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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBugs Bunny retaliates against the pompous opera star who does him violence.Bugs Bunny retaliates against the pompous opera star who does him violence.Bugs Bunny retaliates against the pompous opera star who does him violence.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Mel Blanc
- Bugs Bunny
- (voix)
- …
Nicolai Shutorev
- Giovanni Jones
- (voix (chant))
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesLeopold Stokowski never conducted with a baton. This is the reason why Bugs Bunny, impersonating Stokowski, promptly breaks the baton before conducting, and conducts using such dramatic hand gestures.
- GaffesWhen Bugs Bunny fills the throat sprayer with liquid alum, he tightens the top counterclockwise, which would loosen the top. He should turn the top clockwise, which would tighten the top.
- Versions alternativesApparenty sometimes aired without a sequence in which Bugs, dressed up as a bobby-soxer, tricks the opera singer into signing an autograph book with a stick of dynamite.
- ConnexionsEdited into Le Clapier de Séville (1950)
- Bandes originalesA Rainy Night in Rio
(uncredited)
Music by Arthur Schwartz
Lyrics by Leo Robin
Sung by Bugs Bunny (Mel Blanc) while playing the banjo
Commentaire à la une
Bugs is lying on a rock happily playing some folk music while opera singer Giovanni Jones is in "the house down the hill" (quite a modern looking house for 1949, no?) rehearsing. After being constantly disrupted by Bugs's music, Giovanni violently puts it to an abrupt end. Little does he realize what Bugs has in store for him during his performance that night...
Being a late-1940s cartoon, we see our favorite rabbit at his most aggressive (before the more "kid-friendly" Bugs of ten years later). As such, Chuck Jones' generally dark/violent humor is in full force here, and is very funny due to some clever jokes and excellent timing. My favorite being the sometimes cut-from-TV scene where Bugs dresses like a bobbysoxer asking for Giovanni's autograph, only to give him a stick of dynamite rather than a pen. Giovanni's pose when he was getting ready to sign his name was simply priceless! Highly recommended!
Being a late-1940s cartoon, we see our favorite rabbit at his most aggressive (before the more "kid-friendly" Bugs of ten years later). As such, Chuck Jones' generally dark/violent humor is in full force here, and is very funny due to some clever jokes and excellent timing. My favorite being the sometimes cut-from-TV scene where Bugs dresses like a bobbysoxer asking for Giovanni's autograph, only to give him a stick of dynamite rather than a pen. Giovanni's pose when he was getting ready to sign his name was simply priceless! Highly recommended!
- MartyD82-1
- 20 mai 2005
- Permalien
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Détails
- Durée8 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Bugs Bunny casse-noisettes (1949) officially released in Canada in English?
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