PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,5/10
851
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El Coyote ataca al Correcaminos con una enorme catapulta que lanza rocas, pero le sale el tiro por la culata.El Coyote ataca al Correcaminos con una enorme catapulta que lanza rocas, pero le sale el tiro por la culata.El Coyote ataca al Correcaminos con una enorme catapulta que lanza rocas, pero le sale el tiro por la culata.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Mel Blanc
- Wile E. Coyote
- (voz)
- (sin acreditar)
Paul Julian
- Road Runner
- (voz)
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
TO BEEP OR NOT TO BEEP (1963) is my favorite Roadrunner cartoon ever made. The best gag is when the coyote tries to catch the roadrunner in a noose. The catapult gag, originally from ZOOM AND BORED, is even better here. This only made it to one tape, The Classic Chase. Too bad, because this is a gem. The end of this one was surprising. There's more great gags in between, such as the wrecking ball. There's never a bad moment in this cartoon. The best Looney Tunes were made in the sixties, but this tops them off. Watch this and laugh out loud.
Grade: A+
Grade: A+
This cartoon was very poorly made. The gags are not funny. The repeated one sided contest becomes a boring painful watch after a point. It feels like a rape. The agony of the coyote just not remains with the coyote but reaches the audience and the net result is a lot of pain. These are not meant for kids and the exaggerated slapstick violence is too much to bear. Chuck Jones asked audience to watch these by keeping the brain away. But he failed in that attempt. These do not appeal the funny bone and the gags are not at all hilarious but gives a feeling of being molested. Very poor concept overall. Poor execution, poor editing, poor background music, poor concept, poor story, poor gags, poor everything from the start to the end.
This is a Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner cartoon. As far as I'm concerned, there has never been a bad one of those. Wile reads a cookbook with a Road Runner recipe. He sets off to catch a Road Runner.
This has been re-edited from a failed TV pilot. The best sequence has to be the catapult. I love that he keeps going back to it. The comedy gets raised with each new iteration of failure. If there is anything missing, it does need some ACME product placement. There is a joke at the end which is connected to that. It would work better if Wile peels off an ACME sticker to reveal the contraption's true origins.
This has been re-edited from a failed TV pilot. The best sequence has to be the catapult. I love that he keeps going back to it. The comedy gets raised with each new iteration of failure. If there is anything missing, it does need some ACME product placement. There is a joke at the end which is connected to that. It would work better if Wile peels off an ACME sticker to reveal the contraption's true origins.
Very good and thoroughly enjoyable Roadrunner-Wile E.Coyote cartoon, one of their better ones of the 60s in my view. It is not all that surprising as to how it ends(the story is also a fairly formulaic one in the first place), then again the Roadrunner-Coyote series are not about the stories strictly speaking but about the quality of the gags. You do miss Coyote's looks to the camera, which were kind of breaking-the-fourth-wall-without-a-word, and despite the clever overhead shot and with the cactus the falling down the cliff gag has been done to death. The animation has been more detailed before, budget constraints perhaps, but the colours are still really lovely and the drawings and backgrounds are well-rendered. In short, well-done animation considering any potential constraints but not great animation. Bill Lava's music is rousingly orchestrated and has a lot of life and isn't repetitive, his work hasn't always worked in the Speedy cartoons but it works wonderfully here and couldn't be more evident in the final gag. The gags are consistent in how funny they are, the wrecking ball and noose gags do provoke a lot of laughs but the highlight is absolutely Coyote's attempts with a boulder and catapult, as has been noted previously instead of moving on to different methods of catching the Roadrunner it was nice to see Coyote making numerous attempts doing the same thing. And even more importantly, the gag isn't just funny, it's hilarious, the last part of it especially. Roadrunner is good, but Coyote has always been the more interesting and funniest of the two and as always he is sly and amusing, but we also feel pangs of sympathy too. To conclude, a very good Roadrunner-Wile E.Coyote cartoon and one of their better outings of the 60s. 7.5/10 Bethany Cox
This entry into the Roadrunner series of cartoons which began in 1949 with 'Fast And Furry-ous' is one of my favourites. It runs along at a frenetic pace after the initial decision by Wile E Coyote to catch Roadrunner and eat him for lunch. As usual Wile never succeeds, but the ways he tries to do it are genius.
I mean, just how many times can you think of where using a giant catapult to hurl a boulder (in an attempt to squash the fleet little bird) has gone so hilariously wrong in so many different ways?
This cartoon rocks!
I mean, just how many times can you think of where using a giant catapult to hurl a boulder (in an attempt to squash the fleet little bird) has gone so hilariously wrong in so many different ways?
This cartoon rocks!
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe first Road Runner cartoon (and the only one directed by Chuck Jones) to not open with freeze frames of the characters with their names and "Latin species" subtitles.
- ConexionesEdited from Adventures of the Road-Runner (1962)
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Detalles
- Duración7 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
By what name was Beep o no beep, esa es la cuestión (1963) officially released in Canada in English?
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