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Movie
DVDs
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Looney Tunes Golden
Collection DVDs

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Looney
Tunes - Golden Collection (2003)
They're
the crown princes of animation. They're the
international ambassadors of cartoon comedy. They're
the fabulously funny friends you grew up with! And
now, 56 of the very best animated shorts starring the
very wackiest Warner Bros. cartoon characters have
been rounded up on DVD for the first time ever in The
Looney Tunes Golden Collection! Just barely contained
in four special edition discs, each specially selected
short has been brilliantly restored and re-mastered to
its original, uncut, anvil-dropping, laughter-inducing
glory! Featuring some of the very earliest,
ground-breaking on-screen appearances of many all-time
Looney Tunes favorites, it's an unprecedented
celebration for cartoon-lovers eager to re-live the
heady, hilarious, golden age of Warner Bros.
animation! Sparkling with one unforgettable, landmark
animated marvel after another, there's that icon of
carrot-crunching aplomb, Bugs Bunny, in a dazzling
assortment of his very best classic shorts. Also
highlighted in their own delightfully zany series of
cartoon gems: the ever-flustered Daffy Duck and
eternal straight-man Porky Pig. Plus, all the rest of
the beloved Looney Tunes lineup starring in some of
the most wildly imaginative cartoon shorts ever
created! Including an array of exclusive bonus DVD
features from expert commentaries to insights into the
evolution of these classic characters, this is the
ultimate animated experience for anyone who's ever
thrilled to the timeless query: "Ehhh? what's up,
Doc?"
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Looney
Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Two
Greetings, Looneytics! For all who rightly place
Looney Tunes alongside Mom, apple pie and web-surfing
at work as American institutions, this is your time to
rise and shine and watch. Yes, here on 4 discs you'll
find 60 more of the finest, funniest, bestest Golden
Era cartoons from the feverishly bent artistic minds
at Termite Terrace. Disc 1 showcases a certain
wascally wabbit. The happiness of pursuit is center
stage in Disc 2 and 3's respective batches of Road
Runner and Sylvester/Tweety fun. Disc 4 is an all-star
cavalcade of Hollywood parodies and more. All 60 toons
are restored, remastered, uncut. And each disc is
chock-a-block with bonus goodies. It's a 24-carrot gem
of a collection. Anything less would be dethpicable.
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Looney
Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Three (2005)
RESTORED, REMASTERED AND REE-DICULOUS: COMPLETELY
UNCUT AND UNCENSORED LOONEY-NESS, INCLUDING SOME HOME
VIDEO DEBUTS! You know what you want. More three-day
weekends. More ounces in a pound of chocolates. More
Looney Tunes. Your wish is our command. Because in
this 4-disc set are 60 more of the most looneytic
Looney Tunes ever unleashed on rabbit, duck, pig or
humanity. Indeed, some have never before been on home
video! Disc 1 features the tall, gray and haresome
one. Disc 2 lampoons Hollywood. Ham actor Porky Pig
rules Disc 3. And Disc 4 has the duck and a cast of
crazies. One thing: to watch these, you must be as
tall as this sign. Wrong disclaimer. Read the one in
the box below. Got the idea? Now have fun. And pass
the chocolates. Disclaimer Box Copy: The Looney Tunes
Golden Collection Vol. 3 Is Intended for the Adult
Collector and May Not Be Suitable for Children.
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Like previous installments, the Looney Tunes
Golden Collection, Volume 4 mixes favorites from
the Warner Bros. archives with relatively obscure
older works. Chuck Jones' "Mississippi Hare" and
Friz Freleng's "Sahara Hare" and "Knighty-Knight
Bugs" (which won an Oscar) offer hilarious
performances by Bugs. Two of Jones' earliest films,
"The Night Watchman" and "Conrad the Sailor"
prefigure his use of subtle expressions in his later
cartoons. The disc of shorts by Frank Tashlin
includes "Plane Daffy": pigeon see-duck-tress Hatta
Mari anticipates Jayne Mansfield in such later
Tashlin live-action comedies as Will Success
Spoil Rock Hunter?
Not all of these films have aged as gracefully.
Younger viewers will probably not catch the
references to Charlie McCarthy, Bill Robinson, and
other old film and radio stars. The Speedy Gonzalez
cartoons feature ethnic humor that seems
embarrassing today; it's also crashingly unfunny.
Each disc offers a disclaimer about stereotypes,
noting, "they were wrong then and are wrong today."
The discs are loaded with extras that range from
a partial set of storyboards for "Sahara Hare" to
three of the "Private Snafu" shorts, which were made
for the "Army-Navy Screen Magazine" during WW II.
The oddest extra is the documentary Bugs Bunny
Superstar, which infuriated many of the Warner
Bros. artists when it was released in 1977. Much of
its information should be taken with a grain of
salt. (Unrated, suitable for ages 6 and older:
cartoon violence, some ethnic stereotypes, mild
risqué humor, alcohol & tobacco use) --Charles
Solomon
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The fifth
collection of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies
continues Warner Bros.' scattershot approach, mixing
classics and obscurities. Among the best-known and
funniest cartoons are "Ali Baba Bunny" (Daffy
yelling, "I'm rich! I'm socially secure!"),
"Bewitched Bunny" (Witch Hazel galloping off in a
cloud of hair pins), and "Buccaneer Bunny" (a
sterling example of one of director Friz Freleng's
favorite gags: having the characters run up and down
stairs and in and out of various doors). "Gold
Diggers of '49" and "Little Red Walking Hood" show
Tex Avery beginning to explore the self-reflexive
gags that would be become one of the hallmarks of
his mature style. In "Walking Hood," Grandma stops
the action to answer the phone and place her order
with the grocer--including a case of gin. "The Daffy
Doc" is Bob Clampett at his most surreal, with Daffy
and Porky getting sucked into an iron lung, bulging
and shrinking like balloon animals. Some of the
earliest cartoons predate the adoption of "The
Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" as the theme song for the
Warner Bros. cartoons. Many shorts from the early
'30s were built around songs from Warner's musicals:
"I've Got to Sing a Torch Song" (written for Gold
Diggers of 1933) features caricatures of Mae
West, George Bernard Shaw, Benito Mussolini, and
Bing Crosby frolicking to the title tune. Greta
Garbo delivers the closing, "That's All, Folks!"
Like the previous four sets, Golden Collection
Volume 5 comes loaded with extras that range
from three WWII films in which Mr. Hook urges
sailors to buy war bonds to "Extremes and
In-Betweens: A Life in Animation" (2000), a
documentary about Oscar-winning director Chuck
Jones. Many of these cartoons will have viewers of
all ages in stitches. (Unrated, suitable for ages 6
and older: cartoon violence, ethnic stereotypes,
mild risqué humor, alcohol and tobacco use)
--Charles Solomon |

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