)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Tasmanian Devil / Yosemite Sam (voice)(archive footage)
This must-have animation collection "Looney Tunes Super Stars: Daffy Duck: Frustrated Fowl" (2010) is filled with shorts that have been released on disc before and will delight any Looney Tunes fans. Episodes include "Tick Tock Tuckered," "Nasty Quacks," Chuck Jones's "Daffy Dilly" (1948), "Wise Quackers," "The Prize Pest," "Design for Leaving," "Stork Naked," "This is a Life?" (1955), "Dime to Retire," "Ducking the Devil," "People Are Bunny" (1959), "Person to Bunny" (1960), "Daffy's Inn Trouble," "The Iceman Ducketh" and "Suppressed Duck" (1965).
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Looney Tunes: Spotlight Collection Vol. 5 (2007)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Sylvester / Tweety (archive footage)
The Looney Tunes Guide to Fairy Tales: In a storybook setting, Looney Tunes characters share with kids the necessary ingredients for a proper fairy tale
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Blackboard Revue (1940)
Character: Various (voice) (uncredited)
In this episode of A Color Rhapsody, the blackboard drawings come alive, as the characters on screen gather together for class. This Columbia classroom tale features a jungle sequence, musical segment and a story-within-a-story structure, differentiated by the style of the cartoon world and the 'blackboard' world within.
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Tangled Television (1940)
Character: Various (voice)
In this 1940 entry from Columbia Pictures' "Color Rhapsodies" series, three television pioneers demonstrate how TV works. Featured is singer Madame Dish, followed by trips to India, Egypt, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Venice. With the original main titles intact, this 1940 Screen Gems cartoon, with animation by Art Davis and Herb Rothwell plus music by Joe De Nat, was directed by Sid Marcus.
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Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Vol. 4 (2006)
Character: Voice Characterizations
Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 4 was released on November 14, 2006. It is the first Looney Tunes DVD set to feature some cartoons using the modern 1960s Looney Tunes opening and closing sequences. Disc 1 - Bugs Bunny Favorites. Disc 2 - A Dash of Tashlin (All cartoons on this disc are directed by Frank Tashlin). Disc 3 - Speedy Gonzales in a Flash (All cartoons on this disc star Speedy Gonzales). Disc 4 - Kitty Korner.
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Playing the Pied Piper (1941)
Character: Cat / Mouse (voice)
A dopey Pied Piper cat tries to catch a mouse, partly by reading "How to Be a 'Pied Piper in 10 Easy Lessons."
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Common Scents (1962)
Character: Skunk / Duck Hunter (voice) (uncredited)
Loopy struggles to keep a despondent skunk from committing suicide.
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The Little Theatre (1941)
Character: Coo-Coo Bird / Pie (voice)
Scrappy runs a theater where he acts as the ticket collecter, the usher, the snack vendor, and the performer. He later has some probelms with another child in the audience.
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The Cuckoo I.Q. (1941)
Character: Radio Quiz Show Contestant (voice)
A spoof of radio quiz shows. The host asks questions, with the contestant getting worse and worse punishments for wrong answers. Professor Cornelius Van Goon (a real dope) gets all the answers wrong- and pays for it.
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Bugs Bunny's Thanksgiving Diet (1979)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Tasmanian Devil / Porky Pig / Wile E. Coyote / Sylvester / Tweety / Yosemite Sam
Bugs Bunny's Thanksgiving Diet is a 1979 Looney Tunes Thanksgiving television special. It premiered on CBS on November 15th, 1979.
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Snuffy's Party (1939)
Character: Snuffy Skunk (voice)
Snuffy Skunk, thrown out of his own birthday party, has to save his ungrateful guests by stinking away the flood waters from a burst dam.
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Crop Chasers (1939)
Character: Scarecrow (Voice)
A farmer 'hires' two scarecrows to guard his crops against voracious attacks by a flock of crows. During one attack a baby crow falls into the farmer's water well, and the scarecrows save its life. The grateful crows pledge to leave the farmer's cornfield alone in the future, and set about to repair some of the damage they have just done.
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Marvin the Martian & K9: 50 Years on Earth (1998)
Character: Marvin the Martian / K9 (voice)
Collection of classic cartoons including "Haredevil Hare", "Mad as a Mars Hare", "Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24 1/2th Century", "Spacedout Bunny", "Lumber Jack Rabbit", and "Hyde and Go Tweet".
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Railroad Rhythm (1937)
Character: Krazy Kat
Krazy Kat runs a small train line which is being put out of business by a modern streamliner. A wild situation requires Krazy to make a fantastic rescue. After receiving a reward, Krazy gets his own streamliner.
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The Merry Mouse Cafe (1941)
Character: Elmer / Mouse Announcer / Mouse (voice)
After the "Squawk Club" closes for the night, the mice come out and put on a show of their own. The Mouse of Ceremonies introduces the vastly-talented Miss Hedy La Mouse, and Hedy stops the show. Elmer, a rube-mouse from out of town, wanders in and falls for Hedy but the jealous M.C. attempts to restrain Elmer. The latter, evidently not all that far from out of town, assists Hedy in a couple of dances, including a Conga in which all the mice join in. But the night janitor, a real party-pooper, shows up, and all the mice scurry for cover.
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Happy Holidays (1940)
Character: Girl's Father / Pumpkin / Turkey / Various (voice)
A small child pulls the pages off a calendar, one for each month, revealing a short skit on a holiday for that month
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The Lone Mountie (1938)
Character: Krazy Kat / Yukon Jake (voice)
An animated short starring Krazy Kat and set in the Yukon.
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1967 Busch Advertisement (1967)
Character: Barney Rubble (uncredited)
Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble quit their jobs at the gravel pit, drink Busch Beer for inspiration, watch a preview for Busch's advertising in 1967, and take up new positions as bartenders.
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Cat-Tastrophy (1949)
Character: Cat Yell (archive footage) (voice)
Kitty's owner introduces her to a puppy who will befriend and Kitty realizes that when the puppy grows up he becomes Kitty's enemy because dogs hate cats and makes a chase in the yard at the end of the flashback of kitty for the puppy and kitty chases the puppy and the horse gets into the garbage can.
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Lucky Pigs (1939)
Character: N/A
A down-and-out family of pigs wins a sweepstakes, are immediately besieged by reporters and photographers, and then go on a wild spending spree, which soon exhausts their windfall-prize money. Than the tax collector shows up. After paying the taxes, the pigs are right back where they started from.
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The Gorilla Hunt (1939)
Character: Various Jungle Creatures
A boxing kangaroo tricks his son into fighting when he really wants to be a violinist.
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The Egg Hunt (1940)
Character: Prof. Crackpot
An English fellow lectures about his trip to the Gobi desert to find a dinosaur egg.
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Happy Tots' Expedition (1940)
Character: Happy Tots
The Happy Tots are a group of tiny elves. They decide to build a rocket and blast off to Mars.
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The Land Of Fun (1941)
Character: Various
A travelogue for some vacation spot, possessed of every natural attraction the tourist seeking peace could wish for.
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Hot Foot Lights (1945)
Character: Sneezes
A caricature of W.C. Fields runs a theater show with four separate short stories in which nursery rhymes are sung in the beginning (by Andrews Sisters lookalikes) and then acted out.
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Barnyard Babies (1940)
Character: Various
Mother Hen's kids are aspiring singers and actresses, but Chester wants to become a G-Man. This fantasy of his lands him into trouble.
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The Streamlined Donkey (1941)
Character: Various
An exuberant little donkey lives for one thing: the joy of racing at top speed. But his mother, cautions her son to go slow and use care, for misfortune may be just around the corner. When the son tires of his mother's lectures, he leaves from home, dashing off into the desert. Meanwhile, a heinous villain enters the picture, and he uses Mother Donkey as a beast of burden. The little donkey comes back years later to find his mother missing. When the donkey learns what has happened, he dives into action, using his irrational behavior to find his mother. Then, using his superior speed and strength, he gives the miscreant a sound trouncing, thus liberating his beloved mother. The short ends happily with mother and son basking in familial bliss, and Mother Donkey reluctantly acknowledging that extreme caution is not always the only path to righteousness.
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Paunch 'n' Judy (1940)
Character: Daddy Higgins
A father tries to take picture of his easily distracted daughter, which is made more difficult by an angry group of dogs.
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Gym Jams (1938)
Character: Krazy Kat
Krazy Kat runs a gymnasium where out-of-shape folks go through the slimming and fit routines of the era, usually involving machinery or high-pressure steam.
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Krazy's Travel Squawks (1938)
Character: Krazy Kat / Pygmies
Krazy Kat steers his magic carpet to three exotic locations while declaiming in the style of a radio announcer. The locales are the North Pole, Holland, and somewhere in Equatorial Africa.
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Krazy Magic (1938)
Character: Krazy Kat
On a dark and stormy night, Krazy and his girlfriend seek shelter in an old abandoned house –- the domain of "The Great Hindini." Completely bizarre goings-on ensue! Lots of weird concepts and surreal gags a la Fleischer Studios' "Bimbo's Initiation" - this is truly a nightmare-flavored cartoon that really pulls all the stops.
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News Oddities (1940)
Character: Various
A cartoon offering a series of blackout gags, disguised as a newsreel
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The Charm Bracelet (1939)
Character: Guy on Phone
Margie, receives a charm bracelet from Scrappy. When she falls asleep, the various charms on the bracelet come to life. They have a picnic and a good time, and as Margie awakens, they become inanimate objects on the bracelet again.
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The Crystal Gazer (1941)
Character: Zaza Raja the Mystic
A theatre-crowd is gathered to listen to Zaza Raja, a renowned mystic, who answers all questions regarding people's life and future. In response to a question from a young girl in the audience, the psychic goes wonder-gazing into his crystal ball and visions ancient Egypt. In search of the answer to the question, he wanders off into the tombs of the ancient Pharaohs, where many mummies held him solve the riddle of the young lady's future. But, when Zaza Raja snaps out of his spell, he finds he has forgotten the answer. He learns the theater audience is none too pleased about it.
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Fish Follies (1940)
Character: Aquarium Guard
Scrappy visits an aquarium, where a uniformed docent tells him about the cartoon fish.
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A Worm's Eye View (1939)
Character: Scrappy / Worm
Scrappy goes fishing, tying a worm onto his hook before casting it into the water to face a myriad of fish with sharp teeth. Can the worm escape from being devoured?
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Little Blue Blackbird (1938)
Character: Buzzard (voice)
A mother blackbird hatches out two normal offspring and one featherless nitwit. The nitwit refuses to learn to fly and learn the other aspects of bird-life, but when he battles wicked hawks and saves his siblings from been eaten up, all is forgiven at the family nest.
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Pixie Land (1938)
Character: Gnomes (voice)
A mad scientist injects his serum and sees the unexpected consequences. When our goofy scientist hits a flea on a little puppy, the folks of Pixie Land are about to have some very big problems. A montage of them getting ready to go to war has the feel of RKO's "King Kong."
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Sailor Mouse (1938)
Character: Sailor Mouse (voice)
A little mouse runs away from home and goes to sea. Aboard the ship, a rat starts to educate the mouse on the ways of sea-farin' mice by sending him to the galley to steal cheese from the Captain's table. But the Captain's parrot, a sea-goin' snitch, spots the thievery and squawks loud and long about it. That brings the whole crew down after the mouse, who gets away and learns that there is no place like home.
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Silly Seals (1938)
Character: Walrus Teacher (voice)
In a North Pole classroom, Professor Seal is teaching th young seals all about fishing. One little seal would rather practice snowball-juggling and plays hookey, and gets into trouble with the teacher. But back in the classroom a hungry polar bear is waiting to make food out of the seals. The juggling seal does his act and the bear is so impressed that he decides to stay in school and learn to juggle.
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The Cat and the Bell (1938)
Character: Gangster Mouse (voice)
A family of starving mice try to come up with an idea to get past the cat guarding the food. After the youngest mouse trips over a bell, they come up with a plan to tie the bell to the cat's tail so they can hear when it's coming. The youngest mouse is elected to the dangerous task. After numerous attempts, the mouse finds himself running for his life. When the cat catches up, he accidentally swallows the bell, to the delight of the mice!
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The Disobedient Mouse (1938)
Character: Vocal Talents (voice) (uncredited)
Baby-Face Mouse, disobeying his mother, goes into the territory of Rat Enemy No.1. The gangster is working on turning the young mouse into a member of his gang, but Baby-Face gets so tough he knocks out Rat Enemy No. 1 and turns him over to the police and gets a reward. Back home though, he gets spanked for crossing the railroad tracks into bad territory.
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Crackpot Cruise (1939)
Character: Various (voice)
This cartoon is a series of blackout gags, as we set sail in New York harbor, visit a series of ports of call in totally random order, and return to New York. It's narrated by Knox Manning, or a very good imitator.
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Drinking Water (1945)
Character: Private McGillicuddy
The Third Commandment for Health: Drinking Water. Thou shalt not drink water from any other source than that designated, else thou become victim to an unhappy fate more painful than Japanese lead. Thou shalt use thy water sparingly and wisely else thy days and thy brothers days shall be numbered. Private McGillicuddy discovers what happens when you don't follow that commandment.
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Use Your Head (1945)
Character: Private McGillicuddy
The Seventh Commandment for Health: Thou shalt not use any spots except chosen ones for the deposition of your excrement. Thou shalt not urinate in thy brother's tent or street else he regard thee as a dog and treat the accordingly. Private McGillicuddy discovers what happens when you don't follow that commandment.
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Personal Cleanliness (1945)
Character: Private McGillicuddy
Commandments for Health examines why personal cleanliness is important for soldiers on the Pacific front. Soldiers should bathe and wash with soap whenever a source of clean water is discovered. Private McGillicuddy discovers what happens when you don't follow that commandment.
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Cleaning Mess Gear (1945)
Character: Private McGillicuddy
The Fifth Commandment for Health: Cleaning Mess Gear. Thou shalt carefully and faithfully wash thy mess gear both before and after meals. For verily if thou becomes negligent in this habit thy guts shall be like knots in a wet rope. Private McGillicuddy discovers what happens when you don't follow that commandment.
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MGM Cartoon Christmas (1993)
Character: N/A
Hugh Harman's brilliant 1939 Oscar-Nominated parable Peace On Earth, highlights MGM/UA Home Video's animated shorts Christmas Package. Also included is Hugh Harman-Rudolph Ising's Alias St. Nick, a comedic tale about a young cynical mouse who believes there "ain't no Santa Claus." The Pups' Christmas follows two adorable puppies as they tangle with cornucopia of gifts, some of which turn out to be quite menacing! The Peachy Cobbler is a heartwarming retelling of the sweet Shoemaker and the Elves, directed by Tex Avery. A sickly old shoemaker feeds his last piece of bread to some birds who then decide to do him a favor and fix all the shoes in his shop!
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Bear Hug (1964)
Character: Braxton Bear
Loopy helps a bear with his relationship with Emmy Lou who has a angry boyfriend named Braxton, who has a jealous streak.
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Bear Knuckles (1964)
Character: Braxton Bear
Braxton needs Loopy's help with getting rid of a big buff bear named Jack Delightful, who won his girlfriend, Emmy Lou's love.
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Crow's Fete (1965)
Character: Crow
To help his good friend, Farmer Brown, Loopy attempts to get rid of a corny crow who keeps eating up corn from the farm.
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Trouble Bruin (1964)
Character: Braxton Bear
Loopy, under the company name of Jealous Lovers Anonymous, helps Braxton again with his mad crazy jealous streak to win over his girlfriend, Emmy Lou.
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Orange Blossoms for Violet (1952)
Character: Harvey / Fred (voice)
In this short, with the sound effects and voices of the Warner Bros animation shorts, but with black and white footage of monkeys and other animals, we see a struggle between two boy monkeys and the girl they love.
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Speaking of Animals Down on the Farm (1941)
Character: Various Animals (voice) (uncredited)
Part of Tex Avery's "Speaking of Animals" series of animated shorts. A collection of puns, sight gags and slapstick jokes involving pigs, cows, chickens and other animals on a farm.
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Jack Benny Christmas Shopping Show (1957)
Character: Wallet Salesman
Jack is determined to finish his Christmas shopping in one visit and tortures a wallet salesman with constant changes to his order. Meanwhile, Dennis is having difficulty finding the right present for his mother.
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G.I. Journal (1944)
Character: N/A
We see them all here including male vocalist Harry Babbitt, comic Ish Kabibble and guest stars like Jerry Colonna, Mel Blanc, Lucille Ball and Linda Darnell.
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Strictly G.I. (1943)
Character: Self
A filmed broadcast of the Command Performance radio programs in which various Hollywood stars appeared and performed in accordance with letter requests from American service men stationed around the world. This entry (Army-Navy Screen Magazine No. 20) was broadcast and filmed at a live performance at Camp Roberts, California. Lana Turner, Betty Hutton, Judy Garland and Bob Hope star.
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Mel Blanc: The Man of a Thousand Voices (2008)
Character: Himself & Various Voices (archive footage)
The life and career of the renowned voice actor of animation and radio. For generations, Mel Blanc was one of the most famous Hollywood voice actors with his myriad of voices for classic animated characters like Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and scores of others. However, animation was only one of the fields where Blanc shone through in his long career. This film covers the life of this amazingly talented and big hearted actor, comedian and musician as he became one of the performing greats from the golden ages of American animation and radio through to the 1980s.
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Hollywood Ghosts & Gravesites (2003)
Character: (voice) (archive footage)
Ever wonder if celebrity truly dies with the celebrity, if graves really can give up the dead, or if walls really do talk? Then join the hunt for star haunts and hauntings in and around the city of broken dreams - Hollywood, California. Find out the details of the odd pilgrimages and observances held at celebrity gravesites, the eerie accounts of strange studio haunts, the unusual tales of ghostly disturbances at the mansions of the stars, and the spooky sightings of apparitions on the Grey Ghost herself, the legendary luxury liner, the Queen Mary. With this program, you have a unique backstage pass to the studio lots, the crypts, the tombstones, the cemeteries, and the homes of some of Hollywood's most notable characters, ranging from Bugsy Siegel and Rudolph Valentino to Harry Houdini and Marilyn Monroe. So if your curiosity is sparked and your courage is up to par, then come along on a truly terrifying tour of Hollywood Ghosts and Gravesites.
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Learn and Live (1943)
Character: Oil Temperature Gauge (voice)
Joe Instructor, an Army Air Forces flight instructor, visits Pilot Heaven and has a discussion with Saint Peter about the unacceptable number of pilots who have died and gone to heaven without ever getting into combat, all as a result of haphazard or inattentive flying. Joe points out several pilots as examples and tells Saint Peter just what they did wrong that landed them in Pilot Heaven.
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Bugs Bunny's 80th What's Up, Doc-umentary! (2020)
Character: Self / Bugs Bunny (voice) (archive footage)
Narrated by Billy Crystal, the documentary examines the history of the character over the decades, including sketches, clips from the shorts, and interviews with the animation legends who created some of the most memorable Bugs material
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Woody Woodpecker and Friends (1982)
Character: Various Voices
A compilation of ten classic Walter Lantz cartoons: Knock Knock (1940), The Bandmaster (1947), Ski for Two (1944), Hot Noon or 12 O'Clock for Surf (1953), The Legend of Rockabye Point (1955), Wet Blanket Policy (1948), To Catch a Woodpecker (1957), Musical Moments from Chopin (1946), Bats in the Belfry (1960), and Crazy Mixed Up Pup (1955). Also includes the interesting documentary short on Walter Lantz's career "Walter, Woody and the World of Animation". Note: This is NOT the 2007 and 2008 DVD collections titled "The Woody Woodpecker and Friends Classic Cartoon Collection" shown as the cover image.
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Scrappy Birthday (1949)
Character: N/A
For her birthday, Andy presents his sweetheart, Miranda, with her usual present, candy and flowers. Miranda complains she wants something decent for her birthday like a fur coat...which Andy can't afford. A con man tells him he doesn't need money. He sells him a tracking hound and tells him he can hunt for the fox himself. Unfortunately, the fox Andy and his hound find has no intentions of being caught. Eventually, Andy does capture an animal to make a fur stole with. It's not the fox but, rather, something that's more of a surprise.
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Tokio Jokio (1943)
Character: Various Characters (voice)
A "captured" Japanese newsreel. Civilian defense shows an aircraft spotter painting spots on aircraft and a fire prevention HQ that already burned down. Kitchen Hints shows the construction of a sandwich from bread and meat ration cards. Poisonalities in the News shows Yamamoto walking on stilts and boasting of plans for the White House, contrasted with the room reserved for him: an electric chair. A submarine, launched 3 weeks ahead of schedule, is still being built. A plane's new landing gear is a little man on a tricycle. A minesweeper uses a giant broom.
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The Wacky Wabbit (1942)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice) (uncredited)
While seeking gold in the desert, prospector Elmer Fudd stumbles across mischievous Bugs Bunny.
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Acrobatty Bunny (1946)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Nero the Lion / Elephant Trumpeting (voice)
When the circus arrives they put the lion's cage right over Bugs' rabbit hole.
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Jitterbug Follies (1939)
Character: Count Screwloose (voice) (uncredited)
Count Screwloose and J.R. the Wonder Dog are promoting a $10,000 swing contest. They plan to skip town with the entry fees, but a menacing thug from the "Citizens for Fair Play" convinces them otherwise. The contestants: A singing hippo, "Mother Goose" who starts out as an old woman, then sheds her disguise to reveal a pretty girl, and a fan-dancing ostrich. Throughout, a couple of penguins are heckling. The ostrich proves wildly popular, and Screwloose fears he'll have to give the prize to her, when he gets an idea. He dresses J.R. up as the ostrich and sends him out, but the penguins use a box of sausages to expose the dog. The crowd runs Screwloose and J.R. out, and they grab a ride on a train where the penguins are waiting for them.
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Adventures of the Road-Runner (1962)
Character: Wile E. Coyote (voice)
Adventures of the Road-Runner is an animated film, directed by Chuck Jones and co-directed by Maurice Noble and Tom Ray. It was the intended pilot for a TV series starring Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, but was never picked up until four years later when Warner Bros. Television produced The Road Runner Show for CBS from 1966 to 1968 and later on ABC from 1971 to 1973. As a result, it was split into three further shorts. The first one was To Beep or Not to Beep (1963). The other two were assembled by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises in 1965 after they took over the Looney Tunes series. The split-up shorts were titled Road Runner a Go-Go and Zip Zip Hooray!.
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A Cricket in Times Square (1973)
Character: Tucker the Mouse (voice)
Chester Cricket gets trapped inside a picnic basket and transported from his home in Connecticut to the middle of New York City. Alone and lost, he meets up with Harry and Tucker, a cat and mouse that have somehow become friends, and with Mario, a young boy who works with his father at a Times Square newsstand. When it's discovered that Chester can play songs he hears from the radio just by rubbing his legs, people begin to come from all around to listen. Though Chester is happy with his new-found friends, he will eventually have to say good-bye and return to his home.
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Confusions of a Nutzy Spy (1943)
Character: Porky Pig / Eggbert / Missing Lynx (voice) (uncredited)
Constable Porky Pig and his lazy bloodhound are on the trail of a Nazi spy, Missing Lynx, in this World War II propaganda piece (a spoof on the 1939 "Confessions of a Nazi Spy").
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The Yolks on You (1980)
Character: Daffy Duck / Sylvester / Foghorn Leghorn (voice)
Foghorn Leghorn assigns Prissy, who's been laying some odd, unsatisfactory eggs, to lay turquoise eggs for Easter...
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Daffy Flies North (1980)
Character: Daffy Duck / Duck Flock Leader (voice)
Refusing to go with the flock, Daffy seeks an easier way to travel north.
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Skyscraper Caper (1968)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales / Ice Cream Man (voice)
One night, Speedy Gonzales tries to save his pal Daffy Duck from sleepwalking through a construction site.
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Bugs vs. Daffy: Battle of the Music Video Stars (1988)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Tweety / Yosemite Sam / Pepe le Pew / Sylvester (voice)
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are dueling VJs in this showcase of musical segments from classic Warner Brothers shorts.
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Petunia Natural Park (1939)
Character: Car Motor / Drunk Fawn (voice) (uncredited)
As a narrator describes the scene, we watch the whole Katzenjammer clan camping in the park of the title, a composite of several national parks in the western USA. There are several spot gags, including Mama taking a picture of a bear and ending up being photographed by several bears. Mama has a run-in with the law for picking a flower; The Captain has his own for feeding a bear, which turns out to be a ranger/cop in disguise.
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Wacky Blackout (1942)
Character: Narrator / Various Animals (voice) (uncredited)
We tour a farm and see how the various animals are preparing for the war, in a series of blackout skits.
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Dog Tired (1942)
Character: Hyena (voice)
The Two Curious Puppies get into mischief at the zoo.
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Hiss and Make Up (1943)
Character: Roscoe / Cat (voice) (uncredited)
An old woman has a cat, a dog, and a canary. The cat and dog fight even worse than normally. Fed up, she tells them both off, then threatens to throw them both out if there's any more trouble.
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Hop and Go (1943)
Character: Scottish Rabbits, Baby Bird
Claude Hopper, a kangaroo, and "best darn hopper in the world," is full of himself (and dumb), so a couple of Scottish rabbits take him on. They set up a boxing ring; Claude gets tangled in the ropes. Next, he tries a distance leap, but the rabbits ride on his tail, then leap over as he lands. He tries again, without all the ballast in his pouch, but they've stuck his tail down with chewing gum. Claude falls into the river; the rabbits wash up in his water-filled pouch.
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The Unruly Hare (1945)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
When Elmer Fudd disturbs Bugs with his railroad surveying, Bugs fights back.
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What's Brewin', Bruin? (1948)
Character: Papa Bear's Yell / Mama Bear (voice) (uncredited)
Pa Bear's attempts to hibernate are constantly frustrated by Junyer's snoring, Ma repeatedly opening the window, a persistent drip from the ceiling and finally, the voices of spring.
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Looney Tunes All Stars (1999)
Character: (archive footage)
The Warner Bros. studio spawned more enduring cartoon stars than any other group in Hollywood history. Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Tweety, Sylvester, Elmer Fudd, Speedy Gonzales, Foghorn Leghorn, Tasmanian Devil and the rest are so famous, and so beloved that their first names alone can put a smile on your face. Through the magic of animation they have come to life, becoming personalities we can identify with, laugh at, and care about. These superstars, the best "actors" in their field, introduce us to the greatest cartoons ever made: the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies.
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Tom and Jerry's Winter Wackiness (2013)
Character: Tom
Tom and Jerry's Winter Wackiness movie was released Oct 01, 2013 by the Turner Home Entertainment (T.H.E.) studio. Come in from the cold with Tom and Jerry! The holidays are here! Celebrate the season with Tom and Jerry in these seven cartoon adventures that will battle away your winter blues. Tom and Jerry's Winter Wackiness movie One good chase deserves another, and lots of friends join the fun, whether it's Spike on a sled, a giant abominable snow mouse or a St. Tom and Jerry's Winter Wackiness video Bernard to the rescue with some hearty spirits. Tom and Jerry's Winter Wackiness film No matter how many new friends they make, Tom and Jerry will always be best buddies... but even better enemies. Tom and Jerry's Winter Wackiness review Snuggle up for a snowstorm of fun for the entire family!
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The Bookworm Turns (1940)
Character: Raven / Dr. Jekyll / Giant Bookworm (voice) (uncredited)
Poe's raven, not feeling well, goes in search of a doctor, and in a nearby book finds Dr. Jekyll. The doctor offers to transfer the bookworm's brain to the raven.
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The Way of All Pests (1941)
Character: Various Bugs (voice)
Various members of the insect world join forces to harass a man who unknowingly makes their lives miserable.
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The Flintstones: Jogging Fever (1981)
Character: Barney Rubble (voice)
After failing his annual physical, Fred wants to prove to everyone that he is in shape, so he decides to become the first citizen of Bedrock to enter the Rockstone Marathon.
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The Magic Beans (1939)
Character: Giant Mouse (voice)
Jack the Mouse sells the family cow (hey, it's a cartoon)for a handful of Mexican jumping beans, is scolded by his mother who throws the beans out into the yard. A great beanstalk sprouts from the ground and transports Jack the Mouse to a cloud island in the sky that has a castle owned by a giant bloodthirsty cat. Jack steals the hen that lays golden eggs. The cat gives chase.
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Soup to Mutts (1939)
Character: Jock / Cat / Dogs (voice)
A cat tries to sneak into a dog talent show.
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Hemo the Magnificent (1957)
Character: Squirrel / Turtle / Alligator / Rabbit (voice)
Professor Frank Baxter and some animated friends answer questions about blood. what makes it red? Why do little animals' hearts beat so quickly? And so much more.
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Busy Bakers (1940)
Character: Swenson / Beggar (voice) (uncredited)
Struggling Swenson the baker is down to just a single donut remaining in his shop. He gives it to a blind beggar who stops in. Later, while Swenson sleeps, the kindness is rewarded.
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The Hungry Wolf (1942)
Character: Wolf (voice) (uncredited)
It's the dead of winter, a hungry wolf is out of food, and he's desperate.
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About Time (1962)
Character: (voices) (uncredited)
An entry in the Bell Science animated film series, on the nature of time.
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Bugs Bunny in Space (1977)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
Bugs Bunny in Space is a parody of "Star Wars" that features a compilation of science-fiction themed clips from Warner Brothers cartoons starring Bugs Bunny and other characters.
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Ounce of Prevention (1982)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
Bugs Bunny and his friends teach children about safety regarding fires and other burn-causing injuries in the home.
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The Chow Hound (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu / Bull / Army Chef (voice) (uncredited)
Snafu learns of the folly of hoarding and wasting military food supplies.
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The Millionaire Hobo (1939)
Character: Bum
A bum is sleeping by the road when Scrappy roars up on his motorcycle -- he's a messenger in this cartoon -- to give him a telegram. His uncle has died and left him a million. While he goes into conniptions over his newfound wealth, Scrappy points out the word he missed. His uncle has left him a million cats. The bum doesn't listen, but begins to spend his wealth, telling everyone to send him the bill.
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Queen's Kittens (1938)
Character: Chef (voice)
Four kittens escape fro a wicker basket as Her Majesty walks past in the palace. They get into all sorts of trouble.
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Murder Can Hurt You! (1980)
Character: Chickie Baby (voice)
A private eye spoof that sends up assorted TV detectives from Ironside, Columbo and Kojak to Baretta, McCloud and Starsky and Hutch, as eight bumbling super-sleuths band together in a battle of wits against the devilishly clever Master Criminal.
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Cartoons Go To War (1996)
Character: Himself (archival footage)
This remarkable documentary dedicates itself to an extraordinary chapter of the second World War – the psychological warfare of the USA. America’s trusted cartoon darlings from the studios of Warner Bros., Paramount, and the “big animals” of the Disney family were supposed to give courage to the people at the homefront, to educate them, but also to simultaneously entertain them. Out of this mixture grew a genre of its own kind – political cartoons. Insightful Interviews with the animators and producers from back then elucidate in an amusing and astonishing way under which bizarre circumstances these films partially came into existence.
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Breakdowns of 1938 (1938)
Character: Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
Flubs and bloopers that occurred on the set of some of the major Warner Bros. pictures of 1938.
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Showbiz Goes to War (1982)
Character: (archive footage)
While a few Hollywood celebrities such as James Stewart and Clark Gable saw combat during World War II, the majority used their talents to rally the American public through bond sales, morale-boosting USO tours, patriotic war dramas and escapist film fare. Comedian David Steinberg plays host for this star-studded, 90-minute documentary, which looks at the way Tinseltown helped the United States' war effort.
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The Little Broadcast (1943)
Character: Various (voice) (uncredited)
The Great Maestro gets to conduct more than he can compose himself to. A Puppetoon animated short film.
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Robinson Crusoe Jr. (1941)
Character: Porky Pig / Friday / Tortoise / Others (voice) (uncredited)
Stranded on an island after his ship was wrecked by a hurricane, Porky meets a friendly African Native. They build a house, and Porky begins to explore the island. On his way we see various sight gags.
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Walt Disney’s Carousel of Progress (1975)
Character: Uncle Orville
Follow an American family over 4 generations of progress and watch technology transform their lives. During each era, learn how the technological marvels of the day made life more comfortable—and paved the way for unimaginable innovations. Imagine the wonders the next hundred years may bring!
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Tales of Washington Irving (1970)
Character: Brom's Dog / Lead Dwarf / Mayor Elect / Baby Rip (voice)
This 1970 animated special contains two versions of Washington Irving's most popular stories; The Legend of Sleepy Hollow - about the headless horseman (who makes a too brief appearance), and Rip Van Winkle - the man who fell asleep and awoke years later. It originally aired on TV between Halloween and Thanksgiving in the early 1970s and was later released on VHS home video by MGM in 1987 but it's currently out of print.
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Cheese-Nappers (1938)
Character: Gangster Mouse (voice)
Public Rat Number One takes along Baby-Face Rat to steal the cheese out of the kitchen icebox. The dishes in the kitchen become animated and chase the marauders, capturing the youngster while the gangster rat escapes. Baby-Face is brought before Policeman Sugar Bowl and given the third degree. He escapes, is chased by the frankfurter-bloodhounds but manages to get away. Arriving back in the rat-hole, he beats up the big rat for leading him astray into a life of crime. He turns the big rat over to the police, and then broadcasts over the radio that crime does not pay.
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Daffy's Rhapsody (2012)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice) (archive footage)
Elmer Fudd attends a musical concert, only to find it's Daffy Duck performing a song about escaping hunters, and Elmer is unable to contain himself, donning his hunting gear and chasing the duck as he finishes his song.
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Clean Pastures (1937)
Character: Al Jolson / The Devil (voice)
The Lord sees that the stock value of "Pair-o-dice" is dropping on the exchange so he dispatches a slow-witted and slow-talking angel to sinful Harlem to recruit new customers. When this fails, God finds success sending a group of musical angels with a little more swing in their style, so much so that even the Devil wants to join up! One of the “Censored 11” banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 for racist stereotyping.
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Daffy Duck: Frustrated Fowl (2010)
Character: (archive footage)
Daffy Duck: Frustrated Fowl was released in conjunction with Bugs Bunny: Hare Extraordinaire None of these shorts have been released on disc before, and Chuck Jones's "Daffy Dilly" (1948) is a welcome addition to any cartoon library. Daffy sets out to win the money a gloomy millionaire is offering to anyone who can make him laugh--and succeeds in spite of himself. But many of these cartoons are, simply, duds. "This Is a Life?" (1955), "People Are Bunny" (1959), and "Person to Bunny" (1960) spoof largely forgotten TV shows. How many viewers under 65 will recognize caricatures of Art Linkletter and Edward R. Murrow? The films pitting Daffy against Bugs play like weak remakes of Jones's "Rabbit Fire" trilogy or Friz Freleng's "Show Biz Bugs"--"Person to Bunny" even repeats some of Daffy's tap dance to "Jeepers Creepers" in "Show Biz." The very late "Suppressed Duck" (1965) is painfully unfunny. Once again, some of the films have been inexplicably cropped to simulate a widescreen format.
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Porky's Cafe (1942)
Character: Porky Pig / Conrad Cat (voice) (uncredited)
Porky uses his cafe's kitchen's mechanical gadgets to fix a meal for a diner, while cook Conrad Cat deals with an ant in the pancake mix.
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Plenty of Money and You (1937)
Character: Ostrich (voice) (uncredited)
A hen's chicks hatch, but one of them is actually an ostrich. She treats it as her own, but the ostrich keeps getting into trouble.
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Tom and Jerry's Greatest Chases, Vol 3 (2009)
Character: (archive footage)
Everyone's favorite cat and mouse are back with 14 shorts from the popular cartoon series. Volume 3 finds Tom and Jerry engaging in some of their greatest chases ever! Episodes: Cat Napping, The Flying Cat, The Two Mouseketeers, Smitten Kitten, Baby Butch, Designs on Jerry, The Pecos Pest, Touche Pussy Cat!, The Flying Sorceress, Blue Cat Blues, The Night Before Christmas, The Bowling Alley-Cat, Fine Feathered Friend, Puttin' on the Dog
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Science Friction (1970)
Character: Aardvark Sneezing (voice)
The Ant is captured by a scientist and placed in an insect specimen container within the scientist's mobile laboratory, and fortunately for the Ant, his host does not approve of the Aardvark's Ant-snatching attempts.
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Mumbo Jumbo (1970)
Character: Tiny Sneezing (uncredited)
The Ant's "lodge brothers" come to his rescue and thwart the Aardvark's nefarious plans.
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The Cartoon Collection (1988)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Sylvester / Tweety
Compilation of cartoons raising money for the National Children's Home charity. Featuring Mickey Mouse ("The Simple Things"), Bugs Bunny ("Duck Rabbit Duck"), Tom and Jerry ("The Bowling Alley Cat"), Pluto ("Canine Casanova"), Sylvester and Tweety ("Hyde and Go Tweet"), The Pink Panther ("Sky Blue Pink"), Donald Duck ("Drip Dippy Donald"), Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner ("Hot Rod and Reel") and Daffy Duck ("Ain't That Ducky").
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The Lonesome Stranger (1940)
Character: Lone Stranger / Killer Diller Boy Leader / Sheriff / Indian Telegramer (voice) (uncredited)
This Lone Ranger spoof pits the Lonesome Stranger and his horse Sliver against a gang of Mexican banditos known as the Killer Diller Boys.
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Scooby-Doo: Mystery in Motion (2012)
Character: Speed Buggy (voice) (archive footage)
Scooby-Doo and friends are off on another adventure in this collection of 3 episodes from the various eras of Scooby-Doo TV shows.
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A Lecture on Camouflage (1944)
Character: Private Snafu / Technical Fairy - First Class / German Soldier / German General (voice) (uncredited)
Using Snafu as an example, Techanical Fairy First Class teaches the methods of effective camouflage.
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Scrub Me Mama with a Boogie Beat (1941)
Character: Boat Captain / Mammy / Fighter One / Fighter Two / Various (voice)
Lazy black folks in Lazy Town (Pop. 123½) are napping and attracting flies. They are so lethargic they even fight in slow motion. Then a riverboat arrives with a red hot mama on board. Faster than you can say "Jim Crow", she has everyone moving to a Harlem boogie beat, dancing, scrubbing clothes, and eating watermelon. As the boogie-woogie comes to a close, Mammy hoists her skirt. Her big bottom reads "The End".
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Looney Tunes Super Stars Tweety & Sylvester: Feline Fwenzy (2010)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice) (archive footage)
It's not your imagination; you really "taw a puddy tat." Laugh your way through 15 bird-chasing, all-time cartoon favorites with "Looney Tunes Super Stars: Tweety & Sylvester." It's a grand collection featuring the clever canary and the cagey cat. Includes classic Warner Bros. cartoons like "The Last Hungry Cat," "Snow Business," "Birds Anonymous" and the Oscar-winning short "Tweetie Pie."
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Heathcliff: The Movie (1986)
Character: Heathcliff / Spike (voice)
One rainy day, Heathcliff babysits and recounts old stories while his nephews are reluctantly forced to listen.
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Position Firing (1944)
Character: Trigger Joe (voice)
Hapless B-17 waist gunner "Trigger Joe" learns how to adjust his aim, to take into account the relative motion of his aircraft, his bullets, and the attacking enemy fighter.
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A Jetson Christmas Carol (1985)
Character: Cosmo S. Spacely (voice)
What do Santa Claus and George Jetson have in common? They both have to work on Christmas eve! That mean old Mr. Spacely forces George to work late, while the family wonders what has happened to him, while Astro opens one of his presents early, breaks it, accidentally swallows a piece of it (a Spacely Sprockett) and becomes very ill. It seems the Jetsons may lose their Tiny Tim-like dog. Plus, Mr. Spacely is visited by his old partner, Jacob Marsley, who tells him of three spirits that will visit him. And they do, first the Past ghost robot who shows him young Spacely picking on young George, Present (which is an Xmas present) shows him of dying Astro, and Future shows the Jetsons very rich after sueing Mr. Spacely. When Spacely wakes up after seeing all this, he's a changed man! A sadder, wiser, nicer and happier Cosmo Spacely! At least until the next episode.
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The Hoober-Bloob Highway (1975)
Character: Bub (voice)
The Hoober-Bloob Highway is an animated musical special written by Dr. Seuss. Visit the magical island where Mr. Hoober-Bloob sends babies to Earth in his own musical way.
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Hanna-Barbera's 50th (1989)
Character: Barney Rubble (voice)
The special is hosted by Tony Danza and Annie Potts celebrating 50 years of William Hanna and Joseph Barbera's partnership in animation. This is the first animated project to be broadcast in Dolby Surround sound system.
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Tokyo Woes (1945)
Character: Japanese Announcer / Sad Sack / Singing Bond
Created for the US Navy in World War II. The Mr. Hook character was created by Hank Ketcham while at Walter Lantz Studios, where the first- and only color- Mr. Hook cartoon was produced. A wartime propaganda film about Japan and war bonds. The loudspeaker grille is in the shape of a peace sign as it shouts at Mr. Hook.
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Journey Back to Oz (1972)
Character: Crow (voice)
Dorothy and Toto return to the Land of Oz to find the Scarecrow as ruler of the Emerald City. Unfortunately for the new mayor, the wicked Mombi is conspiring to take over the city for herself. With the help of the Tin Woodsman, the Cowardly Lion and other familiar friends, Dorothy sets out to save Oz.
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The Little Lion Hunter (1939)
Character: Lion (voice)
Out hunting in the jungle with his spear, African native boy Inki keeps narrowly missing his prey: a parrot, a giraffe, even a butterfly. Then there's that weird black bird with the syncopated hop who keeps popping up out of nowhere, only to disappear mysteriously once again. Back to big game hunting, Inki puts his ear to the ground, not noticing the ferocious lion sneaking up on him.
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Zip Zip Hooray! (1965)
Character: Wile E. Coyote (voice)
Wile E. Coyote suspends his chase with the Road Runner to explain to two young boys watching him on TV why he wants to catch the speedy bird.
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Dr. Jerkyl's Hide (1954)
Character: Sylvester / Alfie (voice)
Two cockney canines chase Sylvester Cat into the lab of Dr. Jerkyl, where the cat drinks Hyde formula...
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The Screwball (1943)
Character: Woody Woodpecker (archive sound)
It's the day of the big baseball game between the Drips and the Droops and Woody Woodpecker is trying to crash the gate and get in without paying for a ticket. A policeman keeps tossing him out but Woody puts on a baseball uniform---including a baseball-cap, since baseball players do not wear hats---gets inside and soon gets involved with the game. He ends up pinned to the scoreboard by a deluge of baseballs thrown by everybody in the ballpark.
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Tease for Two (1965)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice)
Daffy Duck goes to a forest on a gold hunt, and his treasure map indicates the presence of gold in a hole occupied by two polite twin gophers.
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A Very Merry Cricket (1973)
Character: Tucker the Mouse / Alley Cat (voice)
A sequel to "A Cricket in Times Square," in this feature a musical cricket returns to his New York City home and his friends, a cat and a mouse, to discover the meaning of Christmas.
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Days of Wine and Roses (1963)
Character: Cartoons (voice) (uncredited)
An alcoholic falls in love with and gets married to a young woman, whom he systematically addicts to booze so they can share his "passion" together.
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Champagne for Caesar (1950)
Character: Caesar (voice)
When jobless genius Beauregard Bottomley interviews with Burnbridge Waters for a position at Waters' soap company, the owner rudely turns Bottomley down. As revenge, Bottomley enters a TV quiz show that Waters' company sponsors, with the goal of winning until he bankrupts the businessman. When Bottomley keeps acing the questions, becoming a media sensation, Waters desperately calls on vixen Flame O'Neal to uncover Bottomley's area of weakness.
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Yankee Dood It (1956)
Character: Sylvester, Elf
Elmer Fudd is the progressive King of industrial Elves. He visits an outmoded shoemaker's shop to extol the virtues of mass production capitalism to the shoemaker, whose pet cat, Sylvester, uses the magic word, "Jehosophat" to turn Fudd's elf helper into a mouse and chases him around the shoemaker's shop.
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A Hitch in Time (1955)
Character: John McRogers, Grogan
John McRogers dreams about his future after spending four years in the U.S. Air Force, and is convinced by "Grogan," Technical Gremlin First Class, on why he should remain in the Air Force, rather, and what the advantages would be if he returned to civilian life.
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A Bird in a Guilty Cage (1952)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice)
Sylvester Cat spots Tweety Bird in a display window of an after-hours department store and sneaks inside through a mail server chute. Tweety flees Sylvester by hiding in a hat pile and a doll house, evades the shots from a rifle Sylvester uses, and escapes in a vacuum tube. Tweety sends a dynamite stick through another tube, and Sylvester swallows it, thinking it is Tweety. The dynamite blows up inside Sylvester after the cat leaves the store and walks down the street.
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Woody's Jalopy (1941)
Character: Woody Woodpecker / Motorcycle Cop
Woody Woodpecker is driving through the countryside and is, shall we say, not a stickler for the rules. He's practically asking for trouble when he confronts a traffic cop who explains he is looking for speeders. Woody reveals himself to be a speeder by driving to Alaska and back in less than a minute. The cop tries to arrest him but Woody states, "I bet ya wouldn't be so tough without that uniform." The officer undresses but Woody attacks him with a boxing glove camera. Woody also gets his goat by dressing as a farmer on horse-and-buggy and as a Chinaboy with rickshaw. Finally, the cop flips out and is sent to a mental hospital with Woody as his caretaker.
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Crowing Pains (1947)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn, Sylvester, Barnyard Dog, Henery Hawk
Henery Hawk hides in an egg to catch his first chicken, while Foghorn Leghorn tells him that Sylvester is the real chicken and the farm dog joins in the fun.
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Nuts and Volts (1964)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, Sylvester
Sylvester Cat turns to automation in hopes it will help him catch the fastest mouse in Mexico, Speedy Gonzales. He builds a robot to chase Speedy around their house, but Speedy outsmarts Sylvester's new mechanical stooge, reducing it to a heap of scrap metal.
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The Cats Bah (1954)
Character: Pepe Le Pew (voice)
Penelope, an American tourist cat who's gotten a white stripe of paint down her back, is pursued through the Casbah by the amorous skunk Pepe Le Pew, who woos her with his rendition of "As Time Goes By".
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Lovelorn Leghorn (1951)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Barnyard Dog
The other hens make fun of Miss Prissy, who still has not found a husband. Prissy sets out, rolling pin in hand, to find one, and she comes upon confirmed bachelor Foghorn Leghorn in the midst of his feud with the barnyard dog. The dog helps Prissy take Foghorn as her mate by knocking him out and stuffing him in a picnic basket!
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It's a Great Feeling (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice) (uncredited)
A waitress at the Warner Brothers commissary is anxious to break into pictures. She thinks her big break may have arrived when actors Jack Carson and Dennis Morgan agree to help her.
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The Hardship of Miles Standish (1940)
Character: Miles Standish - Indians (voice)
In this version of "The Courtship of Miles Standish", Elmer Fudd is messanger John Alden, sent to give Miles' love letter to Pricilla. While delivering the message, however, her house is attacked by Indians, and John is the only one who can save her.
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Rabbit Hood (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Sheriff of Nottingham / Little John (voice)
While trespassing in the royal gardens in search of carrots, Bugs runs afoul of the Sheriff of Nottingham, who tries to apprehend him for poaching. Of course Bugs sets out to endlessly turn the tables on the hapless sheriff.
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Homeless Hare (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny
A construction worker destroys Bugs' home with a steam shovel and refuses to repair the damage.
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The Stupor Salesman (1948)
Character: Daffy Duck / Slug McSlug / Others (voice)
Slug McSlug, a notorious bank robber, is chased by police after his latest heist. He reaches his country hideout, where he is promptly visited by an uninvited Daffy Duck, who is a door-to-door vendor of a variety of items.
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Draftee Daffy (1945)
Character: Daffy Duck / Man from the Draft Board (voice)
Despite an initial outburst of patriotism, Daffy is terrified to learn that "the little man from the Draft Board" has a letter for him, and tries his best to hide.
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Waking Sleeping Beauty (2009)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice) (archive footage)
By the mid-1980s, the fabled animation studios of Walt Disney had fallen on hard times. The artists were polarized between newcomers hungry to innovate and old timers not yet ready to relinquish control. These conditions produced a series of box-office flops and pessimistic forecasts: maybe the best days of animation were over. Maybe the public didn't care. Only a miracle or a magic spell could produce a happy ending. Waking Sleeping Beauty is no fairy tale. It's the true story of how Disney regained its magic with a staggering output of hits - "Little Mermaid," "Beauty and the Beast ," "Aladdin," "The Lion King," and more - over a 10-year period.
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Crows' Feat (1962)
Character: Jose / Rocket Announcer (voice)
Two Mexican crows, flying to Guadalajara on the wings of an airplane, spot a corn field on the ground below and dive into it...
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Baton Bunny (1959)
Character: Bugs Bunny
Bugs conducts the Warner Brothers Symphony in Franz von Suppé's "Morning, Noon, and Night in Vienna" while reacting to a bothersome fly.
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Puss n' Booty (1943)
Character: Rudolph - Petey Bird (voice)
Woman wonders why her little pet birds keep disappearing. Rudolph the cat knows, but other than burping feathers, he's not saying. But it looks like he's met his match when the woman orders another bird from the pet shop: a little yellow canary named "Petey".
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A Horse Fly Fleas (1947)
Character: Flea (voice)
A flea befriends a horsefly, who has hooves like those of a horse, and rides the horsefly into the hair of a dog. The flea chops down strands of the dog's hair to use as "logs" with which to build a cabin, unaware that the dog's coat is the sacred territory of a tribe of Indian fleas, who declare war on the interlopers. The Indians capture and are about to burn the flea and the horsefly when the dog jolts in pain from the fire. The flea and the horsefly free themselves and flee the Indians through the hairs on the dog's carcass.
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Little Red Walking Hood (1937)
Character: Egghead (voice) (uncredited)
Red walks past a pool hall; the wolf sees her and pursues. But Red is oblivious to his come-ons.
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Broom-Stick Bunny (1956)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Genie
On Halloween night, Bugs Bunny, masquerading as a witch, trick-or-treats at the creepy old mansion of Witch Hazel, who prides herself on being the ugliest witch of all.
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Gas (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu / Bugs Bunny / Soldier / General (voice) (uncredited)
Snafu learns the need of keeping his gas mask at hand when he is attacked by anthropomorphic gas cloud.
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Fresh Fish (1939)
Character: Tuna (voice)
A tour of the waters near a South Sea island, introducing us to the various kinds of marine life, including the pickled herring, the hermit crab, the starfish, a seahorse race, and many other puns. Among the running gags, a two-headed fish who keeps asking for directions to Mr. Ripley and a professor in a diving sphere looking for a rare wim-wam whistling shark.
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Cats and Bruises (1965)
Character: Sylvester / Speedy Gonzales (voice)
Sylvester Cat intrudes on Speedy Gonzales' Cinco De Mayo celebration, starting a chase that ends in disaster.
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Catty-Cornered (1966)
Character: Tom / Jerry (voice) (uncredited)
Jerry's mouse hole connects two homes, with Tom living in one residence, a neighboring cat in the other. Jerry decides the best survival plan is pitting the cats against each other, without their knowledge.
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Boobs in the Woods (1950)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig (voice)
Porky sets out to the great outdoors to paint landscapes, but Daffy claims that the lake and mountains are his, and he refuses to let Porky paint them.
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Swooner Crooner (1944)
Character: Porky Pig / Al Jolson Rooster (voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig's egg faces production problems when a crooning rooster distracts the hens from their jobs.
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Piker's Peak (1957)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Saint Bernard with Hiccups (voice)
In the Alps Bugs and Yosemite Sam vie for 50,000 Cronkites, the prize for the who "climbs the Schmatterhorn."
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Cracked Quack (1952)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig (voice)
Daffy Duck takes shelter from a blizzard by sneaking into a cozy home owned by Porky Pig. Daffy tries to secretly mooch off of Porky for an entire winter, but Porky's dog realizes that Daffy isn't the stuffed ornament he pretends to be and keeps trying to alert Porky to Daffy's ruse.
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A Sheep in the Deep (1962)
Character: Sam Sheepdog, Ralph Wolf
Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog punch into work, with Sam guarding a flock of sheep against Ralph's attempts to snatch some mutton for dinner. Ralph uses a lull-a-bye record to put Sam to sleep and steals one of the sheep, but the lamb unzips itself to reveal someone very unexpected beneath!
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Fast Buck Duck (1963)
Character: Daffy Duck / Millionaire (voice)
Daffy Duck reads in the local newspaper that a millionaire seeks a loyal, entertaining, and trustworthy boon companion.
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Pay Day (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
Technical Fairy First Class shows Snafu the consequences of frittering away his pay.
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Robot Rabbit (1953)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Horse (voice)
Bugs Bunny faces off against Farmer Fudd's robot.
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Tick Tock Tuckered (1944)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / Boss (voice) (uncredited)
Porky and Daffy are workers at an aircraft company and are chronically late. Why? Because they have a great deal of trouble getting to sleep, between the noisy cats, the full moon shining insistently, and the sudden rain shower (and leak in the roof).
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You Were Never Duckier (1948)
Character: Daffy Duck / Henery Hawk / Rooster / George K. Chickenhawk / Contest Moderator
Finding that the prize for best duck at the National Poultry Show is only $5.00, but $5,000 for the best rooster, Daffy disguises himself as one, but then becomes the object of Henery Hawk's chicken hunt.
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Howard the Duck (1986)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice) (archive sound)
A scientific experiment unknowingly brings extraterrestrial life forms to the Earth through a laser beam. First is the cigar smoking drake Howard from the duck's planet. A few kids try to keep him from the greedy scientists and help him back to his planet. But then a much less friendly being arrives through the beam...
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Two's a Crowd (1950)
Character: (voice)
Claude Cat is determined to get rid of the mistress's birthday present: a new puppy.
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By Word of Mouse (1954)
Character: Hans, Willie, Sylvester
Hans, a mouse from Germany, comes to America to visit his cousin Willie, and learns about the wonders of the capitalist system.
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From Hare to Heir (1960)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Accountant (voice)
Sam, the Duke of Yosemite, will inherit one million pounds if he can keep his temper in check. Thing is, he has to endure Bugs Bunny as his house guest.
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Back Alley Oproar (1948)
Character: Sylvester (voice)
Sylvester sings opera and popular tunes while standing on a back alley fence; Elmer, who wants to sleep, tries to thwart him.
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Freudy Cat (1964)
Character: Sylvester / Sylvester Jr. / Dr. Freud E. Cat (voice)
Sylvester Cat is a basket case, convinced that baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper is everywhere, around every corner, waiting to damage his pride yet again in front of his son. Junior takes his fearful father to a cat psychiatrist to whom Sylvester confides his constant frustration at being unable to defeat the "giant mouse".
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Rabbit Romeo (1957)
Character: Bugs Bunny
Elmer Fudd's Uncle Judd sends him an ugly, temperamental Slobovian rabbit named Millicent to babysit until he arrives. Elmer happens upon Bugs Bunny and thinks he'll be the perfect match for Millicent. But as soon as Bugs gets a look at her, he tries to get away!
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Quacker Tracker (1967)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales / Hunters (voice)
The Tooth & Nail Hunting Society is offering a reward to anyone who can bag their only missing trophy, Speedy Gonzales. Daffy's just the fool to do it. Daffy tries telling Speedy his shotgun is a telescope, but Speedy convinces Daffy to look. Daffy tries a snare, but it doesn't work until he steps into it to figure out what's wrong. An exploding girl mouse doll keeps finding its way back to Daffy. Daffy disguises himself as a giant enchilada, but the mice squirt hot sauce on him. Finally, Daffy rides a rocket, but ends up running into a train which throws him right back through the hunting society's roof.
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Outpost (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
Snafu has an object lesson on the value of complete and accurate regular reports when he discovers and reports evidence of the enemy's presence at his assigned area.
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Chow Hound (1951)
Character: Cat, Professor
A muscular dog exploits a cat and a mouse for food, but they keep forgetting to bring him gravy!
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Mother Was a Rooster (1962)
Character: Barnyard Dog / Foghorn Leghorn / Ostrich (voice)
Foghorn Leghorn is sound asleep when the barnyard dog places an ostrich egg beside him for a gag. When Foghorn awakes and sees the egg...
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What's Cookin' Doc? (1944)
Character: Bugs / Emcee / Hiawatha / Audience / Wolf (voice) (uncredited)
At the Academy Awards ceremony, Bugs Bunny tries to convince the audience that he deserves the Oscar. Opens with live action scenes of Hollywood.
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Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare (1964)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Tasmanian Devil (voice)
Bugs and the Tasmanian Devil battle it out in a jungle hospital, with Bugs convincing Taz that he's sicker than he thinks.
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The Slap-Hoppy Mouse (1956)
Character: Sylvester / Sylvester Junior (voice)
Sylvester Cat takes his son, Junior, on a mouse-hunting expedition in an old, broken-down, mouse-infested house near some railroad tracks.
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Broadway Melody of 1940 (1940)
Character: Panhandler (uncredited)
Johnny Brett and King Shaw are an unsuccessful dance team in New York. A producer discovers Brett as the new partner for Clare Bennett, but Brett, who thinks he is one of the people they lent money to, gives him the name of his partner.
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Jeepers Creepers (1939)
Character: N/A
Police officer Porky is called to investigate strange noises at a house that might be haunted. Before he arrives, we tour the house and hear some evil-sounding cackles, which, it turns out, are coming from a radio one that a ghost was listening to. The ghost then sings the title song while getting ready for a night of haunting, just as Porky arrives. The ghost invites him in with a woman's voice, then disappears. Porky comes in and gets spooked by some flapping curtains. When he comes back in, the ghost puts a couple frogs into a pair of shoes and sets them loose; they collect a hatrack and a curtain, forming a sort of black ghost that ultimately scares Porky upstairs right into the arms of the ghost.
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The Bugs Bunny Mystery Special (1980)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
F.B.I. and C.I.A. agent Elmer Fudd is after a tall, dark, stranger who robbed a bank. He gets him confused with Bugs Bunny...the chase is on.
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A Taste of Catnip (1966)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales (voice)
Daffy Duck goes to a doctor after he realizes that he is starting to act like a cat. Daffy finds himself drinking milk out of saucers.
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Tweetie Pie (1947)
Character: Tweetie / Thomas (voice) (uncredited)
Thomas the cat finds Tweetie in the snow, warming himself by a cigar butt. Thomas's mistress rescues the little yellow bird before her cat can devour him, but Thomas doesn't give up.
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Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Vol. 1 (2003)
Character: N/A
Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 1 is a 4-disk DVD box set that was released by Warner Home Video on October 28, 2003. The first release of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection DVD series, it contains 56 Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons and numerous supplements.
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Hare-Way to the Stars (1958)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Marvin the Martian (voice)
Bugs Bunny groggily climbs out of bed and his hole and, unknowingly, into a rocket ship that's parked directly above. It transports him into outer space, where he is chased by martians.
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The Chewin' Bruin (1940)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
A bear hunter tells Porky the tale of a hunt 30 years ago: a bear got a taste of his chewing tobacco and chased him down to get it; the hunter took the bear on with his bare hands rather than lose the tobacco. Or at least, that's the way he told the story.
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Design for Leaving (1954)
Character: Daffy Duck / Delivery Guy / Mechanical Dog (voice)
Daffy Duck is a salesman for a futuristic appliance company, who, against Elmer Fudd's will, modernizes Fudd's house with many screwball gadgets, none of which work in Fudd's favor.
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Woolen Under Where (1963)
Character: Sam Sheepdog, Ralph Wolf
Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog are friends, housemates and coworkers who become bitter enemies, but strictly while they're on the clock. A suit of armor, a skin diving outfit, a unicycle and a makeshift tank figure in Ralph's schemes.
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Gorilla My Dreams (1948)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Gruesome Gorilla / Mrs. Gruesome / Tarzan (voice)
Bugs Bunny is sailing the South Seas when a gorilla mother, desperate for a child, hijacks his barrel and presents Bugs to her husband. Bugs decides to play along, but quickly discovers his new "father" plays a bit rough.
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Oily Hare (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Texan
A Texas oilman fights Bugs over property rights to his rabbit hole.
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Rover's Rival (1937)
Character: Porky Pig / Puppy (voice) (uncredited)
Porky reads a book of new dog tricks; unfortunately, his dog, Rover, is old. A puppy comes by and taunts him.
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Chimp & Zee (1968)
Character: Professor / Chimp Sounds (voice)
A hunter goes into the jungle to capture a rare blue-tailed simian. That's when he sees Chimp, who happens to be the blue-tailed creature he's hunting for...
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Steal Wool (1957)
Character: Sam Sheep-Dog, Ralph Wolf
Ralph Wolf tries to forcibly remove Sam Sheepdog in order to gain access to a flock of sheep. Without success, he uses a lasso, cannon, a string of firecrackers, and a giant rubber band.
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Kitty Kornered (1946)
Character: Porky Pig / Sylvester / Small Cat / Tiny Cat / Drunk Cat / Goldfish Wife / Moose / Narrator (voice)
Porky puts his cats out in the snow, but then they put him out and have a party. Expelling them again, Porky goes to bed, only to be terrorized by the felines' mock Martian invasion.
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Mexican Cat Dance (1963)
Character: Speedy Gonzales (voice)
Mexican mice take over a bullfight ring after all the people have left, and they arrange their own entertainment, with Speedy Gonzales as a matador and Sylvester Cat substituting for a bull.
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Is There a Doctor in the Mouse? (1964)
Character: Tom (voice)
Jerry mixes and drinks a high-acceleration potion which renders him so fast that he eats all of Tom's food before the bewildered cat can even see him.
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Fresh Airedale (1945)
Character: Shep, Cat, Other Voices
Shep the dog is seen by his master as loyal and loving, but the cat knows he is really a self-centered, conniving weasel who lets burglars in the house and takes credit for the good deeds of others.
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Heir-Conditioned (1955)
Character: Sylvester, other cats
Sylvester is a rich cat, courtesy of his deceased mistress, who has left him 3 million dollars. His alley cat friends, hope to sponge off his good fortune, and Sylvester is eager to share with them. But Elmer Fudd, as Sylvester's new financial advisor lectures him on investing his wealth in business and industry.
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Woody Dines Out (1945)
Character: Woody Woodpecker (voice) (archive sound)
Woody Woodpecker goes out to dine and accidentally stumbles into a taxidermist's shop, thinking it is a restaurant. The taxidermist, wanting a woodpecker to stuff, doesn't inform Woody otherwise.
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Stooge for a Mouse (1950)
Character: Sylvester / Mike Bulldog / Mouse (voice)
A crafty mouse decides to remove his one obstacle to obtaining a block of cheese - Sylvester Cat - by stirring up trouble between Sylvester and Mike the Bulldog, two buddies turned to enemies by the mouse's clever set-ups implicating Sylvester in attacks on Mike.
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Scent-imental Romeo (1951)
Character: Pepé le Pew / Penelope Pussycat / zookeeper / animals (voice)
A hungry cat disguises herself as a skunk to get in on feeding time at the zoo, but amorous Pepe thinks she's the real thing and pours on his Maurice Chevalier impression to win her over.
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Bedevilled Rabbit (1957)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Tasmanian Devil / Crocodile (voice)
Hidden in a box of carrots, Bugs lands in Tasmania, where he matches wits with the Tasmanian Devil.
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Pancho's Hideaway (1964)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, Pancho Vanilla, Men
A hot-tempered bandit, Pancho Vanilla, robs a Mexican bank and rushes to his hideout to count the loot. Speedy Gonzales, Mexico's fastest mouse, follows Pancho there, intending to return the money to the bank. He challenges Pancho to a duel and then speeds past him again and again, bringing every cent of the money back to the bank and causing a flustered and enraged Pancho to shoot himself in the feet.
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Goofy Groceries (1941)
Character: Crab / Jack Bunny / Chicken Pie / Dog / Gorilla / Black Boy / Superman (voice) (uncredited)
Grocery store products come to life, along with caricatures of Jack Benny, Rochester and Ned Sparks, and take-offs on Superman and King Kong.
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Henhouse Henery (1949)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Henery Hawk / Barnyard Dog (voice)
Little Henery the Chicken Hawk goes hunting chickens with a hammer and clunks Foghorn Leghorn on the noggin. Foghorn sends Henery after the barnyard dog by misleading him into thinking the dog is a chicken. The dog sets Henery straight and helps him build a tree trap to catch Foggy for supper.
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Hop, Look and Listen (1948)
Character: Sylvester (voice)
A baby kangaroo hops out of his zoo cage and roams into the surrounding city. The kangaroo stops at Sylvester Cat's home while Sylvester is hunting for mice with a fishing rod. When Sylvester "reels in" the kangaroo, he thinks he has caught a giant mouse and makes a humiliatingly unsuccessful attempt to catch him.
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Cannery Woe (1961)
Character: Speedy Gonzales / Sylvester / Jose / Mayor Raton (voice)
Speedy Gonzales helps provide cheese for the mayor's reelection campaign (and two hungry friends) by swiping it from the store guarded by Sylvester.
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Trick or Tweet (1959)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice)
Sylvester Cat and a goony orange cat pretend not to let their rivalry over trying to catch Tweety Bird interfere with their friendship...
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Little Orphan Airedale (1947)
Character: Porky voice
Charlie Dog, looking for a good home and some easy living, thinks he's found the perfect sap in Porky Pig. He tries to ingratiate himself with the pig, all the way avoiding Porky's attempts to get rid of the dead-beat dog.
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A Street Cat Named Sylvester (1953)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Hector Bulldog (voice)
The title of this cartoon is a misnomer, because it is in fact Tweety Bird who is the homeless one here, and Sylvester is Granny's pet. Tweety seeks shelter from a blizzard and taps on Granny's house door. Sylvester answers and grabs the canary. He tries to hide Tweety from Granny while evading the attacks of Hector, Granny's bed-ridden bulldog, who wants revenge on Sylvester for his broken leg. Tweety keeps escaping Sylvester's clutches, with Hector's help.
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Canary Row (1950)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Desk Clerk / Monkey (voice)
Sylvester Cat spots Tweety Bird in a San Francisco apartment and tries to gain access but cannot make it past Granny or the cat-hating desk clerk.
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Hyde and Go Tweet (1960)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Mr. Hyde / Two Cats (voice)
Sylvester alternates chasing the normal Tweety and fleeing a monster version of Tweety.
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Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt (1941)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Hiawatha (voice) (uncredited)
Bugs Bunny is hunted by Hiawatha, a stereotyped Native American who fills roughly the same role as Elmer Fudd in other Bugs Bunny cartoons of this era.
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Tweet Dreams (1959)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Dr. Milt Towne / Dog / Junior (voice)
Warners' "economy cartoon," repackaging footage from earlier Tweety and Sylvester chases with new footage. In this one, Sylvester tells a psychiatrist of his frustration at not being able to catch Tweety, his repeated failures illustrated through past cartoons featuring the canary and puddy tat.
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The Sour Puss (1940)
Character: Porky Pig, Cat, Flying Fish
Porky decides to go fishing the next day and tells his cat. The cat sleeps fitfully. The next day, while they are fishing, the cat gets into a battle with a flying fish who behaves rather like Daffy Duck.
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Dime to Retire (1955)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck (voice)
Exhausted traveler Porky Pig drives into a town looking for a hotel. He is delighted to find one with a 10 cents per-night fee. Unfortunately, its manager is Daffy Duck.
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Pink Elephant (1975)
Character: Elephant (voice) uncredited
An elephant follows the Pink Panther home from the zoo.
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Porky's Phoney Express (1938)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
A pony express office. Porky's only allowed to clean up and lick envelopes. When a rider comes back...
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Dangerous Dan McFoo (1939)
Character: Character Who Fights Dan McFoo (voice) (uncredited)
An arctic saloon. The tiny dog, Dan McFoo, is playing a pinball-like marble game in the back. His girlfriend, Sue, sounding like Katharine Hepburn, stands by. A stranger comes in with eyes for Sue; he begins a boxing match with Dan. After Dan gets knocked down, he accuses the stranger of having something in the glove; the ref finds four horseshoes and a horse. After the fight goes on a while with no conclusion, the narrator tosses a couple of guns, the lights go out, and Dan is shot or is he?
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Thugs with Dirty Mugs (1939)
Character: Tattle-Tale Bank Clerk / Annoyed Mobster / Secret Agents / Man in Audience
Killer Diller and his gang are robbing every bank in town in numerical order (except the 13th National Bank, which they skip out of superstition). Despite their predictable actions, the police are unable to catch them...until they get a tip from an unlikely source.
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The Jet Cage (1962)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Blackbird
Tweety sits in his house, forlorn over the fact he can't fly outside like other birds because of his hungry feline predator, Sylvester.
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The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas (2000)
Character: Puppy Dino (voice)
The Flintstones are at it again. The Flintstones and the Rubbles head for Rock Vegas with Fred hoping to court the lovely Wilma. Nothing will stand in the way of love, except for the conniving Chip Rockefeller who is the playboy born in Baysville but who has made it in the cutthroat town of Rock Vegas. Will Fred win Wilma's love?
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Looney Tunes Collection: Best Of Bugs Bunny Volume 1 (2004)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Elmer Fudd (archive footage)
Among the most popular and recognizable cartoon characters ever created, Bugs Bunny is that rare animated creation with a personality so vibrant it's hard to believe he's not "real." The carrot-savoring hero of over 175 cartoon shorts and numerous feature films, Bugs has leaped from the screen into the wider world beyond to become a global icon of popular culture and one of the most beloved Looney Tunes characters ever to pop out of a rabbit hole! Included in the brilliantly restored and re-mastered animated triumphs in this eminently looney assortment of favorite Bugs Bunny shorts: Bugs and Duffy's epic argument about which of them is fair game in RABBIT SEASONING; the outrageous operatic antics of THE RABBIT OF SEVILLE, and Bugs running rings around a bad-tempered bovine in BULLY FOR BUGS. And that's just the beginning...
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Porky's Five & Ten (1938)
Character: Porky Pig / Fish / Radio Announcer (voice)
Porky sets sail for the Boola-Boola islands in the South Seas with a ship full of general merchandise and plans to open a 5 & 10 cent store. But a swordfish cuts a hole in the ship and Porky's goods fall into the ocean, where the fish make creative uses of them, ultimately opening a Hollywood nightclub, complete with fish impersonating various stars.
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A Wild Hare (1940)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Skunk (voice) (uncredited)
While hunting rabbits, Elmer Fudd comes across Bugs Bunny who tricks and harasses him.
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Hare Brush (1955)
Character: Bugs Bunny / board members / asylum inmates (voice)
The corporate board has Elmer committed to an asylum because he thinks he's a rabbit. At the sanitarium, Bugs agrees to trade places with Elmer.
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A Feather in His Hare (1948)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Baby Rabbits / Indian Screaming (voice)
A hungry indian tries to cook bugs, yet Bugs outwits him yet again. Banned for offensive depiction of Native Americans.
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The Good Egg (1945)
Character: Shoulder Angel / Shoulder Devil / War Bond Allotment Baby (voice) (uncredited)
Navy seaman Mr. Hook is convinced of the value of holding on to his war bonds.
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My Little Duckaroo (1954)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Nasty Canasta (voice)
Daffy Duck is a Wild West outlaw named "The Masked Avenger", righter of wrongs and doer of heroic deeds. Porky Pig is his sidekick. Together, they seek to arrest Nasty Canasta, a villain whose crimes include gag-stealing and square dancing in a round house.
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Feline Frame-Up (1954)
Character: Claude Cat / Pet Owner (voice)
After Claude frames Marc Antony, making it look like the bulldog ate the kitty, Marc must try various methods of getting back at Claude from outside the yard.
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Tom Tom Tomcat (1953)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Cat Chief (voice)
Tweety Bird is being taken by his mistress, Granny, on a trip across a prairie in a horse-drawn wagon when they are attacked by a tribe of Indian cats, all of whom are Sylvester or Sylvester variants.
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Bugs Bunny and the Three Bears (1944)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Henry 'Papa' Bear (voice)
The bears tempt Goldilocks with carrot soup, the scent of which brings Bugs on the scene. Bugs romances Mama bear and she becomes infatuated with him.
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I Wanna Be a Sailor (1937)
Character: Gabby Duckling (voice) (uncredited)
Momma parrot is teaching her young-uns to say "Polly want a cracker" but little Peter doesn't want a cracker, he wants to be a sailor like dad. Mom tells him what a no-account his dad really was, setting sail for Hawaii ("no, Maw, it was Catalina") right after the kids were born. Peter is unswayed, and takes off. He turns a barrel into a boat, and crews it with an annoyingly talkative duckling, then sets sail on a lake. They get caught in a thunderstorm (the duck loves it). Peter calls for help and momma comes running, but the duck has already saved him. But he still wants to be a sailor.
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Bugs Bunny's 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales (1982)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Yosemite Sam / Sylvester / Sylvester, Jr. / Speedy Gonzales / Tweety / Genie / Hassan / Big Bad Wolf / Beanstalk Giant / Elvis Gorilla / Stork (voice)
If Bugs Bunny were to direct his signature inquiry--"What's up, doc?"--toward the modern-day Warner Bros. creative team, he wouldn't be far off. For 1001 Rabbit Tales, they've doctored up a batch of classic cartoons featuring the carrot muncher and his bumbling comrades and bundled them, near seamlessly, into a feature-length film. Here's the premise: Bugs and Daffy, both book salesmen, are competing to sell the most copies of a kids' book. Instead of burrowing a beeline to his sales territory (he should have made a left at Albuquerque), Bugs ends up in the castle of Yosemite Sam, here a harem-leading honcho. Sam's pain-in-the-spurs son, Prince Abalaba, needs somebody to read him stories; Bugs, who'd sooner take the job than suffer the alternative, that involving being boiled in oil, signs on.
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What's My Lion? (1961)
Character: Rocky the Mountain Lion (voice)
It's open season for hunting, and Rocky the Mountain Lion takes refuge from gunfire by sneaking into a cabin owned by Elmer Fudd.
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Corn Plastered (1951)
Character: Farmer (voice)
A beany-capped, wise-cracking crow invades a corn field owned by an elderly farmer. The farmer unsuccessfully attempts to kill the crow by using a gun, an axe, and a cannon.
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Cat-Tails for Two (1953)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, George
Two cats try to catch Speedy Gonzales aboard a ship, without much success.
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Compressed Hare (1961)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Wile E. Coyote (voice)
Bugs battles Wile E. Coyote. A ten trillion volt electric magnet draws everything imaginable.
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Jack and the Beanstalk (1952)
Character: Farm Animals (uncredited) (voice)
A young boy trades the family cow for magic beans. Ascending the beanstalk with the butcher who sold him the beans, he faces the giant terrorizing his village.
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Knighty Knight Bugs (1958)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
King Arthur's kingdom and the knights of the Round Table are in the doldrums since the Dark Knight stole the Singing Sword and put it under the protection of a fire-breathing dragon. The king's jester, Bugs Bunny, says only a fool would try to steal it back, so the king orders him to try. The jester boldly enters the Dark Knight's castle, initially catching his adversaries napping, but when the Singing Sword wakes the knight and the dragon, can Bugs complete his mission? He's a clever fool. A moat, portcullis, and catapult all figure in the face off.
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Dough for the Do-Do (1949)
Character: Porky Pig / Others (voice)
Porky Pig has an adventure in Wackyland while searching for the last Do-Do bird.
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Chili Corn Corny (1965)
Character: Daffy Duck, Speedy Gonzalez (voice)
Daffy owns a cornfield. A crow sits outside, dejected, because he's starving and won't take any corn. The scarecrow frightens him and justifiably so because Daffy is hiding inside with a shotgun.
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Banty Raids (1963)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Barnyard Dog / Tough Rooster / Giggling Chicken (voice)
A horny hipster rooster, attracted to the hens in Foghorn Leghorn's barnyard, disguises himself as a baby foundling on Foghorn's doorstep. Foghorn adopts the girl-crazy rooster as his son, giving him access to all the chickens on the farm!
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The Hasty Hare (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny/Marvin the Martian/I. Frisby/Trumpet Sound (voice)
A Martian, with his green dog-soldier, K-9, arrive on Earth with instructions to bring back an Earth creature. He chooses Bugs Bunny.
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Tweet Tweet Tweety (1951)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Ranger (voice)
Sylvester Cat leaves a trailer in a National Forest Camping Ground to go bird hunting and discovers an egg in a nest. Sylvester decides to sit on the egg to hatch it, and when it hatches, out crawls Tweety Bird! Sylvester chases Tweety into a geyser and down a river in a boat toward a waterfall.
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A Feud There Was (1938)
Character: Various (voice)
The McCoys and the Weavers are two feuding hillbilly clans. Elmer Fudd, Peacemaker, attempts to end the fighting; but violence and zaniness win out.
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Technological Threat (1988)
Character: Various (voice; uncredited)
Human fear of technology is portrayed in this very amusing futuristic parody. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2013.
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Booby Hatched (1944)
Character: Robespierre / Bear (voice) (uncredited)
A duck struggles mightily and finally hatches her eggs in the bitter cold. All but one, that is: poor little Robespierre. Mama doesn't notice him missing until after he has sprouted legs and run off in search of warmth.
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Patient Porky (1940)
Character: Porky Pig / Dr. Chilled Air / Elevator Operator / Rabbit / Bugs Bunny / Oliver Owl / Scottish Dog / Program Seller (voice) (uncredited)
Porky checks into a hospital with a tummyache; he has the bad luck to encounter a patient posing a "Dr. Chilled-Air" who is a bit too eager to operate.
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Rodent to Stardom (1967)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales / Hassenpfeffer (voice)
Daffy is discovered by famous Hollywood director Harvey Hassenpfeffer. The duck is made stuntman for Speedy Gonzales.
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Really Scent (1959)
Character: Pepe Le Pew
Pepe le Pew arrives in New Orleans, where Fabrette the black cat has been cursed with white stripes like a skunk, interfering with her chances to get married. Of course, a skunk is her perfect match... if she can stand the smell!
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The Windblown Hare (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny / The Three Little Pigs / Big Bad Wolf (voice)
Bugs buys the homes of the three little pigs and the wolf starts blowing them down. Of course you know "this means war."
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Jumpin' Jupiter (1955)
Character: Porky Pig, Sylvester
A strange alien captures Porky Pig and Sylvester's entire campsite as a sample to take back to its planet, but only Sylvester figures out what is really going on.
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The Mouse on 57th Street (1961)
Character: Mouse / Cops / Spiffany's Man / Muldoon (voice)
An inebriated mouse with a throbbing head takes a priceless diamond, thinking it's a soothing piece of ice. Two policemen, one of them a lunkhead, are assigned to recover the missing jewel.
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Aloha Hooey (1942)
Character: Sammy Seagull (voice)
Sammy Seagull and Cecil Crow have stowed away on the same ship. Cecil, from Iowa, wants to see a hula dancer; fortunately, they've just come within flying distance of a tropical island with a lovely dancer. They take turns trying to impress her, with such stunts as skywriting hearts (Cecil almost drowns) and fancy dives (Cecil almost crashes, then gets into a fight with a shark, a turtle, and a starfish).
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Little Pancho Vanilla (1938)
Character: Little Pancho Vanilla
Little Pancho Vanilla dreams of becoming a bullfighter, but his mother tells him that's impossible. The greatest bullfighter in Mexico, Don Jose, is coming to town; Pancho tells the local women he's better, so he goes to the amateur tryout, but he gets thrown out because he's so small. The bull quickly disposes of the other amateurs, sending one over the fence, where he catapults Pancho into the ring right on top of the bull, knocking out the bull to great acclaim from the crowd.
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Bugs Bunny's Mad World of Television (1982)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / Pepe Le Pew (voice)
The president of QTTV is thrown out the window since the shows under his reign got nothing but bad ratings. So the executives decide that it is time to find a new president who understands entertainment. That's when they turn to Bugs Bunny. The network calls Bugs Bunny and asks him to be the new president. They also ask him how he came to be and that's when the special shows scenes from What's Up Doc?. Eventually, Bugs accepts the job.
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A Bird in a Bonnet (1958)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice)
The chase continues between Tweety Bird and that persistant puddy tat, Sylvester. Tweety hides in a millinery store (where Granny happens to be shopping) and hides on a hat.
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Porky Pig's Feat (1943)
Character: Porky Pig/Daffy Duck/Hotel Mgr/Bugs Bunny(voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig and Daffy Duck owe an outrageous sum to the Broken Arms Hotel. The manager thwarts their efforts to escape without paying their bill.
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No Barking (1954)
Character: Tweety / Frisky Puppy / Claude Cat (voice)
A homeless cat (Claude Cat) searching for food is harassed by the playful antics and barking of an energetic pup (Frisky Puppy). Frisky repeatedly sneaks up behind the poor tabby cat (who hates the dog) and scares it into jumping vertically when it barks. After Claude finally silences the pup, he encounters a larger dog, whose bark has a disastrous effect. Tweety Bird has two lines. Can you guess what they are?
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The Hypo-Chondri-Cat (1950)
Character: Hubie / Claude Cat (voice)
Those crazy mice Hubie & Bertie are at it again with Claude. This time the mice see that Claude is seriously ill, so they give him an operation.
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Swing Ding Amigo (1966)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales (voice)
Speedy has an A Go-Go Club that resides in Daffy Duck's home, as Daffy has had enough and tries everything in his power to get rid of them because of the raucous noise they make.
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A-Lad-In Bagdad (1938)
Character: Villain (voice)
Hayseed Egghead arrives in the big city of Bagdad and quickly wins a magic lamp in a carnival coin-operated crane game. The shady character who was playing the game before him covets the lamp, and tries to steal it. Egghead sees a poster: The sultan is having a contest for his daughter's hand in marriage. With his lamp, Egghead thinks he's a sure bet; he conjures up a magic carpet, and he's off. After a couple bad vaudeville acts, it's Egghead's turn, but in the meantime, the bad guy swapped the lamp for a coffeepot. Egghead is thrown out, then sees the bad guy using the lamp; Egghead breaks in, steals the lamp and the girl, and flies off. But she uses the lamp herself to conjure up a real hunk to replace the nerdy Egghead.
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Cinderella Meets Fella (1938)
Character: Cuckoo Clock / Royal Guard / Screaming Cinderella (voice) (uncredited)
Cinderella goes to the ball, where she meets Prince Charming (Egghead).
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Hare We Go (1951)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Christopher Columbus / King Ferdinand / Bald Sailor / Crewmen (voice)
In 1492, Bugs Bunny sails the ocean blue, as mascot for Christopher Columbus.
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Of Thee I Sting (1946)
Character: Marching Band (voice) (uncredited)
A mosquito army trains for, then goes on, an attack mission.
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The Bear's Tale (1940)
Character: Wolf (voice) (uncredited)
The Three Bears meets Little Red Riding Hood, told in the style of Tex Avery.
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Hollywood Daffy (1946)
Character: Daffy Duck
Daffy sneaks onto the Warmer Brothers lot, eventually posing as a tour guide. Daffy spoofs a number of contemporary stars, and others appear as "themselves". He also has a number of run-ins with a studio cop.
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Hyde and Hare (1955)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Dr. Jekyll
Bugs Bunny manages to get himself adopted by kindly Dr. Jekyll, but is surprised when his benefactor turns into the horrible Mr. Hyde after drinking a potion.
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I Got Plenty of Mutton (1944)
Character: Wolf / Killer Diller (voice) (uncredited)
A wolf, deprived of meat by war rationing and starving, sees an article in the newspaper about a sheepdog leaving his flock to join the army and thinks it will be easy pickings. However, if he had read the rest of the article, he would know that the flock is now guarded by the ram Killer Diller, a most formidable foe.
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Hare's to Bugs! A Bugs Bunny Celebration (2024)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Enjoy a heartwarming journey through the legacy of the world’s most famous cartoon superstar – Bugs Bunny. Witness his extraordinary transformation from animated character to global and pop culture icon with classic archival footage and exclusive new interviews with voice actors Bob Bergen, Eric Bauza, Jeff Bergman, Candi Milo, Billy West, animation historian Jerry Beck, Variety’s TV Editor Mike Schneider and others.
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My Bunny Lies Over the Sea (1948)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Angus MacRory (voice)
In Scotland, Bugs Bunny rescues a woman from a monster. The "woman" is a kilted Scotsman, and the "monster" is his bagpipe. The Scotsman then challenges Bugs to a game of golf.
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The Hep Cat (1942)
Character: The Hep Cat / Rosebud
A cat-about-town fancies himself such an irresitible "hunk" he momentarily resembles Victor Mature. His wooing of a cute kitten gets derailed by a prankster dog using a cat hand puppet to trap him.
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Yogi's Ark Lark (1972)
Character: Secret Squirrel (voice)
Yogi, Boo Boo and many of his friends including Huckleberry Hound, Snagglepuss, Magilla Gorilla among others decide to build an ark to look for the mythical Perfect Place which is peaceful and hasn't been affected by man and pollution. They hire the Jellystone's janitor Noah Smith to act as captain and travel throughout the world looking for such a place. Even though they think every place they land is a "Perfect place", they soon find out that there is definitely no place like home.
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Jungle Book (1942)
Character: Kaa (voice) (uncredited)
Mowgli, lost in the jungle when a toddler, raised by wolves, years later happens upon his human village and reconnects with its inhabitants, including his widowed mother. Continuing to maintain a relationship with the jungle, adventures follow.
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Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979)
Character: Twiki (voice)
Capt. William "Buck" Rogers is a jovial space cowboy who is accidentally time-warped from 1987 to 2491. Earth is engaged in interplanetary war following a global holocaust, and Buck's piloting skills make him an ideal starfighter recruit for the Earth Defense Directorate, where his closest colleagues are Dr. Huer (Tim O'Connor), squadron leader Col. Wilma Deering (former model Erin Gray), the wisecracking robot Twiki (voiced by cartoon legend Mel Blanc), and a portable computer-brain named Dr. Theopolis.
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The Sheepish Wolf (1942)
Character: Sam Sheepdog / Ralph Wolf (voice)
Sam Sheepdog and Ralph Wolf are both just trying to do what they have to do.
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The Lyin' Mouse (1937)
Character: Cat (voice) (uncredited)
A mouse is trying to free himself from a trap when a cat arrives. The mouse, desperate, asks if the cat has heard the story of the lion and the mouse.
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The High and the Flighty (1956)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Daffy Duck / Barnyard Dog (voice)
Salesman Daffy Duck comes upon a farm, the site of Foghorn Leghorn's ongoing feud with the barnyard dog, and proceeds to sell Foghorn and the dog contraptions to continue their violent, mutual heckling.
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Tom Turk and Daffy (1944)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
It's Thanksgiving, and Tom Turk is trying to avoid become the main attraction on Porky Pig's dinner table. Fellow bird Daffy Duck is willing to help him, until he realizes that he'll miss out on a delicious meal. Hilarity ensues as each tries to get the other caught by Porky.
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Cat's Paw (1959)
Character: Sylvester / Junior (voice)
Sylvester Cat goes bird-stalking in the mountains with his son, Junior.
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High Note (1960)
Character: Drunken Musical Note (voice) (uncredited)
The sheet music for Johann Strauss' The Blue Danube is constructed by moving musical symbols. A baton-toting conductor note tries to direct his fellow notes in performing this musical piece, but finds that one of the notes has become drunk.
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Napoleon Bunny-Part (1956)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Napoleon / Mugsy / Guard / White Coats (voice)
Bugs takes a wrong turn off the Hollywood freeway and tunnels into the headquarters of Napoleon Bonaparte.
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Don't Give Up the Sheep (1953)
Character: Sam Sheepdog, Ralph Wolf (voice)
A sheepdog thwarts the efforts of a thieving wolf whose tricks include altering the time clock, hiding in a bush, imitating Pan, digging a tunnel, unleashing a wildcat and disguising himself as the dog's coworker.
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Bugs Bunny's Valentine (1979)
Character: (voice)
Watch out as Elmer Fudd lays down his rifle in favor of a bow and "love arrows". None of the Loony Tunes favorites are safe from klutzy Elmer "Cupid" Fudd: Forhorn Leghorn and Daffy Duck are chased by love-crazed females and Bugs Bunny winds up getting hitched to Yosemite Sam!
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Good Night Elmer (1940)
Character: Elmer Fudd (voice)
Elmer Fudd spends an endless night trying to fall asleep amid myriad frustrations, in particular, a candle that won't go out.
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Porky's Poor Fish (1940)
Character: Porky Pig / Cat / Whistling Mouse / Lunch Whistle / Turtle / Tuna (voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig owns a fish store and goes out to lunch. After a cat is not having much success with a mouse, he goes into the fish store when Porky is away. When the cat thinks he has the good appetite, the fish go to war against him and drive him out of the store. He is then freaked out by the mouse and shrinks as the mouse grows.
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The Wearing of the Grin (1951)
Character: Porky Pig / O'Mike (voice)
Porky Pig spends the night at an Irish castle after being caught in a storm, and gets in trouble with the two leprechauns who live there.
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The Foghorn Leghorn (1948)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Barnyard Dawg / Henery Hawk / Grandpa Hawk (voice)
Little Henery the Chicken Hawk wants to prove he's big enough to hunt chickens, but he doesn't know what a chicken is. He labels Foghorn Leghorn a loud-mouthed shnook and dismisses him, prompting Foggy to indignantly try to prove he's a chicken and therefore fit to be Henery's prey.
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Russian Rhapsody (1944)
Character: Adolf Hitler / Gremlin from the Kremlin (voice)
As Adolf Hitler personally flies a bomber on a mission to the Soviet Union, the gremlins from the Kremlin set about to stop him.
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False Hare (1964)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Big Bad Wolf / Nephew / Foghorn Leghorn (voice)
Big Bad Wolf and his nephew create a club for rabbits, Club del Conejo, to try to catch Bugs Bunny.
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Ducking the Devil (1957)
Character: Daffy Duck, Tasmanian Devil
Daffy tries to snare the escaped Tasmanian Devil for the $5000 reward offered by the city zoo.
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The Woods Are Full of Cuckoos (1937)
Character: Mr. Growlin
A program for radio KUKU set in the woods, mostly starring birds as caricatures of celebrities of the day. The MC is bandleader Ben Birdie, heckled by Walter Finchell. Wendell Howell prepares to lead a singalong; he gives several different page numbers in the songbook, then says, "Never mind, we won't use the books." The audience, responding "Oh yes we will" pelts him. Billy Goat and Ernie Bear introduce and sing the title song. Everyone sings along, except a fox, who informed he's singing the wrong song, responds, "Why don't somebody tell me these things?" We pan across a series of celebrity guests, like W.C. Field-mouse, Dick Fowl, Deanna Terrapin, Bing Crowsby, and the high-note competing duo of Grace Moose and Lily Swans. Tizzie Fish has a cooking segment. Finally, Louella Possums introduces a company performing a scene from The Prodigal's Return.
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A Coy Decoy (1941)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck (voice) (uncredited)
Characters on book covers come to life, including Porky and Daffy. The "Wolf of Wall Street" chases Daffy through "The Hurricane," "The Storm" and across "The Bridge of San Luis Rey" before expiring in "For Whom the Bell Tolls."
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To Duck.... Or Not to Duck (1943)
Character: Daffy Duck / Duck Referee / Duck Spectators / Laramore (voice) (uncredited)
Daffy challenges duckhunter Elmer to a boxing match, rigged in his favor with the collusion of the duck referee. In the stands, Elmer's dog Larrimore suspects that something funny is going on, but he's drowned out by Daffy's all-duck cheering section.
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Knight-Mare Hare (1955)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Sir Osis / King / Merlin the Magician / Donkey Owner (voice)
An apple falls on Bugs' head, transporting him back to King Arthur's England.
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Bushy Hare (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Balloon Vendor / 'Nature Boy' / Kangaroos (voice)
Bugs encounters marsupials and an aborigine in Australia's outback.
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Well Worn Daffy (1965)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales/ Pedro / Jose (voice)
Speedy and a couple of his mouse friends are in need of a drink in the hot desert and come accoss a water-filled oasis, which belongs to greedy Daffy Duck.
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Louvre Come Back to Me! (1962)
Character: Pepe Le Pew (voice)
Pepe Le Pew, the eternally amorous skunk, is in Paris, where his stench sends a female cat upward to hit a freshly painted flagpole, which puts a white stripe on her back and causes Pepe to think she also is a skunk. He lustfully pursues her into the Louvre art gallery.
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To Beep or Not to Beep (1963)
Character: Wile E. Coyote
Wile E. Coyote hopes to stop and catch the Road Runner using a huge, boulder-throwing catapult. But no matter where Wile E. positions himself, the catapult drops the boulder on him.
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The Penguin Parade (1938)
Character: Drunk Penguin (voice)
An evening at a night club for penguins, (and a walrus or two). The stage show includes an appearance by a penguin incarnation of Bing Crosby, who sings a jazzy version of, "When my dreamboat comes home". The band's three singers do a scat version as well. This is followed by a full swing band instrumental of the song which works the band into a "Hot Jazz" frenzy, literaly melting some of the instruments.
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Heaven Scent (1956)
Character: Pepé Le Pew / Penelope Pussycat / other voices
On the French Riviera, a female cat is frightened by sudden outbursts of barking by every dog around her. So, to scare them away, she paints her back with a white stripe like that of a skunk. But she doesn't receive the peace she'd expected, because Pepé Le Pew, the amorous French skunk, sees her, thinks she's a girl skunk, and pursues her.
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Porky's Bear Facts (1941)
Character: Porky Pig/Bear/Cow/Dog/Mouse (voice)
Porky Pig works hard on his farm all year. On a neighboring farm, a bear lazes around and allows his animals to be idle. The winter comes, and he has nothing to eat.
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Home, Tweet Home (1950)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice)
Tweety Bird is washing in a bird bath in a city park when Sylvester Cat interrupts him. Sylvester chases Tweety, and Tweety takes refuge near a feisty nanny and her toddler. Sylvester dresses as the toddler to try to grab Tweety but is stopped and spanked. Tweety flies to a building ledge, and Sylvester unsuccessfully uses chewing gum to try to reach him. Next, Sylvester angers a bulldog, who chases him away.
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Three Brothers (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
Dissatisfied with being assigned to shoe consignment detail, Snafu learns about the true value of his responsibilities
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The Phantom Tollbooth (1970)
Character: Officer Short Shrift / Dodecahedron / Demon of Insincerity (voice)
The Phantom Tollbooth, based upon the children's adventure novel by Norton Juster, tells the story of a bored young boy named Milo. Unexpectedly receiving a magic tollbooth and, having nothing better to do, Milo drives through it and enters a kingdom in turmoil following the loss of its princesses, Rhyme and Reason.
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Ski for Two (1944)
Character: Woody Woodpecker (archive sound)
Planning a vacation, Woody reads in the newspaper about Swiss Chard Lodge which promises lots of good food (which, as Woody says, is his "favorite dish"). He heads over to said lodge but, upon arriving, is told by owner Wally Walrus that he must make reservations ahead of time... which he has not. Wally throws the pest out but Woody is able to re-enter the premises disguised as none other than Santa Claus. He robs Wally of his food but, once alone with his sack, discovers quite a surprise inside.
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A Broken Leghorn (1959)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Junior Rooster (voice)
On Old MacDonald's farm, an egg hatches in slow-witted hen Miss Prissy's nest, and out of the shell comes a baby rooster. Fearing he will be replaced by the new arrival and sent to be slaughtered, Foghorn Leghorn plots to do away with the tyke.
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Hoppy-Go-Lucky (1952)
Character: Sylvester (voice)
Sylvester Cat and his dopey, brawny feline friend, Benny, hunt mice in a warehouse because Benny wants one as a pet. Hippety Hopper, the baby kangaroo, is in the warehouse, and the two cats, of course, think he's a giant mouse. Benny wants him and obliges Sylvester to try and catch the fleet-of-foot Hippety.
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The Up-Standing Sitter (1948)
Character: Daffy Duck / I. Squeel / Hen / Baby Chick (voice)
Daffy Duck is working as a babysitter for the Acme Baby Sitting Agency. While he's sitting on a chicken egg, it hatches. The chick decides Daffy is a stranger and he should have nothing to do with him, so flees. Daffy has to catch it.
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Old Glory (1939)
Character: Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig balks at learning the Pledge of Allegiance until Uncle Sam appears to him in a dream and gives him a lesson in American history.
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Rabbit Seasoning (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck (voice)
The cartoon finds a row of signs saying it's rabbit season ("If you're looking for fun, you don't need a reason. All you need is a gun, it's Rabbit Season!"). Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck again are arguing over which of them is “in season” (it is really Duck Season, as Daffy says in the beginning), while a befuddled Elmer Fudd tries to figure out which animal is telling the truth. Between using sneaky plays-on-words, and dressing in women's clothing (including a Lana Turner-style sweater), Bugs manages to escape unscathed, while Daffy repeatedly has his beak blown off, upside-down, and sideways by Elmer.
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Africa Squeaks (1940)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
Porky Pig goes on a safari in Africa, and runs into an assortment of crazy animals, wacky natives and Kay Kyser giving dance lessons in the middle of the jungle.
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Porky's Prize Pony (1941)
Character: Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
When jockey Porky's thoroughbred gets drunk on linament, a goofy milk-wagon horse takes over for the big race.
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Duck! Rabbit, Duck! (1953)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck (voice)
The final installment of the "Hunting Trilogy" once again has Elmer out hunting, while Bugs and Daffy try to con him into shooting the other.
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Tom & Jerry (2021)
Character: Tom / Jerry (archive sounds) (uncredited)
Tom the cat and Jerry the mouse get kicked out of their home and relocate to a fancy New York hotel, where a scrappy employee named Kayla will lose her job if she can’t evict Jerry before a high-class wedding at the hotel. Her solution? Hiring Tom to get rid of the pesky mouse.
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South Sea Woman (1953)
Character: Parrot (voice) (uncredited)
Marine Sergeant James O'Hearn is being tried at the San Diego Marine base for desertion, theft, scandalous conduct and destruction of property in time of war. He refuses to testify or plead guilty or not guilty to the charges. Showgirl Ginger Martin takes the stand against his protest. She testifies O'Hearn won't talk because he is protecting the name of his pal, Marine Private Davey White. Ginger tells how she, broke and stranded, met the two marines in Shanghai two weeks before Pearl Harbor.
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What Price Porky (1938)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / Hen (voice) (uncredited)
Porky tries to feed his chickens, but some ducks steal the corn he puts out, then declare war. The battle rages, with the ducks against the chickens, sometimes in wing-to-wing combat, but also aerial attacks, and Porky finally turning the tide with his machine gun improvised from a wringer washer and a bag of corn. But the ducks still get the last laugh.
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Uncle Tom's Bungalow (1937)
Character: Hound (voice)
Warner Bros. cartoon parody of Uncle Tom's Cabin. One of the “Censored 11” banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 for racist stereotyping.
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Daffy Dilly (1948)
Character: Daffy Duck / Reporter / Butler / J.P. Cubish
Tired of selling gag novelties on the street, Daffy tries for the million-dollar reward offered by J.P. Cubish for the first person to make him laugh. But he first has to get past the rich man's haughty butler, and in the process subjects the servant to a Bogart-like grilling.
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The Reckless Driver (1946)
Character: Woody Woodpecker's Laugh (archive sound)
Driving down a U.S. highway, Woody Woodpecker passes a billboard which reminds him that he should renew his driver's license. He heads to the Department of Motor Vehicles and asks Officer Wally Walrus, who takes an immediate dislike to Woody, to give him the test. He puts Woody through the eye test, the reflex test, and the fingerprint test...with Woody constantly making short work of the walrus' patience.
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Sandy Claws (1955)
Character: Tweety / Sylvester
Tweety Bird goes to the beach with Granny, and Sylvester tries once again to catch him.
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Birds Anonymous (1957)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Clarence / B.A. Cats (voice)
In this spoof of Alcoholics Anonymous, pussycats are cast as bird-eating addicts and go through the 12-step process to deal with their addiction. Sylvester, who could never quite get the best of the object of his desire, Tweety Bird, joins and resolves to quit chasing and eating the canary.
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How Bugs Bunny Won the West (1978)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Daffy Duck / Porky Pig (voice)
How Bugs Bunny Won the West is a Looney Tunes special that was released in 1978. This special was narrated by Denver Pyle. The special is available as a bonus feature on The Essential Bugs Bunny DVD set. It had a running time of 30 min.
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Ah, Sweet Mouse-Story Of Life (1965)
Character: Vocal Effects (voice)
Tom chases Jerry around a high-rise apartment, and then around the ledge surrounding the building. They torment each other with a compressed air horn. Jerry goes down a drainpipe and Tom follows, stretching himself the length of the pipe (and getting unstuck with help from the air horn).
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Who Scent You? (1960)
Character: Pepé le Pew / Penelope / Le Capitaine / First Mate / Crewmates (voice)
A female cat wants to board a French cruise ship. Prior to the ship's departure, she crawls under a freshly-painted gate and gets a white streak atop her back and tail. Enter enamored Pepé Le Pew.
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The Bee-Deviled Bruin (1949)
Character: Vocal effects (voice)
It's breakfast time, and Pa finds the honeypot empty. Literally risking life and limb, he has Junyer help him raid a nearby beehive. In the end, he finds he should have listened to Ma in the first place, rather than telling her to "Shaddap!"
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Wild and Woolly Hare (1959)
Character: Bugs/Sam/Cowboys/Injun Joe/Gambler/Old Timers (voice)
Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam duel with trains in an Old West shootout.
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The Flintstones Meet Rockula and Frankenstone (1979)
Character: Barney Rubble / Dino (voice)
The Flintstones and the Rubbles win a trip on "Make a Deal or Don't" to Count Rockula's castle in Rocksylvania, where they have an unpleasant meeting with the Count and his servant, Frankenstone.
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The Night Watchman (1938)
Character: Tough Mice (voice)
A little cat must take his sick father's place as night watchman, but is bullied by a tough mouse and his gang, leaving the rest of the mice free to eat all the food and stage a musical floor show.
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Mexican Boarders (1962)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, Sylvester
Speedy Gonzales' lethargic cousin, Slowpoke Rodriguez, comes to visit Speedy's hacienda, to the delight of Sylvester Cat, who is confident he will be able to catch Slowpoke for dinner.
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Past Perfumance (1955)
Character: Pepe le Pew
Paris, 1913: Passionate, odiferous Pepe Le Pew pursues the latest love of his life, a cat who's been made up to look like a skunk, through the sets of a silent-movie studio.
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Slick Hare (1947)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Waiter / Bartender / Ray Milland (voice)
Humphrey Bogart visits the Mocrumbo Restaurant. He orders fried rabbit and Elmer Fudd has twenty minutes to serve it.
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Daffy Duck's Movie: Fantastic Island (1983)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Tweety / Sylvester / Yosemite Sam / Speedy Gonzales / Taz / Foghorn Leghorn (voice)
Daffy Duck and Speedy Gonzales find a treasure map that leads them to a wishing well, which for a penny will grant any wish (through old cartoon footage). Daffy sets up a resort around the well and various Looney Tunes characters have their dreams come true. Meanwhile, Yosemite Sam and the Tasmanian Devil hunt for the varmints who stole their treasure map!
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Bonanza Bunny (1959)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Blacque Jacque Shellacque (voice)
Bugs fights with Blacque Jacque Shellacque over Klondike gold.
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Baby Buggy Bunny (1954)
Character: Bugs Bunny/Finster/Harry/TV Reporter/Sergeant/Clancy (voice)
Baby-Faced Finster robs a bank, but the baby carriage with the money in it goes down Bugs' rabbit hole.
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Johnny Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1944)
Character: Gremlin (voice) (uncredited)
A young girl rents an apartment from a man who has recently enlisted in the Marines. The trouble is that he's given out keys to a half-dozen of his friends, and they all keep dropping in.
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The Wise Quacking Duck (1943)
Character: Daffy Duck / Mr. Meek (voice)
An exceedingly mild-mannered man is sent out to kill a duck for dinner by his wife. Unfortunately for him, he picks Daffy Duck as his victim. The two face off and do battle for the remainder of the cartoon.
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Walky Talky Hawky (1946)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Henery Hawk / Barnyard Dog / Henry Hawk
Young Henery Hawk's father regretfully admits their family's shame: they hunt and eat chickens. Henery set off to find one, and comes across Foghorn Leghorn, where the loudmouth rooster is engaged in his favorite pastime, playing tricks on grumpy Barnyard Dog.
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Devil May Hare (1954)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Tasmanian Devil / Turtle (voice)
The Tasmanian Devil is on the loose. Bugs offers to help him find his dinner.
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Peace on Earth (1939)
Character: Voices (uncredited)
Two baby squirrels ask grandpa to explain what "men" are when he comes in singing "peace on earth, goodwill to men". Grandpa tells the story of man's last war. This classic animation short was an Academy Award Best Short Subject, Cartoons nominee.
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Little Red Riding Rabbit (1944)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
Bugs, the Wolf and bobby-soxer Red chase each other around while Grandma is off working at Lockheed aircraft.
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Nasty Quacks (1945)
Character: Daffy Duck / Agnes' Father / Baby Duck
A doting father gives a cute little duckling to his little daughter. That duckling grows up to become Daffy Duck, who soon develops quite a night life, which he loudly explains at breakfast, in the process of eating everything in sight. When the exasperated father's attempts at violently removing Daffy fail, he tries one final measure to drive Daffy away...
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Upswept Hare (1953)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
Penthouse dwelling Elmer Fudd brings home a beautiful flowering desert plant and - unknowingly - Bugs Bunny.
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His Hare Raising Tale (1951)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Clyde / Umpire / Ball Player / Scientist (voice)
Bugs tells stories to his nephew Clyde derived from earlier cartoons ("Baseball Bugs", "Stage Door Cartoon", "Rabbit Punch", "Falling Hare", and "Haredevil Hare").
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Salt Water Daffy (1941)
Character: Navy Captain / Sailors / Admiral (voice)
A narrator tells how military recruits are trained on land and sea. Men get a physical, undergo basic training, do duties on board ship for gunnery practice, clean the decks, and prepare for battle.
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Hey There, It's Yogi Bear! (1964)
Character: Conductor Bear / Grifter Chizzling (voice)
Yogi Bear and his pal Boo Boo are shipped off to the San Diego Zoo by Jellystone National Park's Ranger Smith who is tired of Yogi's "pick-a-nick" basket stealing. Yogi escapes by convincing a bear named Cornpone to switch places with him and go to sunny California and returns to the park. His girlfriend, Cindy, not realizing Yogi has escaped, goes looking for him and is kidnapped by a circus owne
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The Henpecked Duck (1941)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / Junior Duck (voice) (uncredited)
Mrs. Duck sues Daffy for divorce in Judge Porky Pig's courtroom, charging her husband with losing their egg in an abortive magic trick.
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Feather Dusted (1955)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn (voice)
Foghorn Leghorn decides to teach Miss Prissy's genius son Egghead Jr. how to have fun by playing croquet, cowboys and Indians.
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Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs (1943)
Character: Dwarves / Worm in Apple / Honey Chile (voice)
Spoof of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) with an all-black cartoon cast. One of the “Censored 11” banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 for racist stereotyping.
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The Bashful Buzzard (1945)
Character: Other voices
Beaky Buzzard, the shyest, dopiest young buzzard in his family, is sent out to catch something to eat.
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Rebel Without Claws (1961)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Southern Colonel / Soldier (voice)
The Confederate Army wants to get an important message through to General Lee, but all the carrier pigeons have been shot down. Tweety steps in.
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Herr Meets Hare (1945)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Goering, Hitler
Bugs disguises himself as Hitler, Stalin and Brunhilde when he confronts Nazi Hermann Goering in the Black Forest.
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Going Home (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
Pvt. Snafu's unit suffers the consequences of blabbing military secrets while on leave at home.
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Claws for Alarm (1954)
Character: Porky Pig / Sylvester (voice)
Porky and Sylvester stay overnight in what Sylvester realizes is a terrifying hotel filled with endless imminent danger.
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Angel Puss (1944)
Character: Lil' Sambo / Angel Puss (voice)
A little black boy is hired to kill a cat, but the feline escapes and proceeds to play tricks on the kid, pretending he's a ghost come back to haunt his "killer". One of the “Censored 11” banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 for racist stereotyping.
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Stage Door Cartoon (1944)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Southern Sheriff (voice)
That wascawwy wabbit is chased into a theatre by Elmer Fudd, and ends up having to perform to save himself, as well as convince Elmer to act himself. The vaudeville industry was never this wacky!
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Fool Coverage (1952)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig (voice)
Daffy Duck is an insurance peddler, who arrives uninvited at Porky Pig's door to persuade him to purchase an accident policy on the pretext that his home is loaded with hazards. When Porky rejects Daffy's claim that accidents in the home are "waiting" to happen, Daffy rigs some.
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Daffy Duck in Hollywood (1938)
Character: Daffy Duck / I. M. Stupendous / Rooster Actor / Assistant Directors (voice) (uncredited)
Daffy causes trouble on a Hollywood set.
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Cats A-Weigh! (1953)
Character: Sylvester / Junior (voice)
Sylvester Cat accepts a position as mouse-catcher on a ship, and his son, Junior, accompanies him. They encounter baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper being shipped from Australia and, as usual, mistake Hippety for a giant mouse.
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Gift Wrapped (1952)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Dog (voice)
It's Christmas Day in the home of Granny, and her pet cat Sylvester delights at chasing her new Tweety Bird and takes fright at the bulldog unwrapped from under the tree.
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The Cagey Canary (1941)
Character: Canary / Cat (voice) (uncredited)
A cat (not Sylvester) tries to capture a little canary bird (not Tweety), and not get caught by protective Granny.
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A Peck o' Trouble (1953)
Character: The Kitten (voice)
Lazy Dodsworth the Cat wants to catch a woodpecker for his breakfast. The woodpecker has built its home inside the upper trunk of a very tall tree, and Dodsworth puts on a professor's cap, pretending to be a passive teacher of bird-catching and thereby deceive an eager-to-learn kitten into doing the perilous ascending of the tree to try to catch the woodpecker.
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Little Boy Boo (1954)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn
Foghorn Leghorn, shivering at the thought of another cold winter in his dilapidated roost, decides to court the well-to-do Miss Prissy, but Prissy won't marry him unless he can prove he'll be a good father to her son, a bespectacled egghead genius who, by scientific means, bests Foghorn in every game they play.
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What's Up, Doc ? (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Al Jolson / Eddie Cantor / Director (voice)
Bugs' showbiz career is recounted from babyhood to stardom. Bugs and Elmer Fudd perform the title song.
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Porky's Tire Trouble (1939)
Character: Porky
Porky works at the Snappy Rubber Company. His dog, Flat Foot Flookey, is determined to follow him into the plant, despite the rules. And Flookey's clumsiness means he's not exactly going to be able to sneak in like when he falls into a vat of rubberizing solution, and molds his face into a number of then-popular movie stars, or makes Porky's boss (a walrus) drop a stack of tires.
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Tortilla Flaps (1958)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, Crow, Mice
A hungry crow intrudes on a party honoring Speedy Gonzales, Mexico's fastest mouse, and tries to catch and eat some of Speedy's friends. Speedy leads the crow on a frustrating and violent chase that demoralizes the crow into surrendering and joining in Speedy's party, as the center of a dart board, and the target of a ball-throw.
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The Super Snooper (1952)
Character: Daffy Duck, Butler, Phone Voice
In this parody of trench-coat detective films, Daffy Duck is Duck Drake, a "Private Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat" who receives a telephone call summoning him to the J. Cleaver Axe-Handle Estate, where a murder has supposedly taken place.
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Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003)
Character: Gremlin Car (archive sound)
Fed up with all the attention going to Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck quits Hollywood, teams up with recently-fired stuntman Damien Drake Jr. and embarks on a round-the-world adventure, along with Bugs and The VP of Warner Bros. Their mission? Find Damien's father, and the missing blue diamond... and stay one step ahead of The Acme Corp., who wants the diamond for their own purposes.
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Porky the Fireman (1938)
Character: Porky Pig, Slow Dog
Fireman Porky and friends try to save a theatrical boarding house and its inhabitants from an inferno.
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The Mouse That Jack Built (1959)
Character: The Maxwell / Ed the Vault Guard (voice)
In this spoof of "The Jack Benny Program", a mouse with Jack Benny's personality and poor violin playing ability lives, along with a mouse version of Benny's valet, Eddie 'Rochester' Anderson, in a hole in a wall of Jack Benny's own home. Jack the rodent takes a mouse version of 'Mary Livingstone (I)' out to dinner, and the two unwittingly walk right into the disguised mouth of an orange cat!
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Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961)
Character: Holly's Drunk Visitor (voice) (uncredited)
Holly Golightly is an eccentric New York City playgirl determined to marry a Brazilian millionaire. But when young writer Paul Varjak moves into her apartment building, her past threatens to get in their way.
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Buckaroo Bugs (1944)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Red Hot Ryder / Villagers (voice)
Red Hot Ryder is sent to catch the Masked Marauder (Bugs Bunny) who is terrorizing a small Western town.
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Buccaneer Bunny (1948)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Polly Parrot (voice)
Yosemite Sam as a pirate makes the mistake of trying to bury his treasure chest in Bugs' hole, and pays with the loss of his ship.
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Tortoise Wins by a Hare (1943)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Cecil Turtle / Mrs. Turtle (voice) (uncredited)
Bugs challenges Cecil Turtle to race, only this time he's wearing an aerodynamic suit like Cecil's. Unfortunately, the gambling ring has bet everything on the rabbit, and Bugs now looks like a tortoise.
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The Music Mice-Tro (1967)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales (voice)
Daffy Duck falls victim to being tormented by Speedy Gonzales and two other mice who form a band and wants to put a stop to it.
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Dog Gone South (1950)
Character: Charlie Dog / Colonel / Belvedere (voice)
Charlie Dog attempts to ingratiate himself to a southern plantation owner.
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Punch Trunk (1953)
Character: Birdbath Owner, Asylum Collector, John, Drunk, Circus Cat, Dr. Robert Bruce Cameron
A tiny elephant emerges from a banana boat and wanders about town, causing an uproar among the populace. Sightings are attributed variously to mass hysteria, insanity and dipsomania.
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Feather Finger (1966)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales / Mayor Katt (voice)
Daffy Duck, broke and impoverished and desperately needing money, finds an offer for $15 to shoot a small moving target...
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Snowbody Loves Me (1964)
Character: Vocal Effects (voice)
Waif mouse Jerry, encrusted with snow, peers through a warmly lit window at Tom asleep by the fire in a room full of cheese.
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Daffy Duck Slept Here (1948)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck (voice)
Porky Pig has to share a hotel room with endlessly annoying roommate Daffy Duck.
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Daffy's Inn Trouble (1961)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig
Daffy Duck vies with Porky Pig in the Western frontier hotel business. Porky has more success, attracting hordes of customers with a live-action saloon party. So, Daffy decides to undermine Porky's good fortune by planting a bomb beneath Porky's inn.
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Early to Bet (1951)
Character: Cat / Dog / Customer / Luigi / Patrons at Bar (voice)
The Gambling Bug causes gambling fever in anyone he bites.
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Martian Through Georgia (1962)
Character: Warden, Businessman, Old Man, Little Boy, Taunting Voice, Scared Citizens
Way out in space, on another world whose population is contented, one of its people decides that travel broadens the mind and relieves boredom. So, he flies to Earth in hope of helping the alien Earthlings improve their lot, only to cause panic and be declared a monster just because he looks different. So, he decides to return home, where, at least, he can find love.
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Porky's Hotel (1939)
Character: Porky Pig / Gabby Goose / Gouty Goat (voice) (uncredited)
Porky runs a small-town hotel. An old goat with gout checks in for a rest, but a talkative goose child will prevent him from getting it.
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Scrap Happy Daffy (1943)
Character: Daffy Duck / Adolf Hitler / Nazi Soldiers / Sub Captain (voice)
During World War Two, Daffy Duck owns a junkyard which collects scrap metal to use in building weapons to continue the Allied fight against the Axis powers. Hitler reads about Daffy's scrap pile and about Daffy's stated intent to win the war with junk and, after throwing a fit and chewing a carpet like a mad dog, orders Daffy's scrap pile destroyed.
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Censored (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu / Technical Fairy - First Class / Japanese Soldier (voice) (uncredited)
Private Snafu wants to tell his sweetheart, Sally Lou, that he thinks his unit will be sent to the South Pacific. But every effort he makes to get his letter through uncensored is thwarted by a resourceful (and unseen) censor with an array of contraptions and booby traps. Not even Snafu's carrier pigeon can avoid the censor -- not when he has a hawk for an assistant. Technical Fairy, First Class, comes to the rescue and agrees to deliver the letter -- but he has good reason to say that he'll hate himself in the morning.
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Bunny and Claude: We Rob Carrot Patches (1968)
Character: Claude / Sheriff / Storekeeper (voice)
Outlaws Bunny and Claude are chased by the Sheriff. The Sheriff even attempts to disquise himself as a giant carrot to catch the duo.
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Aqua Duck (1963)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice)
Lost in a desert, Daffy Duck finds a gold nugget and is unwilling to part with it even though he is in desperate need of water.
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It's an Ill Wind (1939)
Character: Porky
Porky and his friend Dizzy Duck go fishing, but their trip is cut short by a thunderstorm. They take refuge in an old building that appears haunted, though the biggest hazards are an old bearskin that lands on a swivel chair, a dog that gets tangled up in chains and a diving helmet, and their own clumsiness generally.
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Tom and Jerry: In the Dog House (2012)
Character: (archive footage)
Tom and Jerry are at it again, but there's a new ingredient in their classic chase recipe - just add Spike! It's hound heaven as everyone's favourite bulldog, spike (and on, Tyke), gets in on the fun in this pup-packed collection. These 22 doggie-delightful shorts are guaranteed to have fans howling! Join Spike and Tyke in their many dealings with the fast and furious duo. Whether Spike's on guard duty, or simply trying to catch a nap, you can bet Tom and Jerry's fur-fueled antics are guaranteed to rattle his cage. And an angry Spike usually spells hard times for Tom - with a little coaxing from jerry, of course! Leash-up for some K9-filled fun for the entire family!
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Porky's Naughty Nephew (1938)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
Porky and Pinky go to the beach. As Porky tries to nap, Pinky keeps whacking him with his little shovel. Then he fakes drowning in a shallow puddle. Porky enters a swim race, and Pinky sets a fake shark to follow him.
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Snowman's Land (1939)
Character: Head Mountie (voice)
In the Canadian north, a little Mountie runs afoul of the dread outlaw, Dirty Pierre.
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Hobo Bobo (1947)
Character: New Yorkers / Baby (voice)
Little Bobo the Elephant decides to leave a jungle, where he is assigned to the thankless task of moving logs with his trunk, for a glamorous life in a circus in America. On the advice of a minah bird, Bobo paints himself pink to gain access to a ship bound for the U.S., because nobody on the ship will admit to seeing a pink elephant much less act to remove the presumed hallucination. After Bobo arrives in America, a steet-cleaner washes his pink color away, and people are now willing to acknowledge seeing the little elephant. Bobo is arrested by the police and chained for trial by judge, and the judge sentences him to life - in a circus, where he is bat "boy" for the big top baseball team, and laments that he's carrying logs (i.e. bats) yet again!
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Fair Weather Fiends (1946)
Character: Woody Woodpecker's Laugh (archive sound)
After a storm strands them on a deserted island, Woody Woodpecker and his wolf friend end up battling themselves in a quest to find food.
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Tweety's Circus (1955)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice)
Sylvester Cat pays a visit to a closed-to-business circus and finds Tweety Bird in one of the cages. Tweety escapes and a mad chase ensues. Meanwhile, Sylvester must flee from an uncaged lion he angered earlier.
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Wet Hare (1962)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Blacque Jacque Shellacque (voice)
Blacque Jacque Shellacque dams the river and plans to charge everyone a fortune for water, but not if Bugs Bunny has anything to say about it.
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A Mouse Divided (1953)
Character: Sylvester / Baby Mouse / Stork (voice)
A drunken stork delivers a baby mouse to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Cat. Sylvester is about to eat the little rodent when it calls him Daddy. Touched, Sylvester adopts the mouse as his son - which, distressingly, attracts every hungry cat in the neighborhood to his door!
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Goldimouse and the Three Cats (1960)
Character: Sylvester / Sylvester Jr. (voice)
Sylvester, his wife, and son go for a walk while their porridge cools, when Goldimouse wanders by to eat the porridge and sleep in their beds. Sylvester then tries to catch her for his "spoiled brat" of a son to eat.
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A Fractured Leghorn (1950)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Cat / Worm (voice)
Foghorn Leghorn and a cat fight over a worm. The cat wants the worm as bait for a fish, while Foghorn just wants the worm for a quick snack.
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Feather Bluster (1958)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Barnyard Dawg
Geriatrics Foghorn Leghorn and the barnyard dog recount their years of violent, mutual heckling, unaware that outside the window of their house their grandsons are behaving the same. The short is essentially a clip show, in that the majority of the footage is reused from earlier cartoons.
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Cat and Dupli-cat (1967)
Character: Tom / Jerry / Rival Cat (voice)
Tom is on the canals of Venice, singing opera. He ends up on a cruise ship, where another cat tricks him out of Jerry (who Tom has just caught), then mirrors his every move. Eventually the cats start chasing each other.
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Ain't We Got Fun (1937)
Character: Cat / Old Man / Elevator Mouse (voice) (uncredited)
The cat's asleep, so the mice are on the loose, for a while at least, in the pantry. When he wakes up, they pile the food on him and get him thrown out, and then they *really* have the run of the house.
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Porky's Building (1937)
Character: Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
Porky and another contractor are competing to submit the lower bid for a new city hall. When they submit identical bids, the city has them compete, whichever finishes first gets the job.
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Porky in Wackyland (1938)
Character: Porky Pig / The Do-Do / Various Wackyland Citizens (voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig travels to a surreal land in order to hunt and catch the elusive Do-Do bird, reportedly the last of its kind.
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His Bitter Half (1950)
Character: Daffy Duck / Wentworth / Carnival Barker (voice)
Daffy Duck marries for money, but the bossy wife and her raucous, trouble-making little son soon have him wanting out.
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Prest-O Change-O (1939)
Character: Cuckoo Clock / Dog Laughing / Dog Hiccup / Rabbit Laugh (voice) (uncredited)
Fleeing from a dog catcher, the Two Curious Puppies run to an old remote house where, upon entering, they are continually subject to the antics of a mischievous magician's rabbit and surprise by the house's magical items.
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I Know That Voice (2014)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Filmmaker Lawrence Shapiro discusses voice-over acting with the talented people behind the characters.
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High Diving Hare (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Telegram Boy (voice)
Yosemite Sam tries to force Bugs Bunny to do a high-diving act when the regular act cancels.
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Putty Tat Trouble (1951)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Sam (voice)
Tweety Bird is shoveling out his nest atop a city pole after a snowstorm and is spotted by Sylvester Cat and a one-eyed orange tabby, who fight over Tweety. Tweety runs into a cellar where he befriends a wooden dunking bird. The two cats then chase Tweety into a park and onto a sheet of ice covering a pond. Tweety cuts a circle around the cats so that they fall into the freezing water and become bedridden with cold.
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Of Fox and Hounds (1940)
Character: Fox / Bear (voice) (uncredited)
Willoughby, a big dumb hound, is repeatedly tricked by George, the fox, into jumping off cliffs, among other things.
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Cheese Chasers (1951)
Character: Hubie / Claude Cat / Dog (voice)
After eating their fill at a cheese factory, Hubie and Bertie decide there is nothing left to live for, and try to get Claude Cat to eat them.
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The Duxorcist (1987)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice)
Daffy is a professional paranormal investigator come to help a possessed damsel in distress.
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Wagon Heels (1945)
Character: Porky Pig, Injun Joe, Sloppy Moe, Trail Boss
Porky leads a wagon train into "Injun Joe Territory," and finally comes up against the fearsome Superchief. But Sloppy Moe, a survivor of a previous Injun Joe attack, knows something about him he won't tell... until the very end.
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Suppressed Duck (1965)
Character: Daffy Duck, ranger, bear
Daffy Duck goes hunting grizzly bear in a forest but is not allowed by the Game Commissioner to cross the line separating him from the bears. One particular bear teases Daffy by sticking out its tongue. In response, Daffy fires at the bear, but his bullet is stopped dead at the boundary line. Daffy tries to tunnel over to the bears' side and surfaces inside a volatile explosives barn!
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Wackiki Wabbit (1943)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice) (uncredited)
On a tropical island, a pair of castaways look to Bugs as a source of food.
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Pinocchio (1940)
Character: Gideon (hiccup) (voice) (uncredited)
A little wooden puppet yearns to become a real boy.
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Captain Hareblower (1954)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Captain / Crewmen (voice)
Bugs will not bend to the threats of the pirate Yosemite Sam.
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The Old Grey Hare (1944)
Character: Bugs Bunny / God (voice)
Failed hunter Elmer Fudd laments that he's never able to catch the rabbit (Bugs Bunny); just then a bolt of lightning strikes, and the voice of God takes him through a flash-forward to the year 2000. Elmer and Bugs, now both elderly, look back to when they first met as babies.
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The Lone Stranger and Porky (1939)
Character: Silver (voice)
The Lone Stranger is sleeping when his faithful, if overly caricatured, Indian scout sees stagecoach driver Porky being robbed by a bad guy. The scout summons the Lone Stranger, who rides to the rescue. The bad guy goes after him (and, briefly, the narrator). But just in the nick of time, the Lone Stranger recovers and conquers the bad guy. Meanwhile, Silver and the villain's horse have been having their own close encounter, and Silver returns with several little colts.
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A Tale of Two Kitties (1942)
Character: Catstello / Tweety (voice)
Two alley cats, Babbitt and Catsello, decide to make a meal out of Orson as he sleeps in his nest atop a telephone pole. The gullible (and loud) Catsello is repeatedly gulled into trying to "get the bird," earning a variety of thrashings from the casually murderous little canary. Catsello finally resorts to an air strike (with a pair of wooden boards for wings), but it's wartime, and Orson has the cat blasted out of the sky by anti-aircraft guns.
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Kiddin' the Kitten (1952)
Character: Dodsworth Meowing / Kitten / Mice (voice) (uncredited)
A lazy and fat cat, named Dodsworth, is ordered by his mistress to catch mice that have invaded her home and are terrorizing her. Dodsworth doesn't want to condescend to personal physical effort to catch the mice, so dons a professor's hat and dupes a kitten into doing the job for him, on the pretext that he's a teacher who is giving the kitten a valuable learning experience.
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Mutiny on the Bunny (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
Shanghai Sam needs a new crew for his ship. Bugs signs on but rebels at the captain's cruelty.
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Dough Ray Me-ow (1948)
Character: Louie the Parrot / Heathcliff / Radio Music (voice)
Louie the Parrot finds a written will stating that his master bequeathes the family fortune not to him, but to his fellow household pet, a lunkheaded cat named Heathcliff, with the proviso that Louie is next in line to inherit the wealth if Heathcliff dies. So, Louie plots the untimely demise of Heathcliff.
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Sahara Hare (1955)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
Riff-Raff (Yosemite) Sam, riding a camel that won't whoa, chases Bugs into a French Foreign-Legion post.
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Hippety Hopper (1949)
Character: Sylvester / mouse / Bulldog
A mouse is saved from committing suicide by a baby kangaroo, Hippety Hopper, who he frees from a crate on the docks. His new friend, who looks like a "king-sized mouse," then helps him get revenge on Sylvester the cat.
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Brother Brat (1944)
Character: Porky Pig/Baby Butch
A "Rosie the Riveter" type is in need of a baby-sitter for her awful child. The only person available is a clueless Porky Pig. His only instructions are to use a book of child psychology. After fruitless attempts to control the brat, his mother returns to show Porky how to use the book - as a paddle on his little behind.
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14 Carrot Rabbit (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
Yosemite Sam (as Chilikoot Sam) tries unsuccessfully to steal gold from Bugs Bunny during the Yukon gold rush.
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Gonzales' Tamales (1957)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, Sylvester
Male Mexican mice are jealous of Speedy Gonzales for taking their girlfriends. So, they set Sylvester Cat after Speedy by issuing a challenge to Sylvester in Speedy's name.
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Tickled Pink (1968)
Character: Yelling Man (voice) (archive footage) (uncredited)
Calamity results when the Pink Panther wishes for a pair of roller-skates and is granted his wish by his fairy godmother. The "enchanted" skates take the Pink Panther on an uncontrollable junket through a city. He smashes repeatedly through huge windows being unloaded by moving men, knocks over a painter's ladder, tracks through the paint, and puts double lines on a road- and off the road- for cars to follow. He collides with a brick wall, and still the skates won't stop. Every attempt by the panther to remove the troublesome skates fails, until his fairy godmother returns to grant two more wishes. The panther wishes for the removal of the skates, then for the skates to be placed on the fairy godmother's feet, sending her on a similarly uncontrolled and disastrous journey.
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Porky's Duck Hunt (1937)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck (voice) (uncredited)
Inexperienced duck hunter Porky Pig is taunted by a mischievous duck (Daffy, making his screen debut).
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The Prize Pest (1951)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Radio Announcers / Delivery Man (voice)
After listening to one of his favorite radio programs, Porky Pig receives a grand prize from the station. Out of the gift box pops Daffy Duck, who insists on living in Porky's house.
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Fish and Slips (1962)
Character: Sylvester / Sylvester Junior
Sylvester Cat decides to take his son, Junior, on a fishing trip- inside a closed-to-business aquarium with all kinds of exotic fish, some not very friendly to Sylvester.
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Porky's Ant (1941)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
In Africa, Porky tries to catch a rare pygmy ant.
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Operation Snafu (1945)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
Private Snafu steals secret Japanese war plans, is captured and tried. He escapes and rows out to sea.
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Big Top Bunny (1951)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Bruno / Colonel Korny (voice)
Bugs Bunny is hired to perform in Colonel Korny's Circus alongside Bruno the Magnificent, the Slobokian Acrobatic Bear, but Bruno doesn't want to share the limelight.
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Porky's Hare Hunt (1938)
Character: Porky Pig / Rabbit (voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig goes after a rogue rabbit who manages to frustrate him at every turn.
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Spaced Out Bunny (1980)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Marvin the Martian / Hugo / Butterfly (voice)
Bugs Bunny is abducted by Marvin the Martian and brought to Mars to be the companion to his pet abominable snowman Hugo, who will "hug him and squeeze him and call him George."
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Pink Punch (1966)
Character: Pink Panther Effects (voice)
The Pink Panther is a chemist who has perfected a pink health drink. When the Pink Panther tries to promote his drink with a series of signs, each of them in pink writing, the starry dot atop the "i" in "pink" has a mind of its own and, to frustrate the Pink Panther, turns green and repeatedly squirts ugly, green fluid on the panther's fur. The Pink Panther is able to restore his fur's pink color by drinking some of his health drink. But the green dot persistently interferes with the panther's efforts to promote his pink drink. Infuriated, the panther tries to eradicate the green dot, only to find that the dot has a guardian - another green dot of a much larger size.
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Scent-imental Over You (1947)
Character: Pepé Le Pew aka Stinky (voice)
Striving to be like all the high-class dogs in their fine coats, a little hairless pooch borrows a black and white fur coat of her owner, not realizing it makes her appear to be a skunk. Once she has it on, she finds everyone fleeing from her - everyone, that is, except for the amorous Pepé Le Pew.
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Touché and Go (1957)
Character: Pepe le Pew (voice)
The amorous skunk, Pepé le Pew, chases a female cat by the seaside, under the sea and finally on a desert island.
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The Great Carrot-Train Robbery (1969)
Character: Claude / Sheriff / Station Agent (voice)
Bunny and Claude are still at their carrot caper. This time, they rob a train as the Sheriff is once again called out to stop them..
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Goldilocks and the Jivin' Bears (1944)
Character: N/A
The stories of "Goldilocks" and "Little Red Riding Hood" collide with the world of jazz, resulting in three jiving bears and a jitterbugging Big Bad Wolf. One of the “Censored 11” banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 for racist stereotyping.
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Tortoise Beats Hare (1941)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Cecil Turtle / Chester Turtle / Turtles (voice) (uncredited)
Bugs Bunny challenges slick Cecil Turtle to a race.
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Bacall to Arms (1946)
Character: Wolf / Fat Theater Patron / Henpecked Husband / Lion / Duckling / Rochester Soundalike (voice) (uncredited)
Movie patrons watch and interact with a variety of short subjects and a spoof of the film "To Have and Have Not."
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My Dream Is Yours (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Tweety (voice)
Conceited singer Garry Mitchell refuses to renew his radio contract, so agent Doug Blake decides to find a new personality to replace him. In New York, he finds Martha Gibson, a single mother with a great voice. He arranges for her to move to Hollywood, but then has a problem trying to sell her to the show's sponsor. Doug tries every trick he can think of to make Martha a star, and as the two work more closely, he falls in love with her. Complicating matters further, Martha meets and becomes attracted to Garry.
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Tabasco Road (1957)
Character: Speedy Gonzales / Pablo / Fernando / Cat (voice)
Speedy Gonzales, the fastest mouse in all Mexico, runs to the rescue of his two drunken rodent friends, Pablo and Fernando, who keep wandering into the hungry clutches of an alley cat.
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Looney Tunes Spotlight Collection Vol:2 (2004)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Sylvester / Tweety / Elmer Fudd (archive footage)
Thirty more cartoons from the vaults of Warner Bros. to spotlight the inimitable Looney Tunes characters
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The Heckling Hare (1941)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice) (uncredited)
Bugs is being chased by hunting dog Willoughby, and outsmarts him at every turn, until the end, where they outsmart the audience together.
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Person to Bunny (1960)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck (voice)
In his Hollywood home Bugs is being interviewed by the Edward R. Murrow TV show "People to People" when Daffy and Elmer show up.
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Cracked Ice (1938)
Character: Russian Dogs / Drowning Bird / Drunk Fish / Skating Judge
It's ice skating time. After a few generic ice-skating gags, we get to the main story. An animal falls through the ice, and a pig doing W.C. Fields (W.C. Squeals, apparently) calls for help from a Saint Bernard dog. The dog dispenses a drink, and Squeals begins scheming to get some himself. First he tries faking his own fall through the ice, but the dog sees through it and downs the drink himself. Then Squeals tries using a dish of bones and a magnet, but the magnet falls through the ice and gets stuck around a fish. The fish then swims through a liquor spill from the dog's casket; the drunken fish grabs an ax and, swimming in a circle, dunks another skater. He then latches onto Squeals' skates, and hauls him into an ice-skating contest, where the fish-induced antics win him first prize. Squeals fills the loving cup from the dog's cask, and the fish swims off with it.
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Spies (1943)
Character: Private Snafu
The doltish but self-confident and self-congratulatory Private Snafu is in possession of a military secret during World War II. Over the course of the day, spouting rhymed couplets, he divulges the secret a little at a time to listening Axis spies. He tells his mom some of the secret when he calls her from a phone booth; the rest he spills to a dolly dolly spy who plies him with liquor. Snafu's loose lips put himself at risk.
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Along Came Daffy (1947)
Character: Daffy Duck / Others (voice) (uncredited)
Snowbound in a remote cabin, two starving men begin visualizing each other as food. When salesman Daffy Duck calls at their door, it doesn't take long before the men set their minds on having Daffy as their dinner.
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Book Revue (1946)
Character: Daffy Duck / Big Bad Wolf / Cop / Cuckoo / Sailor / Henry VIII / Mice (voice)
A secluded bookstore comes to life in madcap, pop culture reference-heavy fashion.
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Much Ado About Mousing (1964)
Character: Tom Cat / Jerry Mouse / Bulldog / Puppy (voice)
When a bulldog tells Jerry to "just whistle" any time that he needs him, Tom's in for big trouble until he puts earmuffs on the mutt.
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A Day at the Zoo (1939)
Character: Egghead / Elk Named Bill / Monkey / Parrot / Stool Pigeon / Mother Ostrich / Joe Jumbo / Wildcat (voice) (uncredited)
A tour of the zoo, in typical Tex Avery style: a series of one-liners and sight gags, punctuated by Egghead teasing a lion at intervals, despite the admonishments of the narrator.
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Scaredy Cat (1948)
Character: Porky Pig / Sylvester / Mouse in Cuckoo Clock (voice)
Porky Pig and Sylvester the Cat spend the night in an old dark house, whose horrors only Sylvester sees.
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I Gopher You (1954)
Character: Mac (voice)
Two polite twin gophers are indignant at the swiping of all their vegetables by "vandals" in trucks. They follow the trucks to a food processing plant and become caught in the machinery when they try to retrieve their property.
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The Big Snooze (1946)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Hollywood Wolf (voice)
Elmer Fudd walks out of a typical Bugs cartoon, so Bugs gets back at him by disturbing Elmer's sleep using "nightmare paint."
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A Gruesome Twosome (1945)
Character: Tweety / Durante Cat / Dumb Cat
Two cats (one a caricature of Jimmy Durante) battle violently for the affections of a pretty girl cat, who'll dispense her favors on the one who brings her a little bird. Unfortunately for the lovestruck felines, the bird in question is a vicious little thing named Tweety.
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A Flintstone Christmas (1977)
Character: Barney Rubble / Dino (voice)
Santa has an accident at Fred's house on Christmas Eve, Fred and Barney have to continue his run for him.
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Forward March Hare (1953)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Others (voice)
Bugs Bunny gets a draft notice by mistake and joins the army, with disastrous results, especially for the sergeant of his platoon.
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A Helping Paw (1941)
Character: Chester / Tobias the Dog
A man visits the doctor and gets a new pair of glasses. The doctor's dog guides him throughout the city.
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Bugs Bunny's Bustin' Out All Over (1980)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Young Elmer / Marvin the Martian / Hugo (voice)
Three all-new cartoons from animation legend Chuck Jones showcase Bugs Bunny and some of Jones' most famous characters. Springtime has arrived and stirred the birds, the bees and Bugs Bunny -- the time when an infant Elmer Fudd chased a youthful Bugs with his popgun, waiting for the start of "wabbit season"; when Bugs was held captive by Marvin Martian (in "Spaced Out Bunny"); and when, after 30 years of chases, Wile E. Coyote finally caught the Road Runner (in "Soup or Sonic").
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Porky's Road Race (1937)
Character: Porky Pig (hiccups) (voice) (uncredited)
It's race day, and first prize is $2 million (less $1,999,998.37 in taxes). Porky's little car is matched against cars driven by stars of yesteryear, including Laurel and Hardy and Charlie Chaplin. When the black #13 driven by "Borax Karoff" makes a bid for the finish line, can Porky fend him off?
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The Pied Piper of Guadalupe (1961)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, Sylvester, Mice
Sylvester the cat imitates the Pied Piper of Hamelin to lure a group of mice into a jug that he seals with a cork. But Speedy Gonzales won't be hypnotized by Sylvester's flute and gradually rescues his friends from Sylvester's clutches.
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No Buddy Atoll (1945)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
Private Snafu is stranded on a tiny island with a Japanese officer; he must depend on his wits to defend himself against his sword-wielding foe.
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Who's Cookin Who? (1946)
Character: Woody Woodpecker's Laugh
Woody Woodpecker is sleeping. He awakens, under a blanket of snow, to find that both Winter and a hungry wolf are knocking at his door. The wolf has intentions of eating Woody...but Woody has the same thoughts regarding the wolf.
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It's Hummer Time (1950)
Character: Cat / Humming Bird / Bulldog / Bee (voice)
A cat chases a hummingbird and repeatedly stumbles onto the property of a sleepy bulldog, who punishes the cat for each interruption of his slumber.
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Conrad the Sailor (1942)
Character: Daffy Duck
Conrad, a sailor aboard a Navy battleship, is swabbing the deck when he is interrupted and tormented by Daffy Duck.
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Shishkabugs (1962)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / King (voice)
A spoiled-rotten monarch orders royal chef Yosemite Sam to make "Hasenpfeffer", the basic ingredient of which is rabbit. When Bugs comes to the door asking to borrow some carrots, Sam decides to cook him!
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The Impatient Patient (1942)
Character: Daffy Duck / Dr. Jerkyl / Intercom / Others (voice) (uncredited)
Telegram deliverer Daffy Duck is in a swamp, with a message for someone named Chloe, when he starts hiccuping. Unable to stop his hiccups, Daffy decides to seek medical help, in a old house belonging to a Dr. Jerkyl, who advertises his services on a neon sign atop his house. Examining the hiccuping Daffy, Jerkyl decides to use a "scare cure" and chemically transforms himself into a goofy lug named Chloe, to whom Daffy had been assigned to deliver the message - a birthday greeting. Chloe chases Daffy around the house, until Daffy uses a syringe to squirt formula into Chloe's mouth, transforming him into a mischievous infant.
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Two Gophers from Texas (1948)
Character: Mac / Dog (voice)
A theatrical dog decides to answer the call of the wild and hunt for his food. He targets two polite twin gophers as his first conquest and tries to kill them with a falling-rock trap hooked to a radish patch, then plots to attract them into range of his clutches by dressing himself like a baby, then by playing music. The gophers foil all of these schemes and trap the dog in his own piano as they play the keys, which are linked to hammers whacking the dog's rear.
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Wild Over You (1953)
Character: Pepe le Pew (voice)
A wildcat escapes from the zoo, disguises herself as a skunk to fool her pursuers, but that only attracts lovestruck Pepe le Pew.
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Fiesta Fiasco (1967)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales / Mice (voice)
Daffy Duck builds a rainmaking machine in order to rain out Speedy Gonzales's fiesta, but it spits out a small black cloud that does nothing but harass Daffy himself.
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Bunker Hill Bunny (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam Von Schamm (voice)
Sam Von Schamm The Hessian and Bugs Bunny fight it out in the little known American Revolutionary War Battle of Bagel Heights.
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Duck Soup to Nuts (1944)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck (voice)
Porky Pig is out hunting duck, but Daffy shows him that he is no ordinary duck
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Satan's Waitin' (1954)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Devil Dog / Robbers (voice)
Sylvester's carnivorous pursuit of Tweety Bird continues, winding up the cat's spirit in Hell, where he meets a satanic bulldog.
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The Egg Collector (1940)
Character: Owl (voice) (uncredited)
Sniffles the mouse and his friend the Bookworm decide to take up egg collecting, setting their eyes upon a big barn owl egg. But the big barn owl isn't so hot on the idea.
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Bugs Bunny's Wild World of Sports (1989)
Character: (voice)
A TV special that aired on February 15, 1989 on CBS. It was the final production in which Mel Blanc voiced the Looney Tunes before his death on July 10, 1989
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Hare-Less Wolf (1958)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Charles M. Wolf (voice)
An absent-minded wolf sets out to catch Bugs for dinner but keeps forgetting what he was heading out to shoot in the first place.
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The Flintstones: Little Big League (1978)
Character: Barney Rubble (voice)
Fred manages a little league baseball team that seems absolutely hopeless, except for a player that he blindly refuses to recognize.
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Tom-ic Energy (1965)
Character: Tom / Jerry (voice)
Essentially one long chase scene, in an urban setting; at the end, a dog joins in, to Jerry's annoyance.
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Now, Hare This (1958)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Big Bad Wolf / Nephew (voice)
Big Bad Wolf and his little nephew try to trap Bugs Bunny by making like fairy tale characters.
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Crazy Cruise (1942)
Character: Voices
A collection of various gags in the form of a travelogue.
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Speaking of the Weather (1937)
Character: Conductor / Cholly Jam / Walter Snitchall
It's midnight at the bookstore and all the book and magazine characters are coming to life. When a bulldog from an adventure book uses a Boswell Sisters-like performance by girls in a travel magazine as a distraction to rob a bank, he is chased, caught, and sentenced to, of course "Life" (the magazine). But there's also a conveniently placed "Escape" magazine....
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Private Snafu vs. Malaria Mike (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu / Malaria Mike / Tree (voice) (uncredited)
Snafu learns hard way the consequences of not protecting himself from malaria infection.
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Snow White and the Three Stooges (1961)
Character: Quinto (voice) (uncredited)
Once upon a time, in the kingdom of Fortunia, a noble king and his lovely young queen lack but one blessing to make their joy complete. The queen gives birth to a daughter named Snow White, but dies soon after. The king mourns her, but in time, he remarries because of the pleading of his people. His new queen is a beautiful, but evil woman who soon becomes jealous of Snow White's beauty.
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My Little Buckeroo (1938)
Character: The Terror / Horse (voice)
In the border town of Boiled Beef, Texas, in 1872, a bandit who is wanted by authorities terrorizes the town - but a pig-headed deputy thinks he has a way to capture him.
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Tweet and Sour (1956)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice)
Sylvester Cat tries to catch Tweety Bird in Granny's farm house, but Granny catches Sylvester and warns him if anything ever happens to Tweety, she will have Sylvester turned into violin strings. A one-eyed orange tabby makes off with Tweety, and Sylvester must rescue the canary to avoid being sent by Granny to the violin string factory.
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The Haunted Mouse (1941)
Character: Cat (voice) (uncredited)
A starving cat wandering in the wilderness sees a sign that says "Ma's Place / Home Cooking / 3 Miles". The cat speeds into town, without noticing the sign that says "Ghost Town / Population 100 Ghosts". One of these ghosts is a mouse eager to get revenge on cats for having tormented him in life.
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All a Bir-r-r-d (1950)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Conductor / Dog (voice)
Tweety Bird is on a train with Sylvester.
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Life with Feathers (1945)
Character: Sylvester the Cat / Lovebird / Telegram Guy (voice)
A spurned love bird tries to get Sylvester to put him out of his misery.
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Rabbit of Seville (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
Behind the Hollywood Bowl stage which is playing the opera The Barber of Seville, Bugs Bunny flees into the backstage area with Elmer Fudd in close pursuit. Seeing his opportunity to fight on his terms, Bugs raises the curtain on Elmer, trapping him on stage. As the orchestra begins playing, Bugs comes into play as the barber who is going to make sure that Elmer is going to get a grooming he will never forget.
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Looney Tunes Super Stars Bugs Bunny: Hare Extraordinaire (2010)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Marvin the Martian / Tasmanian Devil / Yosemite Sam (voice)(archive footage)
Never offered before in this format, these classic and completely remastered Looney Tunes shorts capture everyone's favorite wascally wabbit, Bugs Bunny, in his element - and all of his animated glory.
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Birds of a Father (1961)
Character: Sylvester / Sylvester Jr. (voice)
Sylvester Cat discovers that his son, Junior, has a new best friend - a bird named Spike. Aghast, Sylvester decides to teach his son the facts of feline life and goes with him on a bird hunt, which, as usual, isn't Sylvester's forte. He is hit with a badminton racket after he mistakenly shoots a badminton birdie and then is blown up when he sends a model plane after Spike and is himself shot at by the out-of-control plane and forced to take refuge in an explosives store shed, with the plane slipping in behind him and firing at the TNT.
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Fowl Weather (1953)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Hector / Rooster / Hen (voice)
Granny is Tweety Bird's mistress on a farm. She assigns a bulldog named Hector to take care of Tweety while she's away. Sylvester Cat disguises himself as a scarecrow to sneak up on Tweety. Tweety runs into a chicken coop and is protected by a mother hen and an aggressive rooster. Hector, seeing that Tweety is gone and fearing Granny's wrath, paints Sylvester yellow and puts him in Tweety's cage to fool Granny. Tweety returns and makes like a cat since turnabout is fair play.
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Gay Purr-ee (1962)
Character: Various Characters (voice)
Mewsette is a starry-eyed cat who grows weary of life on a French farm and heads for the excitement of 1890s Paris. Her tomcat suitor, Jaune-Tom, and his furry cohort, Robespierre, chase after Mewsette, but she's already fallen under the spell of a feline modeling-school racket run by Madame Rubens-Chatte and her slimy assistant, Meowrice.
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The Mouse-Merized Cat (1946)
Character: Catstello
Babbit hypnotizies Catsello, despite his efforts to resist, into believing he's Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, and Jimmy Durante, then a chicken, and finally a dog, who he sics on the cat. The cat hypnotizes him back. Finally, Catstello hypnotizes both of them into cowboy and horse, leaving him alone to enjoy the deli they live in.
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Lumber Jerks (1955)
Character: Mac (voice)
Two polite gophers find that their home, a tree, has been cut down and taken away. They find it in a log pile about to be taken inside a processing factory. Following it into there, they become caught in the daunting machinery.
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Scalawag (1973)
Character: Barfly the Parrot (voice)
A crew of land locked pirates, led by the aptly named Peg, go in search of buried treasure hidden by the treacherous Mudhook and his twin brother. They meet up with good natured landowner, Don Aragon, who goes along for the ride with his sister and a young boy, Jamie. Along the way, Peg and Jamie form a father son relationship that is put to the test due to Peg's naturally dishonest ways.
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The Flintstones (1994)
Character: Dino (voice) (archive sound)
Modern Stone Age family the Flintstones hit the big screen in this live-action version of the classic cartoon. Fred helps Barney adopt a child. Barney sees an opportunity to repay him when Slate Mining tests its employees to find a new executive. But no good deed goes unpunished.
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Horton Hatches the Egg (1942)
Character: Mouse / Hunters / Audience Member (voice) (uncredited)
Horton the elephant agrees to watch over lazy Maisie bird's egg while she vacations. Much later, after...
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Horse Hare (1960)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Commander / Geronimo / Indian Chief / Mule (voice)
Yosemite Sam leads his Indians against Fort Lariat while Bugs is in charge.
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Plop Goes the Weasel! (1953)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Weasel / Barnyard Dawg (voice)
A lip-smacking weasel invades the barnyard of Foghorn Leghorn and his usual canine foe, and Foghorn is quite willing to put baby chicks in danger of being taken by the weasel so long as it makes the dog appear to be failing his job of guarding the chicks.
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The Flintstones: Wind-Up Wilma (1981)
Character: Barney Rubble / Dino (voice)
Wilma is a celebrity when she gets a shot at the big leagues and becomes a pitcher for the Bedrock Dodgers after nailing a couple of robbers with a melon at the grocery store; however, she and Fred argue over her ambition to pitch for the team because Fred thinks a woman's place is in the home.
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Pests for Guests (1955)
Character: Goofy Gopher Mac / Furniture Salesman (voice)
Elmer Fudd buys a wooden chest of drawers not knowing that two polite twin gophers (known as The Goofy Gophers) have claimed the piece of furniture as their new home.
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Big House Bunny (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
Bugs Bunny escapes hunters by leaping into his rabbit hole and tunneling to safety. Unhappily he tunnels into the Sing Song prison where a sadistic prison guard named Sam Schultz refuses to accept that he's anything but one of the prisoners. Soon Bugs is in stripes, but it's the guard who will find prison life to be hell when Bugs Bunny is around to trick him into a cell, the hangman's noose, an electric chair and even into the warden's office, where Bugs will put a severe strain on the relationship between boss and underling. Finally, Sam decides that enough is enough.
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Sweet Sioux (1937)
Character: Native American Coach (voice)
Gags in a Native American village lead up to the tribe's attack on a covered wagon to the tune of "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down," the first use of the song in a Warner Bros. cartoon.
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Bugs Bunny's Looney Christmas Tales (1979)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Porky Pig / Foghorn Leghorn / Pepe le Pew / Tweety / Sylvester / Tasmanian Devil / Light Company Man / Airplane Pilots / Santa Claus / Elmer Fudd (voice)
A TV movie special that compiles of a few Looney Tunes episodes centered around an episode of a Christmas Carol, with the part of Scrooge played by Yosemite Sam.
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Ant Pasted (1953)
Character: Ants (voice)
Elmer Fudd, on a fourth of July picnic, throws some of his firecrackers into an ant colony, and the ants declare all-out war on him.
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Egghead Rides Again (1937)
Character: Egghead (voice) (uncredited)
City dweller Egghead dreams of being a cowboy, but his bouncing around gets him kicked out of his boarding house. He sees an ad for a ranch looking for a cowboy and applies. His tryout includes tests of marksmanship and use of a branding iron, but most of it consist of chasing down and roping a troublesome little calf. He passes the test, but the job isn't exactly what he dreamed of.
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Daffy's Southern Exposure (1942)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice) (uncredited)
It's the dead of winter, and Daffy Duck is starving. A fox and a weasel invite him into their cabin and feed him beans. But they have an ulterior motive--namely eating Daffy.
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Mouse-Taken Identity (1957)
Character: Sylvester / Junior (voice)
Sylvester Cat checks in to work at a museum with his son, Junior. He is bragging about his mouse-catching prowess when the baby kangaroo, Hippety Hopper, having escaped from the zoo, turns up in the museum. Sylvester and Junior, as usual, mistake Hippety for a giant mouse and chase him around the exhibits.
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Ballot Box Bunny (1951)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Others (voice)
When Yosemite Sam campaigns on a platform including rabbit genocide, Bugs Bunny runs against him.
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Ain't She Tweet (1952)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety / Dogs / Old Man (voice)
Sylvester Cat discovers Tweety Bird in a pet store window. Tweety is taken to be delivered by truck to a new owner - Granny. Sylvester chases the delivery truck to Granny's home, where Granny has a huge, fenced-in area for her army of bulldogs. Sylvester makes several unsuccessful attempts to pass the dogs and reach Tweety inside Granny's house.
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A Pest in the House (1947)
Character: Narrator / Daffy Duck / Drunk (voice)
A very tired businessman needs some sleep and checks into a hotel run by Elmer Fudd, where Daffy Duck is the bellhop.
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Porky & Daffy (1938)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / The Champ / Pelican Referee (voice) (uncredited)
Porky is Daffy's fight manager who gets Daffy a fight with "The Champion", but things get looney.
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The Shell Shocked Egg (1948)
Character: Mama Turtle / Baby Turtles / Dog (voice)
A mother turtle buries her eggs in the sand. While she is away, one of the egg partly hatches and begins roaming the countryside trying to finish hatching.
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The Spy Swatter (1967)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales / Professor (voice)
After a mouse scientist invents a cheese than can strengthen mice to defeat cats, Daffy Duck is ordered to stop Speedy Gonzales before he can deliver the formula.
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Porky's Romance (1937)
Character: Petunia Pig (excited)
The introduction cartoon for Petunia Pig deals with Porky's courtship with her. Once he's won her hand in marriage, he fantasizes about his future with her, which doesn't seem very appealing.
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Plane Daffy (1944)
Character: Daffy Duck, Pigeon 13, Hitler, Goering, Goebels
Daffy Duck is a message courier bird delivering a military secret that a femme fatale Nazi spy is determined to get.
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Rhapsody Rabbit (1946)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
When Bugs Bunny attempts to perform Liszt's Second Hungarian Rhapsody, he is troubled by a mouse.
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Operation: Rabbit (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Wile E. Coyote (voice)
Wile E. Coyote, genius, announces to Bugs Bunny that he is going to catch him and eat him, and then employs a variety of gadgets and plans in an attempt to do so.
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Dog Gone People (1960)
Character: Mr. Crabtree / Rupert / Policeman (voice)
Hoping for a promotion, Elmer Fudd agrees to take care of his boss' dog and finds he must treat the pooch as a human.
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Daffy Duck's Easter Show (1980)
Character: Daffy Duck / Foghorn Leghorn / Sylvester / Speedy Gonzales / Duck Flock Leader (voice)
Daffy is looking forward to celebrate Easter but his mysterious animator decides to make very bad things with the three completely new episodes. In the first, "The Yolks on You", Daffy seeks to outfox Sylvester the Cat for a golden egg laid by Prissy the Hen; the second story, "The Chocolate Chase", finds Daffy attempting to protect a chocolate factory from intruders; in the finale, "Daffy Flies North", Daffy attempts to hitchhike north for the winter.
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Hare Tonic (1945)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
When Elmer Fudd brings Bugs Bunny home for dinner main course, Bugs tricks him into thinking there is a terrible outbreak of Rabbititus.
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Hare Trigger (1945)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam
Yosemite Sam is trying to rob the train that Bugs Bunny is riding on, and the two face off in several different ways.
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Ceiling Hero (1940)
Character: Various (voice) (uncredited)
A series of blackout gags parodying aviation and aviation films. Gags include a parchutist whose parachute reads "Good to the last drop", jokes about LA's expanding city limits, and a satire of test pilot and their bravery.
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Hillbilly Hare (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Curt Martin (voice)
While vacationing in the Ozark Mountains, Bugs Bunny encounters Curt and Pumpkinhead Martin, two dimwitted hillbillies who are duped by Bugs into a violent square dance.
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What's Up Doc? A Salute to Bugs Bunny (1990)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Gruesome Gorilla / Himself (archive footage)
This salute to Bugs Bunny reveals the loony, creative atmosphere in which Bugs was born and developed and includes ten original, full-length cartoons that represent the stages of the wascally wabbit's evolution.
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Porky's Hero Agency (1937)
Character: Porky Pig / Porkykarkus / Emperor (voice) (uncredited)
Porky is reading the Greek myth of the gorgon, who turned everyone she looked at into stone. Mother tells him it's bedtime; he dreams of being Porkykarkus, the hero that saves Greece.
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Unnatural History (1959)
Character: Rover (voice)
Are animals human? Or vice versa? This is the question asked by a professor, Dr. Beest Lee, who appears on a stage in a theater to give a lecture and show a film about the human-like qualities of various cartoon animals, among them a beaver who "damns" a troublesome river, a groundhog who uses technology to predict the coming of spring, and a dog who scolds his neglectful master.
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All Fowled Up (1955)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Henery Hawk / Barnyard Dog (voice)
Intending to catch a chicken for his dinner, little Henery the Chicken Hawk ventures onto the farm of the eternally feuding Foghorn Leghorn and barnyard dog. Foghorn tries to dump a load of concrete on top of the dog, but the chute for dropping the concrete suddenly extends itself to a position directly above Foghorn, who is covered over by the concrete and frozen in a "Thinker" pose. Little Henery attaches a rope to the cement-laden Foghorn and drags him home for a tough-to-chew chicken dinner.
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Hare Ribbin' (1944)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Russian Dog (Elmer Fudd voice) (voice)
Bugs is chased into a lake by a French Poodle who speaks with a thick French accent; the rest of the story unfolds under water.
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Ali-Baba Bound (1940)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
Porky finds out that Ali-Baba and his Dirty Sleeves plan to attack the fort; it's up to him to go warn the fort. He gets there to discover everyone has left for the Legion convention in Boston. Porky and his rented camel fend off the attackers themselves for a while, but when the situation gets dire, the young camel summons its mother. Momma takes care of the attacker that's menacing them. The secret weapon, who has been sitting on the bench with an artillery shell strapped to his head, now comes in, but runs right through the fort and into Ali-Baba.
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Claws in the Lease (1963)
Character: Sylvester / Junior (voice)
Sylvester Cat and his son, Junior, live in a dump, and Junior decides to find them a home. He does, but the fat lady who lives there only wants to adopt Junior and separates the kitten from his father. So, Sylvester makes a number of attempts to gain access to her house.
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Porky and Teabiscuit (1939)
Character: Porky Pig / Porky's Poppa / Grandpa / Horse Trainers / Race Starter (voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig is sent out by his father with $11.00 spending money for help on the farm, unfortunately, he accidentally spends it on an auction, for a sickly, broken-down race horse known as Tea Biscuit. Porky shapes him up for a race, although Tea Biscuit's attention is diverted to a trombone. However, a balloon pop assures that Porky wins with Tea Biscuit and gets the reward...
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Love Me, Love My Mouse (1966)
Character: Tom / Jerry (voice) (uncredited)
Tom is wooing Toots; he presents her with a present - Jerry. But Toots would rather play mother to Jerry than eat him, much to Tom's annoyance.
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The Mice Will Play (1938)
Character: Cat (voice) (uncredited)
The mice are on the loose after hours in a doctor's office, playing with the various pieces of medical apparatus. Susie Mouse is caged for research until her lover Johnnie frees her. A mouse orchestra plays a swinging wedding song. But throughout, a cat is stalking...
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Greetings Bait (1943)
Character: Wacky Worm / Jerry Colonna (voice) (uncredited)
A worm reminiscent of Jerry Colonna is lowered into the water and uses various guises to lure fish. He also tangles with a crab.
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Pre-Hysterical Hare (1958)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Saber-Tooth Rabbit / Narrator / Dinosaurs / Saber-Tooth Tiger (voice)
Bugs discovers a Micronesian Film Documentary in "Cromagnonscope" showing Elmer Fuddstone and a sabertooth bunny in 10,000 BC.
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The Captain's Christmas (1938)
Character: John Silver (voice) (uncredited)
Pirate John and his crew threaten Christmas after taking over the Captain's role as Santa.
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Porky's Preview (1941)
Character: Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
The audience enters Porky's movie theater, with a collection of quick gags: A firefly acting as usher, a kangaroo taking tickets and putting the stubs in her pouch, a chicken buying child tickets for her eggs. A skunk tries to buy a ticket, costing a nickel, but he only has one scent. He looks for a way to sneak in. Meanwhile, Porky introduces the show: a collection of cartoons, drawn as stick figures. At the end, the audience is all gone because the skunk managed to sneak in. Porky's cartoons include: Circus Parade, Choo-Choo Train, Soldiers (Marchin), Horse Race, and Dances (hula, Mexican hat, and ballet). All accompanied by a self-parody musical score.
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Gone Batty (1954)
Character: Baseball players (voice)
Bobo the Elephant is baseball team mascot for the lean and meek Sweetwater Shnooks, all of whom are rendered unconscious by their opponents, the husky and brutal Greenville Goons. The Shnooks' manager, rather than forfeit the game, decides to bring in Bobo to play every position - and he does rather well!
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Knights Must Fall (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Sir Pantsalot / Usher / Announcer (voice)
Bugs must joust with Sir Pantsalot of Drop Seat Manor when he tosses a partially eaten carrot into a suit of armor.
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Case of the Missing Hare (1942)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Ala Bahma (voice) (uncredited)
After a traveling magician puts a poster over the entrance to his home, Bugs visits his act to get revenge.
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Crockett-Doodle-Do (1960)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Egghead Jr. (voice)
Foghorn Leghorn decides to take an egghead genius chick out to the woods to distract him from his long-haired atomic science books and teach him about such practical things as scouting and woodcraft, but finds that the kid is more knowledgeable than he in these matters.
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Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol (1979)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
Yosemite Sam is miserly Ebenezer Scrooge in this spoof of Charles Dickens' classic tale. Porky Pig, as Scrooge's clerk, Bob Cratchit, is fired on Christmas eve for the unpardonable act of using coal to keep warm. When Scrooge evicts Cratchit and his family from their modest dwelling, heroic Bugs Bunny decides to dress like a ghost and teach the hot-tempered miser a lesson on the meaning of Christmas.
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Woody the Giant Killer (1947)
Character: Woody Woodpecker's Laugh (archive sound)
Out of work, Woody complains about his not having any living quarters. A slick talking con man convinces him to buy some "magic beans" promising they will guarantee him a home. Sure enough, Woody climbs the resulting beanstalk and finds a huge castle at the top. Unfortunately, the castle is already occupied by a sleeping giant who Woody eventually outwits, turning his castle into a series of apartments with the giant as a bellboy and Woody as his manager.
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Hare Trimmed (1953)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, Minister
Yosemite Sam hears that Granny has inherited fifty million dollars. Good guy Bugs tries to save Granny from Sam's clutches.
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You're an Education (1938)
Character: Lone Stranger (voice)
The brochures in a travel agency come to life. After a series of quick gags (flying fish in airplanes, a wave washing swimmers out to sea and back, etc). , there's a musical interlude featuring a tuba from Cuba. Two Hungary boys are lured by the Cook Island; they grab the Twin Forks from Montana, and add Turkey to their plates, then stop by the Sandwich Islands, Hamburg, Chili, Oyster Bay, and finally a cup of Java. A thief from Bagdad visits the Kimberly Diamond Mines, but awakes a sleeping baby, who Wales. This alerts Central (America), who calls Radio City, which contacts all countries. A group of bobbies, Mounties, Scotland Yard, and others pursue, while the thief is visiting a Pawnee shop. He tries to hide in the fog of London, but it's blown away by a windmill. A dude ranch hand ropes him, then drags him through the Red, Black, and Yellow Seas, and onto the back of the Lone Stranger's horse...
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Porky Chops (1949)
Character: Porky Pig / Squirrel / Bear (voice)
Lumber jack Porky Pig intrudes upon the peace of a hipster squirrel vacationing in the Northwoods by trying to chop down the squirrel's tree. The squirrel retaliates by enclosing the base of his tree with steel so that Porky's axes cannot penetrate. The ensuing conflict between Porky and the squirrel awakens an angry bear.
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Swallow the Leader (1949)
Character: Cat (voice)
Migrating swallows are making their annual spring return to San Juan Capistrano, and a hungry cat awaits them.
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Bugs Bunny Superstar (1975)
Character: Various (voice)
Animator Robert Clampett presents a history of "Termite Terrace," the little shack on the Warner Brothers studio lot which in the 1930's and 1940's housed the animation unit which gave birth to Porky Pig, Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny. Includes color and black-and-white home-movie-type footage shot at the time showing such animation greats as Clampett, Tex Avery and Chuck Jones. Also featured are nine complete Warner cartoons.
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Jerry, Jerry, Quite Contrary (1966)
Character: Tom / Jerry (voice)
Jerry keeps sleepwalking and doing things unknowingly to Tom. He becomes aware of this and tries to stay awake.
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Pizzicato Pussycat (1955)
Character: John Jones / Mouse / Cat / Doctors / Concert Audience Members (voice)
Mr. and Mrs. Jones hear a piano being played in their living room. They automatically assume it is their cat who is making the music, when in fact, the talented one is a mouse whom the cat has forced into being his stooge to make him famous. The cat is showered with media attention and set to play at Carnegie Hall, where he hopes nobody will notice that he is pantomiming the movements with the keys while the mouse is playing his miniature piano inside the full-scale model.
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Falling Hare (1943)
Character: Bugs Bunny / The Gremlin (voice) (uncredited)
Relaxing with a carrot at a U.S. Army air field, Bugs is reading "Victory Through Hare Power" and scoffs at the notion of mentioned gremlins, little creatures who wreak havoc on planes with their diabolical sabotage.
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Mouse-Placed Kitten (1959)
Character: Clyde / Junior (voice)
A kitten is dropped in a sack out of a car and rolls down a hill, to arrive at the door of Clyde and Matilda Mouse...
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Doggone Cats (1947)
Character: Wellington / Sylvester / Cat / Uncle Louie (voice)
Wellington the dog is given a package to deliver to Uncle Louie, with strict instructions not to let go of it. Sylvester and another cat that Wellington has been tormenting see this as their chance to get even. Besides repeatedly filching the package, at one point they drop a duplicate off a bridge. Wellington still manages to retrieve the package a few times, but never for long.
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A Star Is Bored (1956)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Yosemite Sam, Producer, Director
Daffy Duck must double for Bugs in any slapstick which Warners considers too dangerous for its star Bug Bunny.
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Robin Hood Daffy (1958)
Character: Daffy Duck as Robin Hood / Porky Pig as Friar Tuck (voice)
Daffy attempts to convince Porky, as Friar Tuck, that he really is Robin Hood.
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Catch as Cats Can (1947)
Character: Sylvester (voice)
An emaciated canary, singing like Frank Sinatra, is getting on the nerves of a pipe-puffing parrot, who speaks like Bing Crosby. The parrot spots Sylvester, foraging through the trash. Telling the cat he needs more vitamins (which the canary has been swallowing in bulk), he lures the cat inside to snare the canary. The straightforward approach fails (the canary bops him in the nose). He carves a female canary from soap, lures Frankie there; the birds slide down a greased counter, into the sink, and down the drain, but only the soap bird goes through the pipe and down Sylvester's throat. A trail of birdseed into the garage seems to work, but Frankie jacks Sylvester's mouth open. Sylvester laces the vitamins with buckshot; like all cartoon magnets, his attracts everything metal in sight except his prey.
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The Loan Stranger (1942)
Character: Woody Woodpecker (archive sound)
Woody is happily (and nuttily) driving down the street when his car breaks down. He tries to get a loan on it from a nearby wolf. The wolf agrees to give Woody the loan but exclaims if he doesn't receive payment in thirty days, he'll take Woody's car away. Sure enough, a title card tells us, "Thirty days have elapsed (and so has Woody's memory)". The wolf appears at Woody's door trying to serve him with a notice but the crafty woodpecker pretends he's not home. The wolf tries to trap him disguised as a deliveryman giving Woody a cake... but the woodpecker throws it in his face bellowing, "I don't like cheesecake!" Finally, the fox throws a punch at Woody and believes to have seriously injured him. He sympathetically agrees to forget about the loan only to be infuriated when Woody "recovers" holding a cuckoo clock and asking, "How about a loan on the clock, Doc?"
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8 Ball Bunny (1950)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Hobo / Man Drinking Mint Julip / Natives (voice)
Bugs helps a penguin return home.
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Poultry Pirates (1938)
Character: Duck
The ducks and chickens next door eye the Captain's garden covetously through a poorly mended fence. The Captain, armed with a board, is standing guard (but not fixing the fence). He falls asleep, and the poultry attack, stripping the garden methodically. When the Captain comes after them, they lock him into a shed. He gets out, and fetches his shotgun. That stops them, and they drop their booty, until the Captain sets his gun down to collect the veggies; the birds all rush in, snatch them back.
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Easter Yeggs (1947)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Easter Rabbit / Bratty Kid (voice)
Bugs gets roped into delivering the Easter Rabbit's eggs for him.
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The Unbearable Bear (1943)
Character: Burglar / Officer Bear (voice)
Sniffles the mouse's non-stop talking foils both the burglar and a tipsy Officer Bear, who's trying to sneak past his rolling pin-toting, sleepwalking wife.
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The Last Hungry Cat (1961)
Character: Sylvester / Tweety (voice)
Sylvester Cat tumbles and falls dazed to the floor when making a grab for Tweety Bird. He comes to and thinks he has killed and swallowed the little canary and that he's wanted for murder.
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Strife with Father (1950)
Character: Beaky Buzzard / Narrator / Monte - shouting voice (voice)
Foundling Beaky Buzzard is adopted by a couple of polite, English sparrows, named Monte and Gwendlyn. When Monte tries to teach lame-brained Beaky to catch a chicken, Beaky's ineptitude results in Monte being repeatedly struck with a mallet and caught in a grenade explosion.
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Odor of the Day (1948)
Character: Skunk / Dog (voice)
On a cold winter's day, a stray dog is looking for shelter, then finds and sneaks into a cabin with an open fireplace and a cozy bed. But he has a stinky rival for occupancy of the cabin - a skunk.
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Porky's Railroad (1937)
Character: Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
Porky is the engineer on the most pathetic train in the fleet. After some routine episodes (using pepper to get the engine to sneeze itself up a hill, chasing a cow off the tracks, only to discover too late that it's been replaced by a very angry bull), Porky gets word that he's going to be replaced by the new streamlined Silver Fish. He insults it under his breath, but the Silver Fish engineer hears and challenges him to a race. The angry bull catapults Porky to victory.
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Sock a Doodle Do (1952)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Barnyard Dog / Cow (voice)
A prize-fighting banty rooster, so slap-happy that he goes into a punching spree whenever he hears a bell, falls out of a truck and onto the farm where Foghorn Leghorn is in the midst of his usual sparring match with the barnyard dog. Foghorn and the dog use the fighter-rooster's manic punching against each other by ringing a bell once the rooster is within striking distance of their intended victim.
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Chili Weather (1963)
Character: Speedy Gonzales, Sylvester, Mice
Speedy Gonzales helps his fellow mice get food from the Guadalajara Food Processing plant, guarded by Sylvester the Cat.
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The Aristo-Cat (1943)
Character: Cat / Madam / Meadows (voice)
Meadows the butler quits after being tormented by the spoiled family cat, who finds he is unable to survive on his own, especially after meeting the mice Hubie and Bertie.
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Little Brother Rat (1939)
Character: Father Owl / Baby Owls (voice)
Sniffles the mouse has to get an owl's egg for a scavenger hunt, but once he's gotten it, the egg hatches and draws the attention of the mouse-eating father owl.
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Mouse-Warming (1952)
Character: Claude Cat (voice)
A teen-aged boy mouse falls in love with the girl mouse who lives in the hole across the room. But Claude Cat literally comes between them, and also tries to stir up a feud between their two families.
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Foney Fables (1942)
Character: Prince / Giant / Boy Who Cried Wolf (voice) (uncredited)
A series of fractured fairy tales vignettes.
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Porky's Badtime Story (1937)
Character: Porky Pig / Gabby Goat / Boss (voice) (uncredited)
After Porky and Gabby oversleep yet again, their boss warns them that they'll be fired if they're late again...
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Foxy by Proxy (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny
Bugs is provoked by a pack of foxhounds and their hunters stampeding over his hole, so he gets out his Halloween costume from last year (a fox suit) and sets out to lead the dogs on a merry chase. The stupidest of the dogs, whose objective is to cut a fox's tail off, becomes his main victim; Bugs tricks him into chasing a train instead. He eventually tricks the dog pack into running off a cliff, but the stupid dog ends up with Bugs' tail.
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Cat Feud (1958)
Character: Marc Anthony / Pussyfoot / Claude Cat (voice)
Bulldog Marc Anthony, guarding a construction site, finds a kitten, Pussyfoot, to whom he affectionately gives a wiener for lunch. A hungry grown cat sees and is determined to have the wiener.
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The Unchained Goddess (1958)
Character: Hail / Rain (voice)
A scientist and a writer explain the various meteorological phenomena to Meteora, the goddess of weather, while giving an insight into the technology involved in predicting them and warning about the threat of global climate change.
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Speedy Gonzales (1955)
Character: Speedy Gonzales / Sylvester / Various Mice (voice)
Speedy comes to the aid of a group of mice trying to get the cheese from a factory guarded by Sylvester.
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Lighthouse Mouse (1955)
Character: Sylvester / Lighthouse Keeper / Parrot (voice)
Sylvester Cat is a lighthouse keeper's mouse-catcher assigned to keep a mouse from unplugging the light. The mouse only wants a good night's sleep and asks Hippety Hopper, the baby kangaroo who has just crashed off of a ship on the nearby rocks, to help him fight Sylvester and keep the lighthouse light turned off.
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Rabbit's Kin (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny (voice)
Bugs rescues a young rabbit from Pete Puma and gives lessons on how to heckle.
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The Rescuers (1977)
Character: Bats (voice) (uncredited)
What can two little mice possibly do to save an orphan girl who's fallen into evil hands? With a little cooperation and faith in oneself, anything is possible! As members of the mouse-run International Rescue Aid Society, Bernard and Miss Bianca respond to orphan Penny's call for help. The two mice search for clues with the help of an old cat named Rufus.
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Little Red Rodent Hood (1952)
Character: Sylvester / Little Red Rodent Hood / Mouse / Cat / Kitten (voice)
An elderly mouse tells the bedtime story of Little Red Riding Hood to her grandson, who visualizes the tale in cat-and-mouse terms, with himself as Red and Sylvester as the Big Bad Wolf.
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Drip-Along Daffy (1951)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Bartender (voice)
Daffy Duck plays a western hero, but things don't go as he hoped in a one horse town.
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It Happened to Crusoe (1941)
Character: Robinson Crusoe (voice)
WARNING This cartoon features ignorant racial stereotypes and is NOT meant for children or the sensitive.
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Roman Legion-Hare (1955)
Character: Commentator / Emperor Nero / Guard Captain / Bugs Bunny (voice)
The Coliseum, Rome, 54 A.D. Yosemite Sam, as Captain of the Guard, is ordered by Emperor Nero to find a victim to toss to the lions, or else he'll be the victim. Shortly thereafter Sam encounters Bugs Bunny and decides he will make a good victim.
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Bowery Bugs (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny
After a man down on his luck comes looking for a rabbit's foot, Bugs Bunny embarks on a campaign of terror that eventually provokes him to jump off the Brooklyn Bridge.
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April Showers (1948)
Character: Buster's Midget Impersonation (voice) (uncredited)
A married couple who have a song-and-dance act in vaudeville are in trouble. Their struggling act is going nowhere, they're almost broke and they have to do something to get them back on top or they'll really be in trouble. They decide to put their young son in the act in hopes of attracting some new attention. The boy turns out to be a major talent, audiences love him and the act is on its way to the top. That's when an organization whose purpose is to stop children from performing on stage shows up, and they're dead set on breaking up the act.
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Porky's Baseball Broadcast (1940)
Character: Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
Porky Pig provides play-by-play radio-broadcast commentary during a World Series baseball game.
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Much Ado About Nutting (1953)
Character: Squirrel (voice) (uncredited)
A squirrel in a downtown park lugs a giant coconut back home, but nothing he tries will crack it open.
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Road to Andalay (1964)
Character: Sylvester / Speedy Gonzales / Malcolm (voice)
Sylvester Cat uses a hunting bird, Malcolm Falcon, in another unsuccessful attempt to catch Speedy Gonzales, the fastest mouse in Mexico.
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Golden Yeggs (1950)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / Rocky / Nick (voice)
On Porky Pig's farm, a goose lays a golden egg and says that Daffy Duck laid it. Daffy, now the most sought-after duck in the world, is quite willing to take the credit and resultant fame- until Rocky the gangster kidnaps Daffy and orders him at gunpoint to lay more.
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Pappy's Puppy (1955)
Character: Sylvester / Stork / Butch / Doctor / Puppy (voice)
Butch, a mean bulldog, teaches his young son about the facts of life, including how to attack cats. The pup is at first frightened when he encounters Sylvester, but the youngster (remembering his father's lesson) soon becomes a thorn in the pussycat's side.
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An Itch in Time (1943)
Character: Dog / Cat / A. Flea - screaming (voice)
Elmer threatens to give his dog a bath if he doesn't stop scratching, but the poor pooch is the victim of a hungry flea whose tools of the trade include pickaxes and dynamite.
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The Scarlet Pumpernickel (1950)
Character: Daffy Duck / Porky Pig / Sylvester / Highwayman / J.L. / Elmer Fudd (voice)
Daffy tries to sell movie studio head J.L. his script for a swashbuckler set in Merry Olde England, a plot involving a maiden in distress, a scheming Chamberlain, an evil Grand Duke and a dashing masked hero (to be played by Daffy, of course).
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Mississippi Hare (1949)
Character: Bugs Bunny, Southern Gentleman, Purser
After getting mixed in with a bale of cotton, Bugs ends up on a Mississippi riverboat, where he meets up with the notorious gambler Col. Shuffle.
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Duel Personality (1966)
Character: Tom - screaming / Jerry - laughing (voice) (uncredited)
Each having submitted his challenge card to the other, Tom and Jerry meet in a field to duel, using as weapons swords, pistols, bows and arrows, cannons and slingshots.
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Gripes (1943)
Character: Pvt. Snafu
Private Snafu learns the hard way about the need for military dicipline and procedures to maintain an effective army.
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Carnival of the Animals (1976)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Daffy Duck / Porky Pig (voice)
Bugs and Daffy perform and act out their own version of the classic "Carnival of the Animals."
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We, the Animals - Squeak! (1941)
Character: Porky Pig (voice)
Porky hosts a radio program, where animals tell their stories. The guest star is Kansas City Kitty, the best mouser in the country. She tells the story of her life, including her marriage to Tom Collins, the birth of Little Patrick (not necessarily in that order), and the turning point of her life. The mice have plotted out a major operation like gangsters. They sneak out and kidnap Patrick and hold him hostage...
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Hot Spot (1945)
Character: Pvt. Snafu / Camel (voice)
As the Devil watches Pvt. Snafu and his unit stationed in Iran, he talks about the hazards of working in the heat.
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From A to Z-Z-Z-Z (1954)
Character: Numbers / Indians / Sailors (voice)
Ralph is a daydreamer... and he is quick to adapt his current surroundings into new, adventurous dreams.
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A Squeak in the Deep (1966)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales (voice)
Daffy Duck enters a boat racing contest and is frustrated constantly by Speedy Gonzales.
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Robin Hood Makes Good (1939)
Character: Fox (voice) (uncredited)
A fox captures two young squirrels while they're playing "Robin Hood". Their small younger friend uses his ingenuity to try to rescue them.
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Ace in the Hole (1942)
Character: Woody Woodpecker (voice)
Woody Woodpecker is a stable boy. The stables are located right in an airfield, and the sound of airplanes droning around only fuels his lust to fly. "I want to fly like the birds!" declares the woodpecker. But the only thing the bulldog sergeant on the airfield feels Woody is competent for is clipping the horses with an electric clipper. And considering that Woody accidentally allows the clipper to clip off the sarge's shirt buttons and a long strip of hair off his chin, he may be giving Woody too much credit. Nevertheless, Woody spends his time reading "How to Fly a Plane from the Ground Up." And eventually, he sneaks onto a PU-2.
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Room and Bird (1951)
Character: Tweety / Sylvester/ House Detective / Dog / Mouse (voice)
Tweety and Sylvester are Granny's pets in the Spinsters Arms Hotel, where pets aren't allowed.
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Tree for Two (1952)
Character: Sylvester / Spike (voice)
A rough and tough bulldog named Spike sets out with his admirer, a small dog named Chester, to rough up a cat. They encounter Sylvester and chase him into a junkyard, where a black panther that escaped from a zoo just happens to be hiding out. Every time Spike goes into the junkyard to thrash Sylvester, he is clawed into pieces by the panther, which he, in a dark maze of crates, thinks is Sylvester. Chester has no problem pummelling Sylvester before Spike's eyes, which convinces Spike that Chester must be tougher than him.
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Weasel Stop (1956)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn / Willy the Weasel / Dog - Barking / Hen (voice)
A shaggy dog is the guard at a farm's chicken coop when a lip-smacking weasel comes along, intending to gain access to the chickens.
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Rookie Revue (1941)
Character: Drill Sergeant / Soldier / General (voice) (uncredited)
Random gags around military life, set on an army base. A bugler uses a jukebox to play reveille. In formation, one private has a great deal of trouble remembering what comes after "3"; after he gets it, he decides not to go for the $32 question. In the mess hall, the machine gunners machine gun their food while the bombers catch falling biscuits. The infantry marches for miles - past a "next time, take the train" billboard.
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Hare Lift (1952)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
Bank robber Yosemite Sam forces Bugs to try to fly the largest airplane in the world.
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Wild and Woody! (1948)
Character: Woody Woodpecker's Laugh (archive sound)
Woody Woodpecker gallops into a wild western town, which can't keep a sheriff very long due to the notorious outlaw (and sheriff-killer) Buzz Buzzard. Woody volunteers for the position but barely has time to shine up his badge before Buzz rides in with intent to do harm to Sheriff Woody. But Woody has no intentions of allowing Buzz to follow through on his intents.
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One Meat Brawl (1947)
Character: Porky Pig / Mandrake (voice) (uncredited)
On Groundhog Day, Porky Pig goes hunting groundhogs and takes his dopey dog, Mandrake. They soon encounter Grover Groundhog, who is none too thrilled to be the objective of a hunter on his big day.
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Devil's Feud Cake (1963)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / The Devil (voice)
Another in a series of Warner's economy cartoons featuring clips from previous Bugs Bunny-Yosemite Sam cartoons. After Sam is killed in each pursuit, he meets with the devil, who goads him into continuing to chase the bunny.
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Jetsons: The Movie (1990)
Character: Mr. Spacely (voice)
George Jetson is forced to uproot his family when Mr. Spacely promotes him to take charge of a new factory on a distant planet.
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Now Hear This (1963)
Character: Vocal effects
In this surreal cartoon that plays with the idea of sound effects, a near-deaf old man finds one of the devil's lost horns and tries to use it as an ear trumpet.
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A Corny Concerto (1943)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Dog / Swans / Daffy Duck (voice) (uncredited)
Elmer Fudd introduces two pieces of classical music: "Tales of the Vienna Woods" and "The Blue Danube", and acted out by Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Laramore the Hound Dog, a family of swans, and a juvenile Daffy Duck.
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A Scent of the Matterhorn (1961)
Character: Pepé Le Pew (voice)
In the French Alps, an out-of-control street-painter's wagon sprays a stripe of white paint atop a female cat's back. Enter Pepé Le Pew.
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Southern Fried Rabbit (1953)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam (voice)
Bugs Bunny attempts to shake off Yosemite Sam (here, cast as a Civil War-era colonel), who is preventing him from crossing the Mason-Dixon Line.
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A Ham in a Role (1949)
Character: Dog, Mac
A dog decides to quit the slapstick comedy of cartoons and go to his country home to concentrate on Shakespeare, but two troublesome yet polite gophers foil his grand plans.
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Fright Before Christmas (1979)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Tasmanian Devil / Santa Claus / Pilots (voice)
The Tasmanian Devil escapes from a plane and lands in Santa's suit. After taking off in Santa's sleigh he lands on Bugs' roof where he tries to eat everything in sight including the present Bugs got for him.
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Saps in Chaps (1942)
Character: Vulture / Traveler / Cat / Villain / Horse (voice) (uncredited)
Sagebrush site gags depicting wild west wackiness.
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Bone Sweet Bone (1948)
Character: Curator / Shep (voice) (uncredited)
An archaeologist at a museum scolds his small, silent dog, Shep, for supposedly removing a bone belonging to a dinosaur skeleton and orders Shep to bring the bone back, but Shep finds that the place where he buried his most recent bone has been dug up and a bulldog is walking away with the bone in his mouth. Shep chases the bulldog with intent of retrieving the bone, and so begins a battle of wits between Shep and the bulldog.
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Stupor Duck (1956)
Character: Daffy Duck, Aardvark Ratnik
Daffy Duck does Superman as Stupor Duck (aka mild-mannered reporter Cluck Trent) takes on the villainous yet nonexistent Aardvark Ratnik.
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Fair and Worm-er (1946)
Character: Mouse / Dog Catcher (voice)
One long chase: worm chases apple; bird chases worm; cat chases bird; dog chases cat; dogcatcher chases dog; dogcatcher's wife chases dogcatcher; mouse chases dogcatcher's wife. With occasional interruptions by a skunk.
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Who's Who in the Zoo (1942)
Character: Porky Pig / Animals (voice) (uncredited)
A wacky travelogue takes us to the zoo, where Porky Pig is the keeper and goofy animals provide the basis for a series of black-out gags.
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Quackodile Tears (1962)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice)
Daffy Duck is ordered by his loud-mouthed wife to sit on their egg in a nest. When Daffy adjusts the nest to make it more comfortable, the egg rolls away from him and into a crocodile hatchery, where it is indistinguishable from all the other eggs. When Daffy picks what he think is his egg from the crocodile hatchery, a male crocodile gives chase and does battle with Daffy for the egg.
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Easy Peckin's (1953)
Character: Fox / George the Rooster (voice)
A no-nonsense, hulky rooster guards a chicken coop that a sneaky fox repeatedly tries to raid.
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Hobo Gadget Band (1939)
Character: Mr. Sneer (voice)
At the hobo hotel, it's morning. One hobo awakens, and carefully avoids the shower, except for a drop on each eye. He stops at the medicine cabinet for some "soda fizz" which jets about, causing havoc. A train goes by, and the swinging rhythm inspires a makeshift clarinet solo. The cook grabs some fish from the fridge, which opens right onto the river. Another train whistle prompts an announcer; the hobos board down a slide. The clarinet player starts up again, and everyone dances. The engineer notices, stops the train, and pulls the "hobo eliminator" lever, which ejects them. Fortunately, they land right in front of a sign looking for amateur musicians at a radio station. They play and sing, to everyone's enjoyment. The station owner offers them luxury but a passing train whistle changes their minds.
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The Hollywood Matador (1942)
Character: Woody Woodpecker (archive sound)
The bull is watching through a knothole as the great bullfighter, Woody Woodpecker, is showing off for the spectators. Unable to take it no longer the bull dashes into the arena and charges Woody so hard that he makes a shambles of the stadium. Woody, as always, equal to the task at hand is soon serving bull-burgers to the crowd.
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Bugs Bunny's Howl-oween Special (1977)
Character: Bugs Bunny/Daffy Duck/Porky Pig/Speedy Gonzales/Sylvester/Tweety
Bugs Bunny and his friends face Witch Hazel and other scary characters on All Hallows Eve.
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Streamlined Greta Green (1937)
Character: Gasoline Service Man (voice) (uncredited)
In a world wherein cars act like humans, Junior wants to be a taxi, but his mother wants him to grow up to be a nice touring car like his father. Mom doesn't know that Junior sometimes skips school and ventures into the city to ride in traffic, drink hi-test gas, and race trains.
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Slap Happy Pappy (1940)
Character: Porky Pig
Porky runs a farm; we see him plowing the fields. But it's primarily a poultry farm; as the sign says, "For sale: Miracle eggs if it's a good egg, it's a miracle." A rabbit, doing a Jack Benny impression (Jack Bunny), paints and inspects eggs. He starts to smash and reject a black egg, but it hatches into a black baby bird doing a Rochester impression. We next visit the Eddie Cackler family, (Eddie Cantor) who have been trying without success to have a son; the next five eggs hatch, and they are again all girls. A Bing Crosby lookalike comes by with a stroller full of sons, and Eddie asks for his secret; he demonstrates by crooning to a chick, who lays dozens of eggs with boys names on them. Eddie croons to his wife, but in a higher pitch, then dances out singing the theme song to other caricatures. The egg hatches, but in answer to Eddie's question, is it really a boy? "Mmmm... could be."
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The Sword in the Stone (1963)
Character: TIger / Talbot (voice)
Wart is a young boy who aspires to be a knight's squire. On a hunting trip he falls in on Merlin, a powerful but amnesiac wizard who has plans for him beyond mere squiredom. He starts by trying to give him an education, believing that once one has an education, one can go anywhere. Needless to say, it doesn't quite work out that way.
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The Cat's Tale (1941)
Character: Mouse / Cat / Dog (voice) (uncredited)
The mouse, tired of being chased by the cat, convinces him there's no reason for it, and that the cat should talk to the dog and convince him too. The talks are not successful...
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Kit for Cat (1948)
Character: Sylvester / Kitten / Melvin / Landlord (voice)
Elmer Fudd takes in Sylvester Cat and an orange kitten during a cold winter night. He'd like to adopt both, but can only keep one. He decides to go to bed and make up his mind in the morning. Sylvester and the kitten both want to be the one who is adopted, so each tries framing the other for noisy misdeeds.
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Peck Up Your Troubles (1945)
Character: Sylvester (voice)
Sylvester is determined to get a woodpecker that just moved in, high in a tree. He climbs, but the bird greases the tree; he starts to cut it down, but a mean dog stops him (this becomes a running gag). Several other attempts follow; at one point, he puts his paw into the bird's home, and the bird puts a tomato there; Sylvester squishes it, and the bird dresses as an angel to torment him, but Sylvester sees through the disguise. Finally, Sylvester tries to blow up the tree; the dog again intervenes. Sylvester gets the dynamite off the tree and puts out the fuses, but the bird has lit them again, and now Sylvester really becomes an angel.
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Snafuperman (1944)
Character: Pvt. Snafu / Narrator / Soldier, Technical Ferry - First Class (voice) (uncredited)
Pvt. Snafu becomes a superhero, only for him to become the world's dumbest one because he won't study his field manuals.
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Raw! Raw! Rooster! (1956)
Character: Foghorn Leghorn, Rhode Island Red (dazed)
Foghorn's annoying college buddy, Rhode Island Red, comes for a visit and then won't leave.
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Sleepy Time Possum (1951)
Character: Ma Possum / Pa Possum / Junior Possum (voice)
Pa Possum dresses up like a dog to try to get Junior Possum to stop sleeping all the time and do his chores.
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Cross Country Detours (1940)
Character: Bear / Scoutmaster / Polar Bear / Bobcat / Grand Canyon Tourist / Gila Monster / Husky (voice) (uncredited)
A wacky travelogue takes us to the forests of Yosemite, the rocks of Brice Canyon, the frozen wastes of Alaska, the desert wastes of New Mexico, the Grand Canyon, the Colorado River and the giant redwoods of California.
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Lighter Than Hare (1960)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Various Robots / Alien King (voice)
Outer space invader Yosemite Sam wants to capture typical earth creature Bugs Bunny.
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Who's Kitten Who? (1952)
Character: Sylvester / Sylvester Jr. / Delivery Man (voice)
A baby kangaroo, Hippety Hopper, breaks free from a crate at the Zoo Office and hops into the house of Sylvester Cat and his son, Junior. They mistake Hippety for a giant mouse, and Sylvester is pummelled again and again by the playful kangaroo, causing Junior to put a paper bag over his head in shame for his father.
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A-Haunting We Will Go (1966)
Character: Daffy Duck / Speedy Gonzales / Daffy's Nephew (voice)
Daffy convinces his son that old Witch Hazel isn't what he thinks she is.
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The Loose Nut (1945)
Character: Woody Woodpecker's Laugh (archive sound)
Woody Woodpecker goes to the park for a game of golf, and quickly gets at odds with some workers who are laying a cement walk.
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Wabbit Twouble (1941)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Big Chungus / Bear (voice) (uncredited)
Elmer Fudd expects to find "west and wewaxation" during his visit to Jellostone National Park, but he sets up camp in Bugs' backyard, and the rabbit (and a neighboring bear) definitely don't have leisure in mind.
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You Ought to Be in Pictures (1940)
Character: Porky Pig / Daffy Duck / Additional Voices (voice) (uncredited)
Daffy Duck convinces Porky Pig to quit the cartoon biz and try his luck in the features. Porky's adventures begin when he tries to enter the studio.
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Count Me Out (1938)
Character: Record Boxing Coach / Old Mailman / Fighter's Yell
Egghead decides his road to riches is through a boxing correspondence course. When he graduates, he takes on champion Biff Stew. Biff pummels him mercilessly (the correspondence course record continues to coach him during the match), but by accident, he knocks Biff out until we see it was all in Egghead's head, after being knocked out by the practice equipment.
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Mad as a Mars Hare (1963)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Marvin the Martian / Cape Canaveral Controller (voice)
Marvin the Martian is monitoring through his telescope a rocket launch on Earth. The rocket heads straight for him and lands on Mars. The only occupant is Bugs Bunny, lured into Cape Canaveral by a carrot and sent to Mars as an expendable "astro-rabbit". Bugs is to claim Mars in the name of the Earth, but Marvin won't allow an Earth creature to contaminate his atmosphere. He trains a time-projector gun on Bugs and reverts the bunny to a Neanderthal Rabbit, who crushes Marvin with one hand.
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Double Chaser (1942)
Character: Cat / Dog / Mouse Whistle (voice)
A mouse, being chased by a cat, enlists the help of a sleeping bulldog. When the dog awakes, the mouse hides in a hen's nest, and the cat disguises himself as a hen - and even does a hen imitation when the chicks hatch. The mouse then keeps pointing out the cat's hiding places, but when he points to a dump where the cat isn't hiding, the dog turns on him. The mouse paints an apple black and lights the fuse, but it explodes and sends him to mouse heaven.
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Rumors (1943)
Character: Pvt. Snafu / Soldiers / Rumor Mongers (voice)
Snafu inadvertantly starts a panic on his base when he begins a mistaken rumour that the base is about to be bombed.
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Holiday for Drumsticks (1949)
Character: Daffy Duck (voice)
The patriarch of a family of farming hill billies is fattening a turkey to slaughter for Thanksgiving Day dinner, and he is fattening the fowl by providing him with a veritable feast of roast beef, ham, fruits, vegetables, cakes, and pies. A jealous Daffy Duck, one of the turkey's fellow farm animals, wants to have all the food for himself. So, Daffy pretends to care for the turkey's welfare and warns the turkey off the food, and he urges the turkey to lose weight so that the hill billies won't want to slaughter him. Daffy gorges himself on the food while acting as coach to the turkey, who is frantically and strenuously trying to reduce himself. When Thanksgiving comes, the turkey is toothpick-thin, and the hillbilly father turns his hungry sights on an overweight Daffy!
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The Fair Haired Hare (1951)
Character: Bugs Bunny / Yosemite Sam / Judge (voice)
Yosemite Sam and Bugs battle it out over property rights above Bugs' rabbit hole.
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D' Fightin' Ones (1961)
Character: Sylvester / Bulldog (voice)
Sylvester Cat and a tough bulldog escape, chained together, from a transport vehicle headed for the city animal pound and make like convicts on the lam.
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