Knight-mare Hare: Difference between revisions
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Bugs is later chased by a fire-breathing [[dinosaur]]-type [[dragon]]. ("My, what big [[horny toad]]s they have here.") He manages to defeat him by spraying seltzer into his mouth. With his fire lost, the powerless dragon whimpers and flees. |
Bugs is later chased by a fire-breathing [[dinosaur]]-type [[dragon]]. ("My, what big [[horny toad]]s they have here.") He manages to defeat him by spraying seltzer into his mouth. With his fire lost, the powerless dragon whimpers and flees. |
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Bugs later goes to another castle, the residence of a wizard named [[Marilyn Monroe|Merlin of Monroe]]. Merlin changes Bugs into a pig with some "magic powder", but as Merlin laughs and comes shocked, Bugs simply unzips the "costume" into his normal self. He shows Merlin if he can light a fire on his finger like a match, and as Merlin tries doing the same and has no avail, Bugs later walks by him to see him failing all the time, but uses the "magic powder"on the wizard, and tells Merlin to look, and turns him into a [[horse]]. Now mad that Bugs has turned him into his horse form, and just like Bugs has changed himself back to normal by unzipping the costume, Merlin bravely tries hard to change himself back to normal by also "unzipping", but only ends up with the same horse appearance by landing in confusion and pure shock, then still continues to keep unzipping into the same costume no matter how many times he unzips the costume. To try to return to the present, Bugs Bunny walks alongside the table and finds and throws an apple in the air to hit him on the head ("Well, why not? After all, they've laughed at [[Alexander Fleming|the man]] when he discovered [[penicillin]]"); he is successful in this attempt. Walking down the country road, he approaches a farmer tending to a plowhorse wearing a beane cap who looks exactly like the one he turned Merlin into. He walks on by, convincing himself that it is not the same animal, proclaiming "Nah, impossible. Couldn't be him". The farmer then says "Alright, Merlin, giddy up, get along now", to which Bugs does a surprised double-take to the camera, ending the cartoon. |
Bugs later goes to another castle, the residence of a wizard named [[Marilyn Monroe|Merlin of Monroe]]. Merlin changes Bugs into a pig with some "magic powder", but as Merlin laughs and comes shocked, Bugs simply unzips the "costume" into his normal self. He shows Merlin if he can light a fire on his finger like a match, and as Merlin tries doing the same and has no avail, Bugs later walks by him to see him failing all the time, but uses the "magic powder"on the wizard, and tells Merlin to look, and turns him into a [[horse]] when Merlin turns around. Now as he sees that he is the very horse Bugs has turned into and is very mad that Bugs has turned him into his horse form, and just like Bugs has changed himself back to normal by unzipping the costume, Merlin bravely tries hard to change himself back to normal by also "unzipping", but only ends up with the same horse appearance by landing in confusion and pure shock, then still continues to keep unzipping into the same costume no matter how many times he unzips the costume. To try to return to the present, Bugs Bunny walks alongside the table and finds and throws an apple in the air to hit him on the head ("Well, why not? After all, they've laughed at [[Alexander Fleming|the man]] when he discovered [[penicillin]]"); he is successful in this attempt. Walking down the country road, he approaches a farmer tending to a plowhorse wearing a beane cap who looks exactly like the one he turned Merlin into. He walks on by, convincing himself that it is not the same animal, proclaiming "Nah, impossible. Couldn't be him". The farmer then says "Alright, Merlin, giddy up, get along now", to which Bugs does a surprised double-take to the camera, ending the cartoon. |
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==Home media== |
==Home media== |
Revision as of 10:09, 18 June 2023
Knight-mare Hare | |
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Directed by | Chuck Jones |
Story by | Tedd Pierce |
Produced by | Edward Selzer |
Starring | Mel Blanc |
Music by | Milt Franklyn |
Animation by | Ken Harris Ben Washam Abe Levitow Richard Thompson |
Layouts by | Ernie Nordli |
Backgrounds by | Philip De Guard |
Color process | Technicolor |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures The Vitaphone Corporation |
Release date | October 1, 1955 |
Running time | 7:30 |
Language | English |
Knight-mare Hare is a 1955 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies theatrical cartoon directed by Chuck Jones and written by Tedd Pierce.[1] The short was released on October 1, 1955, and stars Bugs Bunny.[2]
Plot
Loosely based on Mark Twain's 1889 novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, the cartoon begins with Bugs Bunny, who is reading a book on the Knights of the Round Table under a hairdryer. While reading, an apple falls and hits his head and he is somehow transported to the time of King Arthur. When he wakes up, he finds himself at the pointy end of a knight's lance. When Bugs asks him: "What's up, Duke?", the knight commands Bugs to surrender as a prisoner of his lance. The knight identifies himself as "Sir O of Kay, Earl of Watercress, Sir Osis of The Liver, Knight of the Garter, and Baron of Worcestersistercestersoustercestersistershire." Ready to take Bugs' challenge to tilt with him for the insult of Bugs' friends, the Duke of Ellington, Count of Basie, Earl of Hines, Cab of Calloway and Satchmo of Armstrong who the knight never heard of and called them "upstarts and rogues", the knight offers Bugs a too heavy sword, then begins to charge at him, during several comedic attempts by Bugs to get the sword off the ground. At the last second, Bugs puts his leg out tripping the knight's horse. The horse falls and the knight pole vaults on his lance over the castle wall and into a high window of a castle tower, falling loudly to the bottom inside the tower.
Bugs is later chased by a fire-breathing dinosaur-type dragon. ("My, what big horny toads they have here.") He manages to defeat him by spraying seltzer into his mouth. With his fire lost, the powerless dragon whimpers and flees.
Bugs later goes to another castle, the residence of a wizard named Merlin of Monroe. Merlin changes Bugs into a pig with some "magic powder", but as Merlin laughs and comes shocked, Bugs simply unzips the "costume" into his normal self. He shows Merlin if he can light a fire on his finger like a match, and as Merlin tries doing the same and has no avail, Bugs later walks by him to see him failing all the time, but uses the "magic powder"on the wizard, and tells Merlin to look, and turns him into a horse when Merlin turns around. Now as he sees that he is the very horse Bugs has turned into and is very mad that Bugs has turned him into his horse form, and just like Bugs has changed himself back to normal by unzipping the costume, Merlin bravely tries hard to change himself back to normal by also "unzipping", but only ends up with the same horse appearance by landing in confusion and pure shock, then still continues to keep unzipping into the same costume no matter how many times he unzips the costume. To try to return to the present, Bugs Bunny walks alongside the table and finds and throws an apple in the air to hit him on the head ("Well, why not? After all, they've laughed at the man when he discovered penicillin"); he is successful in this attempt. Walking down the country road, he approaches a farmer tending to a plowhorse wearing a beane cap who looks exactly like the one he turned Merlin into. He walks on by, convincing himself that it is not the same animal, proclaiming "Nah, impossible. Couldn't be him". The farmer then says "Alright, Merlin, giddy up, get along now", to which Bugs does a surprised double-take to the camera, ending the cartoon.
Home media
The cartoon is available on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 4 DVD box set.
See also
References
- ^ Beck, Jerry; Friedwald, Will (1989). Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros. Cartoons. Henry Holt and Co. p. 278. ISBN 0-8050-0894-2.
- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 60–62. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
External links
- 1955 films
- 1955 animated films
- 1955 short films
- 1950s fantasy comedy films
- Merrie Melodies short films
- Warner Bros. Cartoons animated short films
- Short films directed by Chuck Jones
- American fantasy comedy films
- Arthurian animated films
- Films based on A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
- Films scored by Milt Franklyn
- Bugs Bunny films
- 1955 comedy films
- 1950s Warner Bros. animated short films
- 1950s English-language films