How many looney tunes cartoons were made




















Looney Tunes Cartoons. Appetweet Bubble Dum More Bruce Tom Kenny More Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies filmography. View source. Things you buy through our links may earn New York a commission. On April 17, , the very first Warner Bros. While Walt Disney was focused on elevating the art of animation, Warner Bros. On this 90th anniversary, here is a sampling of 90 of the looniest and merriest cartoons in the Warner Bros.

A tardy jalopy emerging from an outhouse immediately distinguishes Warner Bros. He would star in 39 more cartoons. The first Warner Bros. With Owls. Cartman broke into the title tune whenever he was zapped by an alien ray in the very first episode of South Park. This collection of spot gags captures an old-fashioned night at the movies complete with newsreel, sing-along, and the main attraction, a spoof of The Petrified Forest.

Daffy Duck makes a big splash in his debut. Dramatic angles and odd perspectives keep this one chugging along. Drugstore magazines come to life after-hours with literal characterizations of their titles.

Thus, a miscreant is sentenced to Life but escapes through Liberty with other magazine figures in hot pursuit. Warner Bros. Daffy runs amuck on a movie-studio set, but is sure to give his studio a plug. Spot gags pay off in this spoof of Warner Bros. Something new has been added: rotoscoping to bring to life personages and events from American history to inspire Porky to learn the Pledge of Allegiance. Elmer Fudd stars in a rare heroic role as John Alden in this retelling of the courtship between Priscilla and Miles Standish.

Brace yourself for the inevitable Cleveland Indians sight gag. Daffy goes Eve Harrington on Porky, convincing him to quit cartoons for feature films, thus paving his way to A-list status.

For example, any screenwriter can tell you that a hero should have a worthy opponent and face obstacles on the way to victory.

But in Bugs Bunny cartoons, his villains are usually total idiots like Yosemite Sam and Marvin the Martian, and the story consists of him winning at everything, sometimes even yawning at how easy it is. But in classic Looney Tunes , there is no continuity at all. Even character traits can change seemingly at random. The models for Looney Tunes were the great comedians of silent and early sound movies, who created iconic characters but never treated them as part of any kind of continuing storyline.

Groucho Marx, the biggest influence on Bugs Bunny, has a different name and job in every movie. But even while Looney Tunes were still ongoing, this approach started to fall out of favour.

In the Space Jam movies, characters who never met each other in the original series which is to say, most of them all share a homeland and shoot hoops together.

The most recent TV version, Looney Tunes Cartoons , where Canadian actor Eric Bauza won acclaim as the voice of both Bugs and Daffy, uses a more classic format but cleverly arranges things to have a tiny bit more continuity than before. The ensemble characters of "I Haven't Got a Hat", such as Oliver Owl, and twin dogs Ham and Ex, were also given a sampling of shorts, but demand for these characters was far exceeded by Beans and Porky; Beans himself was later phased out due to declining popularity, leaving Porky as the only star of the Schlesinger studio.

Bugs initially starred in the color Merrie Melodies shorts and formally joined the Looney Tunes series with the release of " Buckaroo Bugs " in , which is the final cartoon produced by Leon Schlesinger.

The inspiration for the changeover was Warner's decision to re-release only the color cartoons in the Blue Ribbon Classics series of Merrie Melodies. Schlesinger sold his interest in the cartoon studio to Warner Bros. The shorts from this era can be identified by their different title sequence, featuring stylized limited animation and graphics on a black background and a new arrangement, by William Lava , of "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down.

The Looney Tunes series' popularity was strengthened even more when the shorts began airing on network and syndicated television in the s under various titles and formats. However, since the syndicated shorts' target audience was children and because of concerns over children's television in the s, the Looney Tunes shorts were edited, removing scenes of violence, racial and ethnic caricatures, and questionable vices.

Theatrical animated shorts went dormant until when new shorts were made to introduce Looney Tunes to a new generation of audiences. New Looney Tunes shorts have been produced and released sporadically for theaters since then, usually as promotional tie-ins with various family movies produced by Warner Bros. While many of them have been released in limited releases theatrically for Academy Award consideration, only a few have gotten theatrical releases with movies.

In , the Looney Tunes characters made their way into the amusement business when they became the mascots for the two Marriott's Great America theme parks, Gurnee and Santa Clara. After the Gurnee park was sold to Six Flags, they also claimed the rights to use the characters at the other Six Flags parks, which they continue to do presently. Looney Tunes characters shared screen time with their rivals at Disney, particularly in the scenes where Bugs and Mickey Mouse are skydiving, and when Daffy and Donald Duck are performing their "Dueling Pianos" sequence.

One of the logos for Looney Tunes on Nickelodeon. In , Nickelodeon aired all the unaired cartoons in a show called Looney Tunes on Nickelodeon until To date, Looney Tunes on Nickelodeon is the longest-airing animated series on the network that was not a Nicktoon. In , Space Jam , a feature film mixing animation and live-action, was released to theaters starring Bugs Bunny and Michael Jordan. The gang also made frequent cameos in Tiny Toon Adventures , from executive producer Steven Spielberg where they played teachers and mentors to a younger generation of cartoon characters, plus occasional cameo appearances in the later Warner Bros.

The latter two had been particularly long-running series, and the Warner Bros. Although the film wasn't financially successful, [8] it was met with relatively positive reviews from film critics and has been argued by animation historians and fans as the finest original feature-length appearance for the cartoon characters. They also appeared in the direct-to-video films Bah, Humduck!

The original cartoon shorts have also been released on multiple home video systems over the years, including the Golden Collection on DVD and Platinum Collection on DVD and Blu-ray, thus contributing to the continued popularity of the Looney Tunes characters.

A handful of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts from the ss are no longer aired on USA television, because of the racial stereotypes of African-Americans, Jews, Japanese, Chinese, and Germans included in some of the cartoons. This has caused dismay among some animation enthusiasts, who feel they should have access to these shorts. There has been some success in returning these cartoons to the public.

In all Speedy Gonzales cartoons were made unavailable because of their alleged stereotyping of Mexicans. In addition to these most notorious cartoons, many Warner cartoons contain fleeting or sometimes extended gags that reference then-common racial or ethnic stereotypes. The release of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 3 includes a disclaimer at the beginning of each DVD in the volume given by actress Whoopi Goldberg which explains that the cartoons are products of their time and contain racial and ethnic stereotypes that these days would be considered offensive, but the cartoons are going to be presented on the DVD uncut and uncensored because editing them out and therefore denying that the stereotypes existed is almost as bad as condoning them.

A number of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies have had scenes cut out from television to remove stereotyping or violent gags. Throughout the years, the censorship varies, but most of the time violent gags tend to be much more heavily edited back in the s and s on the TV networks such as ABC and CBS , probably due to stricter rules against violence in children's TV back during the s and s, in comparison to today where most of the violent gags are shown uncut, with the notable exceptions of suicide gags involving guns, on TV channels such as Cartoon Network.

However, seldom are these affected cartoons are present in their original forms when shown on television, primarily outside of the USA are they present uncensored. When Boomerang UK re-branded and started broadcasting in HD in , the Looney Tunes shorts began to be shown heavily edited; the violence, jokes, alcohol and smoking from these shorts are removed from the channel.



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