|
Looney Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Three
|
Click image for larger view
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RESTORED, REMASTERED AND REE-DICULOUS: COMPLETELY UNCUT AND UNCENSORED LOONEY-NESS, INCLUDING SOME HOME VIDEO DEBUTS! You know what you want. More three-day weekends. More ounces in a pound of chocolates. More Looney Tunes. Your wish is our command. Because in this 4-disc set are 60 more of the most looneytic Looney Tunes ever unleashed on rabbit, duck, pig or humanity. Indeed, some have never before been on home video! Disc 1 features the tall, gray and haresome one. Disc 2 lampoons Hollywood. Ham actor Porky Pig rules Disc 3. And Disc 4 has the duck and a cast of crazies. One thing: to watch these, you must be as tall as this sign. Wrong disclaimer. Read the one in the box below. Got the idea? Now have fun. And pass the chocolates. Disclaimer Box Copy: The Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 3 Is Intended for the Adult Collector and May Not Be Suitable for Children.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Like the previous entries in the Looney Tunes Golden Collection series, volume 3 confirms how brilliant the Warner Bros. artists were and how durable their creations have proven. The set includes classics that every cartoon buff will recognize: "Duck! Rabbit! Duck!," "Robin Hood Daffy," "Birds Anonymous." Other selections are less familiar but significant in the development of the studio: "Sinkin' in the Bathtub," the first Looney Tune; "I Haven't Got a Hat," the earliest Warners cartoon viewers can watch for fun, rather than as an historic curiosity; "Porky's Romance," in which director Frank Tashlin introduced rapid cutting to cartoons. Some of the caricature films have aged less gracefully. Younger audiences will recognize the drawn versions of W.C. Fields, the Marx Brothers, Katharine Hepburn, and Charlie Chaplin. But will anyone under the age of 60 remember Edna Mae Oliver, George Arliss, or Ned Sparks? The producers have once again loaded the discs with supplemental material, including "Point Food Rationing," a unseen short explaining wartime ration books; a BBC documentary on Chuck Jones; and interstitial animated sequences for The Bugs Bunny Show. "Philbert" ranks as the oddest of the extras: an unsold (and leaden) pilot from 1963, featuring live actors and an animated title character. Whoopi Goldberg introduces the set, explaining that some of the ethnic gags would no longer be considered appropriate. But she correctly adds that to remove them would falsify both the history of animation and American popular culture. It all adds up to a set every cartoon fan will want. (Unrated, suitable for all ages: cartoon violence) --Charles Solomon
|
|
|
Looney Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Three
If you like this DVD movie, check out these items!
|
|
User Comments About Looney Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Three
|
|
|
|
Who needs Fort Knox when you have this Gold!!!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Incredibly fast paced and surprisingly ahead of its time, they are laugh out loud funny and entertaining as ever. Better reviews and plenty of valid commendations have been given to this wonderful collection already so I will just add my humble two cents about one disc in particular.
The Porky cartoons are AMAZING. BOY was I wrong. Tashlin's filmmaking eye gives an extra dimension of humour to his cartoons and the comraderie created between pig and duck is awe inspiring and side splitting.
After excitingly perusing the contents, I was eager to watch all cartoons immediately but the disc I expected the least from was the Porky Pig Disc as Porky never stood out in my childhood memories, always being upstaged by Bugs and Daffy. Porky's Romance (another Tashlin cartoon) is also worthy of praise as is nearly all cartoons on this disc, and all the cartoons in this collection. The highlight for me is Frank Tashlin's gem in which Porky and Daffy attempt to escape a hotel without paying the bill.
Bye Bye Blubeard is another SMASH, part of the humour being the fact that Blubeard is genuinely frightening, and I don't think I will ever laugh as much as I did with the pie in the face gag.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Looney Tunes Golden Collection series has been a godsend for fans, but only serious collectors will probably be enthralled beyond this third volume. efforts in WWII and some ancient treasures from the vaults. There are still plenty of classics herein, including some of my personal favorites that were not included in the first two sets, and that makes this third set worth the purchase. In turn, even the second volume had a fair amount of less-than-classic filler, and here in the third volume there are many early-period and late-period items that are outside of the Warner Bros. This third volume is also showing some strain with the bonus features, though there is some historical interest in documentaries about the Warner Bros.
Whoopi comes on automatically with her paternalistic warning in each of these discs, but within one second you can hit the Menu button and navigate to the cartoons themselves. And finally, I'm throwing in my hat with fans who are sick to death of the politically correct warnings from Whoopi Goldberg about those old unfortunate racial caricatures. golden age and offer diminishing returns for fans of the classics. We all know those caricatures were ignorant and sometimes they added objectionable prejudice to the classic cartoons that we love.
But fortunately this set is saved by a smattering of all-time masterpieces that were not squeezed into the first two volumes, and one overall redeeming feature here is a disc devoted to Porky Pig, particularly his early starring runs in which the Warner Bros. For instance, there is a serious problem with Disc 2, a collection of Hollywood parodies, most of which are so old and non-character-driven that it's a real struggle to figure out the point of the parodies and who's being caricatured. [~doomsdayer520~] But the "greatest hits" strategy of the Golden Collection, with the cartoon shorts compiled categorically rather than chronologically, inevitably runs out of steam with most of the funniest shorts piled up in about the first one and a half volumes.
And despite the aforementioned problems with compilation, there are still enough classics in this volume to help you ignore what modern producers think about your love of the best American humor and animation. team experimented with many of the forms later perfected with Bugs Bunny,. But we don't need Time Warner to tell us what to think, and these warnings are tailored for people who would never even watch these discs - either humorless thought police or bigots who are stupid enough to convert ancient stereotypes into modern hatred.
|
|
Looney Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Three
|
|
|
|
|
|
They just don't make cartoons like these any more. I laugh out loud when I watch them and this Christmas I am giving them as gifts for posterity.
|
|
Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
Makes three of the five collections I own and a welcome addition. This is a great collection of Looney Tunes. Recommend it highly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Got tired of getting up on Saturdays with wierd cartoons on my TV. Said to myself what ever happened to bugs and daffy, well I found them.
|
|
|
|
|
|