Rabbit Fire
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Rabbit Fire Looney Tunes (Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck) series |
|
| Directed by | Charles M. Jones |
|---|---|
| Produced by | Eddie Selzer |
| Story by | Michael Maltese |
| Voices by | Mel Blanc Arthur Q. Bryan |
| Music by | Carl W. Stalling |
| Animation by | Ken Harris Phil Monroe Lloyd Vaughan Ben Washam |
| Studio | Warner Bros. Cartoons The Vitaphone Corporation |
| Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
| Release date(s) | May 19, 1951 (USA) |
| Color process | Technicolor |
| Running time | 7' |
| Language | English |
| Followed by | Rabbit Seasoning |
Rabbit Fire is a 1950 Looney Tunes cartoon starring Bugs Bunny, directed by Chuck Jones and written by Michael Maltese. The short, also starring Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd, is notable for being the first film in Jones' "hunting trilogy"βthe other two films being Rabbit Seasoning and Duck! Rabbit, Duck!. It is also the first film to feature a feud between Bugs and Daffy. Produced by Edward Selzer for Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., the short was released to theaters on May 19, 1951 by Warner Bros. Pictures and is widely considered among Jones' best and most important films.
The film marks a significant change in Daffy's style, away from the "screwball" and toward the "foil" for Bugs' jokes.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
Daffy Duck lures Elmer Fudd to Bugs Bunny's burrow, and watches from aside when Elmer attempts to shoot Bugs. Bugs informs Elmer that it isn't rabbit season, but instead duck season. Daffy emerges, irate, and attempts to convince Elmer that Bugs is lying. Their conversion breaks down into Bugs leading Daffy to admit it is duck season by a number of verbal plays and reverse psychology, for example:
- Bugs: "Duck season!"
- Daffy: "Wabbit season!"
- Bugs: "Duck season!"
- Daffy: "Wabbit season!"
- Bugs: "Duck season!!"
- Daffy: "Wabbit season!!"
- Bugs: (reversing the flow) "Wabbit season!"
- Daffy: "Duck season!!!"
- Bugs: "Wabbit season!!!"
- Daffy: "I say it's duck season, and I say, FIRE!" (This entire section is used as the opening in Looney Tunes: Back in Action)
Once Daffy admits it is duck season, Elmer fires his shotgun at Daffy, causing the duck to suffer a temporary setback before he comes back and tries again. This repeats several times during the short, with Daffy trying different ploys to get Elmer to shoot Bugs, but Bugs continues to outwit him.
The cartoon climaxes when Elmer finds the two arguing by a tree with a sign that starts with the words "Rabbit Season"; Bugs and Daffy continue to pull off the sign to alternatively reveal it is "Duck Season" or "Rabbit Season" until they hit a final sign, proclaiming it to be "Elmer Season". The tables turned, Bugs and Daffy, dressed as hunters, begin to chase Elmer, telling the audience to be "vewwy, vewwy quiet...we're hunting Elmers!"
[edit] Reaction
Rabbit Fire is generally considered among Chuck Jones' and Michael Maltese's best works, and is noted for its use of dialogue gags in lieu of the physical gags more typical in animation. Besides the two sequels to this film, a number of other notable Jones shorts, including Beanstalk Bunny and Ali Baba Bunny, paired quick-witted Bugs and self-serving Daffy with (or rather against) each other.
The "duck season/rabbit season" argument from this short became one of the most notable references of the Looney Tunes franchise, and has been analyzed both by scholars and by Jones himself (though it should be noted that this gag was actually used by Daffy against Porky 6 years earlier in the cartoon Duck Soup to Nuts). According to an essay by Darragh O'Donoghue, Rabbit Fire "stands in close relation to human experience, striving and generally failing to grasp an elusive quarry or goal."[1]. Richard Thompson said that in the film, there is "the clearest definition of character roles: Elmer never knows what's going on; Bugs always knows what's going on and is in control of things; Daffy is bright enough to understand how to be in control, but never quite makes it." Jones himself refers to Rabbit Fire as a "corner" picture, among his works that, "as in turning a corner in a strange city, reveal new and enchanting vistas."
The short earned an honorable mention for animation historian Jerry Beck's list of The Fifty Greatest Cartoons: As Selected by 1000 Animation Professionals. Its 1952 sequel, Rabbit Seasoning, made the actual list at number 30. The style, setup, and plot of Rabbit Fire were adapted into the opening sequence of Warners' 2003 film Looney Tunes: Back in Action.
The non sequitur elephant character based on Joe Besser was the inspiration for Horatio the Elephant, a recurring character on PBS's Sesame Street.
[edit] Production details
In two interviews conducted years after this cartoon was originally released, director Chuck Jones fondly recalled voice artist Mel Blanc improvising hilariously as Daffy when he was trying to think of another word besides "dethpicable". However, in the finished film, only the words from the original dialogue script actually appear. Historians believe that Blanc did indeed improvise, as Jones remembered, but that Chuck Jones decided to use what was originally written instead. [2]
Rabbit Fire and its two sequels often have two characters in the same frame for some length of time β an atypical aspect of the "Hunting" trilogy. In order to keep budgets under control, most Warner Bros. cartoons would cut back and forth between characters, rather than put two or more in the same shot. [3]
Interestingly, while the film is introduced by the Looney Tunes music The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down, the opening card indicates a Merrie Melodies "Blue Ribbon" release, and the end card is Merrie Melodies, replacing the original orange-red Looney Tunes title sequences.
This marked the first cartoon where Bugs and Daffy starred and appeared together. While Bugs had made a cameo in Porky Pig's Feat (which co-starred Daffy and Porky Pig), this was the first where both were stars.
The title is a play on "rapid fire".
[edit] Censorship
- Network television channels (particularly ABC, CBS, WB, and the syndicated "Merrie Melodies Show") have edited this cartoon (and the other two cartoons in the "hunting trilogy"βRabbit Seasoning and Duck! Rabbit, Duck!) to remove the many times Daffy is shot in the face by Elmer. While ABC and "The Merrie Melodies Show" would simply replace each occurrence with a frozen shot of Bugs looking on while the gunshot can be heard, CBS and WB would cut the entire scene of Daffy getting shot (sound and all).
- Nickelodeon has aired the other two Hunting Trilogy cartoons with the scenes of Daffy getting tricked into being shot by Elmer intact. However, the Nickelodeon version edited Rabbit Fire to remove the "No More Bullets" gag (where Elmer seems to have run out of ammunition, Daffy stares down the barrel of the shotgun and discovers the hard way that there was "one buwwet weft", with the large slug left lodged in his dangling scalp).
[edit] Influences in other media
- The back-and-forth-and-reversed gag from this short is referenced in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, where Eddie Valiant tricks Roger Rabbit into having a glass of whiskey in the same way Bugs tricks Daffy into getting shot.
- Roger: "I don't!"
- Valiant: "You do!"
- Roger: "I don't!"
- Valiant: "You do!"
- Roger:"I don't!"
- Valiant: (reversing the flow) "You don't!"
- Roger: "I do!"
- Valiant: "You don't!"
- Roger: "I do!!"
- Valiant: "You don't!"
- Roger: "Listen, when I say I do, that means I do!" (he chugs the drink)
- Thrice on the sitcom My Wife And Kids, on a sketch on the season 30 Saturday Night Live episode hosted by Paris Hilton, and on the cartoon Johnny Bravo, the verbal trick is used, with the winner being referred to as having "Bugs Bunnied" the loser.
- In the Baby Looney Tunes series, Bugs uses this same trick to get Daffy to agree with him once or twice.
- Bugs: "I'll take the back seat, you take the front seat!"
- Daffy: "Oh no you don't, I'm sitting in the back seat!"
- Bugs: "I'm sitting in the back seat!"
- Daffy: "I'm sitting in the back seat!"
- Bugs: "I'm sitting in the back seat!"
- Daffy: "I'm sitting in the back seat!"
- Bugs: "You're sitting in the back seat!"
- Daffy: "You're sitting in the back seat, and that's final!"
- Bugs: "Okay Daffy, if you say so." (Daffy realizes he was tricked)
- Daffy: "I'd better remember not to fall for that one again."
[edit] Credits
- Produced by: Edward Selzer
- Directed by: Chuck Jones
- Story: Michael Maltese
- Music: Carl Stalling
- Animation: Ken Harris, Phil Monroe, Lloyd Vaughan, Ben Washam
- Background: Philip DeGuard
- Layout: Robert Gribbroek
- Voice Characterisions: Mel Blanc
[edit] References
| This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2008) |
[edit] Notes
- ^ Darragh O'Donoghue's review of What's Opera, Doc?, Rabbit Fire, and Feline Frameup. sensesofcinema.com
- ^ "You're Despicable!" - michaelbarrier.com. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ^ Michael Barrier's audio commentary for Disc One of Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 1 (2005).
[edit] Sources
- Jones, Chuck (1989). Chuck Amuck : The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist. New York: Farrar Straus & Giroux. ISBN 0-374-12348-9.
- Jones, Chuck (1996). Chuck Reducks : Drawing from the Fun Side of Life. New York: Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-51893-X.
- Thompson, Richard (Jan-Feb 1975). Film Comment.
[edit] External links
| Preceded by The Fair-Haired Hare |
Bugs Bunny Cartoons 1951 |
Succeeded by French Rarebit |

