

#Looney tunes characters movie#
The original Looney Tunes cartoons were made to play in movie theatres, and while not lavishly budgeted, they used what came to be known as “full animation,” where there are enough drawings to make characters move fluidly and act with their entire body. cartoon studio shut down in the early 1960s, Bugs Bunny has struggled to remain relevant – unless basketball is somehow involved. It raises a question I’ve been thinking about for a long time: Why is it that it’s so hard to produce new Looney Tunes content to revive the franchise for a new generation? Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck, the flagship characters of Warner Bros.’s rival Disney, have remained popular, but since the original Warner Bros. Jaime Weinman is the author of Anvils, Mallets & Dynamite: The Unauthorized Biography of Looney Tunes, which was published this week.Įarlier this year, Space Jam: A New Legacy proved what the original Space Jam proved 25 years ago: The Looney Tunes characters – Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and all the other talking animals – have trouble breaking through to mainstream popularity without LeBron James or Michael Jordan to help them. It is good to see the old Looney Tunes back, and here’s hoping that - even as they embark on adventures in a new century - they keep their tune in the key of “looney.Please log in to bookmark this story. There was a funny music video in the episode we saw featuring Elmer Fudd singing the praises of his “gwilled cheese” sandwich, and those elements show the witty potential for the series.
#Looney tunes characters tv#
And we don’t often say this about the cast of a TV show, but it would have been nice to see someone get an anvil dropped on the head or something along those lines (if anyone should be able to get away with comic, cartoon violence - even in today’s sensitive era - it should be cartoon characters who have made that their trademark). We hear Bugs and Daffy squabbling, but not in the brilliant “Rabbit season! Duck season!” type of banter made classic in their previous pairings, but more along the lines of an old married couple. Whereas the original cartoons, in their heyday during the 1940s and ’50s, relied on manic energy, strong visual gags and clever exchanges of dialogue (when there was dialogue), The Looney Tunes Show feels more designed in a traditional sitcom format.

Speaking to the animation, it does live up to the network’s promise of a “vivid, contemporary animation style.” However (again, from the one episode we were able to screen), one thing it does lack is outright looniness. Coyote are also slated to appear in CG-animated shorts. They weren’t in the episode we screened, but the Road Runner and Wile E. In the show, Bugs and Daffy are living together in the suburbs, and end up in more wacky adventures with fellow characters such as Porky Pig, Speedy Gonzales, Yosemite Sam, Foghorn Leghorn, the Tasmanian Devil, Marvin the Martian, Tweety, Sylvester, Granny and Daffy’s new non-nonsense girlfriend, Tina.
#Looney tunes characters series#
This takes place in The Looney Tunes Show, a new animated series premiering May 3 on Cartoon Network.
