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Rating: 4.4 / 5.0 (98 votes)

Released: 2007-10-30

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Looney Tunes: Golden Collection, Vol. 5 by Warner Home Video

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Movie Details

Director
Arthur Davis
Studio
Warner Home Video
Runtime
424
Rated
NR (Not Rated)
Binding
DVD

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Description

More Looney Tunes…your wish is our command. In this 4-disc set are 60 more of the most looneytic Looney Tunes ever unleashed and over 5 hours of extra special features. Indeed, some have never before been on home video! Disc 1 features some of the best Bugs and Daffy shorts ever. Disc 2 is filled with Looney Tunes version of fairy tales. Disc 3 features the best of Looney Tunes directed by Bob Clampett. And Disc 4 is all about the early daze.

DVD Features:
Audio Commentary
Documentaries
Featurette
Music Only Track
Other
TV Special

Actors

  • Mel Blanc
  • Arthur Q. Bryan
  • June Foray
  • Tedd Pierce
  • Ben Frommer

Format

  • Animated
  • Box set
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Subtitled

Editorial Review

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

More Details

Binding
DVD
Aspect Ratio
1.33:1
Disks
4
Picture Format
Academy Ratio

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