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Looney Tunes: Golden Collection, Vol. 6 by Alex Lovy, Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Hugh Harman, Jack King
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DVD detailsActor: Arthur Q. Bryan, Billy Bletcher, Frank Graham, Mel Blanc, Robert C. Bruce Director: Alex Lovy, Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Hugh Harman, Jack King Brand: Warner Brothers DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Animated, Box set, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 413 minutes DVD Release Date: 2008-10-21 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: Warner Home Video
DVD Reviews of Looney Tunes: Golden Collection, Vol. 6DVD Review: AN IMPROVEMENT OVER PAST COLLECTIONS Summary: 3 StarsEither by luck or by listening to fans, Warner finally got something right with this latest collection. In the previous sets, each contained a disc with cartoons featuring a particular Looney Tunes character. This was okay if you were in the mood to see a bunch of great Bugs Bunny or Daffy Duck cartoons, but most people--I believe--prefer seeing a mix of cartoons, rather than watching cartoon after cartoon of the same character, more or less stuck in the same formula. (Really, did anyone out there have a desire to see 12 Tweety and Sylvester teamups or 12 Speedy Gonzales cartoons in a row?)
With the final collection, Warner has two good discs--the first and the last--with mostly great cartoons covering multiple characters. Maybe if they'd gone that route from the get-go they wouldn't be forced to discontinue the series due to diminishing sales.
As for the excellent Mel Blanc documentary--what took so long? Blanc was probably the single-most important player in success of Looney Tunes, and he has to wait until volume 6 to get recognized?
DVD Review: Not so much Bugs Bunny this time, but.... Summary: 4 StarsI've bought all of these collections over the years, and was saddened to hear that they're not doing any more Golden Collections (hope they do more collections, there are still hundreds of shorts not yet available on DVD). My only complaint, and it's a minor one: I was never a big fan of the Buddy or Bosko shorts, and I feel like Warners really didn;t come into their own until later in the 30s with the introduction of Daffy and Porky, and ultimately Bugs Bunny. There are lots of these Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts that I'm still waiting for on DVD and I just hope that Warners will release them in a similar 4-disc format. The six collections they've released to date have been great; some long-awaited cartoons seeing the light of day...and I know, I've said on these posts before, they couldn't possibly put ALL the best cartoons out in one set, they made far too many for that. I only hope they'll keep 'em coming. I'll buy 'em for sure! I'd like to see another collection with more of the Road Runner too (my two cents there). Get it, it's worth your time & money...enjoy
DVD Review: Funny! Summary: 5 StarsGreat Price!! It's also very Funny and Hillarious!! Can't stop laughing everytime I see it. Mel Blanc was a very talented man.
DVD Review: Filling in the history Summary: 4 StarsI have to admit, few of these `toons bring my childhood favorites back to life. To make up for that lack, this collection includes material that I don't recall seeing before, and that I found very informative.
The big surprise was "Horton Hatches the Egg," a Dr. Seuss story in animation. If you don't like Dr. Seuss - well, I guess I don't know why you're watching cartoons at all, then. Collaboration with the good doctor made that an instant classic. Pieces from the WWII era stand out, too. That was the last war with such high civilian support and involvement. As a result, it's no surprise that the animation industry supported the effort, bringing its own brand of ridicule to the patriotic (or propagandistic) effort. I'm not a WWII historian, so one feature did surprise me. Russian leaders, when Russia and the US fought a common foe, got much more favorable press than they did once the cold war started, a few years later. A few zealous paeans to capitalism also took my by surprise - I'll have to check the dates, but they might have come from the early days of the communist menace, as indoctrination into the Us side of Us vs. Them.
As always in these Golden Collections, the extras are worth watching. Each disk offers a few short cartoons in the extras, in addition to the main program. Perhaps they had been in the main program until some marketer decided the extras section needed padding; perhaps they really represent a lower but still worthwhile standard of entertainment. Interviews and commentaries round out these discussions - not for everyone, perhaps, but certainly a treat for some viewers. I can't say this is my favorite among the Golden Collection series, but it still belongs in any `toon-loving household.
-- wiredweird
DVD Review: Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol.6 Summary: 5 StarsThis is a great selection of vintage cartoons.
It contains both black & white and color material.
Description of Looney Tunes: Golden Collection, Vol. 6Here comes the highly-anticipated sixth volume of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, the studio's largest Looney Tunes compilation of animated shorts to date. Fans won't want to miss this golden opportunity to own over 60 classic, fully re-mastered and restored cartoons, presented in their original un-edited format. Most of the shorts in the collection have never been available on DVD before. Fifteen cartoons dating from World War II give Volume 6 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection more focus than previous sets. Many of the 1940's cartoons remain very funny. Bugs Bunny dresses up as Brunnhilda and rides in to the strains of "Tannhauser" in "Herr Meets Hare" (1945), a gag Chuck Jones re-used to greater effect in "What's Opera, Doc" a dozen years later. In "Russian Rhapsody" (1940) some of the gremlins who sabotage Hitler's bomber are caricatures of the Warner Bros. artists. Chuck Jones appears as a chunky, pinkish-tan homunculus swinging a mallet; Friz Freleng is a little green man with a saw-like nose. Younger viewers may find the references to wartime shortages puzzling--or fail to recognize the caricatures of Hermann Goering, Hideki Tojo and Joseph Stalin. Some of the other cartoons can still bring down the house, including "Satan's Waitin'" (1954), in which Sylvester manages to lose all nine of his lives in pursuit of Tweety, and "Bear Feat" (1949), another exercise in futility for Jones' Three Bears. The early musicals featuring Bosko, Foxy (or Freddy Fox) and Buddy have not aged well. Created by Hugh Harman and Rudy Ising, these characters were modeled on Felix the Cat and Mickey Mouse, but lack charm and personality. Some more recent films reveal how social attitudes have changed. "Wild Wife," a spoof of a suburban housewife's tribulations, may have seemed hilarious in 1954; today, it's just a laundry list of sexist gags. Like the previous installments, Volume 6 comes loaded with extras. The rarest are five shorts Friz Freleng directed at MGM in 1938. Producer Fred Quimby lured Freleng away from Warner Bros.--only to insist he adapt the comic strip "The Captain and the Kids," Rudolph Dirks' version of "The Katzenjammer Kids." Freleng correctly predicted the films would flop as the characters were "the meanest little bastards in the world," and soon returned to Warners. (Unrated, suitable for ages 6 and older: cartoon violence, ethnic stereotypes, mild risqu? humor, alcohol & tobacco use) --Charles Solomon (1. Hare Trigger, 2. To Duck or Not to Duck, 3. Birth of a Notion, 4. My Little Duckaroo, 5. Crowing Pains, 6. Raw! Raw! Rooster! 7. Heaven Scent, 8. My Favorite Duck, 9. Jumpin' Jupiter, 10. Satan's Waitin', 11. Hook Line and Stinker, 12. Bear Feat, 13. Dog Gone South, 14. A Ham in a Role, 15. Often an Orphan, 16. Herr Meets Hare, 17. Russian Rhapsody, 18. Daffy the Commando, 19. Bosko the Doughboy, 20. Rookie Revue, 21. The Draft Horse, 22. Wacky Blackout, 23. The Ducktators, 24. The Weakly Reporter, 25. Fifth Column Mouse, 26. Meet John Doughboy, 27. Hollywood Canine Canteen, 28. By Word of Mouse, 29. Heir Conditioned, 30. Yankee Dood It, 31. Congo Jazz, 32. Smile Dam Ya, Smile! 33. The Booze Hangs High, 34. One More Time, 35. Bosko's Picture Show, 36. You Don't Know What You're Doin'! 37. We're in the Money! 38. Ride 'em Bosko, 39. Shuffle Off to Buffalo, 40. Bosko in Person, 41. The Dish Ran Away with the Spoon, 42. Buddie's Day Out, 43. Buddie's Beer Garden. 44. Buddie's Circus, 45. A Cartoonist's Nightmare, 46. Horton Hatches the Egg, 47. Lights Fantastic, 48. Fresh Airedale, 49. Chow Hound, 50. The Oily American, 51. It's Hummer Time, 52. Rocket Bye Baby, 53. Goo Goo Goliath, 54. Wild Wife, 55. Much Ado About Nutting, 56. The Hole idea, 57. Now Hear This, 58. Martian Through Georgia, 59. Page Miss Glory. 60. Norman Normal)
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