Looney Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Three (2005)
Looney Tunes Golden
Collection DVDs

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Like the previous entries in the
Looney Tunes Golden Collection series, volume 3 confirms
how brilliant the Warner Bros. artists were and how durable their
creations have proven. The set includes classics that every cartoon
buff will recognize: "Duck! Rabbit! Duck!," "Robin Hood Daffy,"
"Birds Anonymous." Other selections are less familiar but
significant in the development of the studio: "Sinkin' in the
Bathtub," the first Looney Tune; "I Haven't Got a Hat," the earliest
Warners cartoon viewers can watch for fun, rather than as an
historic curiosity; "Porky's Romance," in which director Frank
Tashlin introduced rapid cutting to cartoons. Some of the caricature
films have aged less gracefully. Younger audiences will recognize
the drawn versions of W.C. Fields, the Marx Brothers, Katharine
Hepburn, and Charlie Chaplin. But will anyone under the age of 60
remember Edna Mae Oliver, George Arliss, or Ned Sparks?
The producers have once again loaded the discs with supplemental
material, including "Point Food Rationing," a unseen short
explaining wartime ration books; a BBC documentary on Chuck Jones;
and interstitial animated sequences for The Bugs Bunny Show.
"Philbert" ranks as the oddest of the extras: an unsold (and leaden)
pilot from 1963, featuring live actors and an animated title
character. Whoopi Goldberg introduces the set, explaining that some
of the ethnic gags would no longer be considered appropriate. But
she correctly adds that to remove them would falsify both the
history of animation and American popular culture. It all adds up to
a set every cartoon fan will want. (Unrated, suitable for all ages:
cartoon violence) --Charles Solomon