Apr 08, 2015 The looney tunes (commonly mistaken as Looney Toons) series features characters such as bugs bunny, daffy duck & porky pig. The looney tunes cartoons, movies and new looney tunes show have been. Dec 09, 2014 The Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote are at it again in this classic Looney Tunes episode. Some highlights include Coyote lighting a match in a room full of explosives and Coyote flying off into the sky with one of his rockets. Directed by: Charles M. Jones / Wile E. Coyote makes 11 disastrous attempts to catch the Road runner. Aug 10, 2013 Well you can find most of the episodes in this link: Merrie Melodies: Giant Robot Love.
New Looney Tunes (formerly known as Wabbit: A Looney Tunes Production for its first season) is an American animated television series from Warner Bros. Animation based on the characters from Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies.[3] The series premiered on September 21, 2015 on Cartoon Network,[4][5] and later premiered on October 5, 2015 on Boomerang. The show (along with most other series produced by W. B. Animation) was then later moved to Boomerang's SVOD service where episodes are released before airing on television.[6][7][8]
On May 23, 2018, the Boomerang streaming service announced that New Looney Tunes would continue into the 2018–2019 animation season. The third season will be the final season. The production of another Looney Tunes revival called Looney Tunes Cartoons,[9] for which a trailer was shown on June 10, 2019.
On September 3, 2019, reruns of the show began airing on Cartoon Network along with The Tom and Jerry Show.
Production[edit]
Squeaks and Bugs, as drawn in a promotional still.[note 1]
After The Looney Tunes Show ended production in 2013, concepts for a new show featuring the Looney Tunes led to the decision for a reboot of the characters. At the time, the idea of making a reboot of all of the Looney Tunes focused mainly on Bugs Bunny and in March 2014, it was announced that the reboot would be known as wabbit. (or bugs! in some regions), to coincide with other reboots of Warner Bros. classics, such as Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! and The Tom and Jerry Show.[11]Sam Register, promoted to president of Warner Bros. Animation and Warner Digital Series a month prior, became supervising producer for the series.[12] The animation was done by Yearim and Rough Draft Studios from South Korea and Snipple Animation from the Philippines.
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The aim of the reboot was for its cartoons to match the tone of the Looney Tunes shorts in their earlier days. This led to the characters returning to their slapstick comedy roots,[13] but with producers seeking to avoid their clichés, such as the anvil gag. The show's production team placed their emphasis on writing original stories, as well as devising 'modern heavy objects to cause pain', according to producer Erik Kuska, with each episode featuring a few shorts in which one or a number of characters became caught up in a situation that they would handle in their own personal way. Despite that, some classic objects can occasionally be seen, such as boulders or safes. Similarly, some classic expressions can be heard, such as Bugs forgetting to 'make that left turn at Albuquerque', or uttering 'of course you know, this means war' (though 'war' is usually replaced with other phrases invoking conflict of some sort). The characters themselves saw some alterations to their appearances, with some also reverting to personality traits they originally had in their earliest appearances - for example, Daffy Duck was reverted to his original screwball personality from his early shorts.
The first season of the show was known as Wabbit and focused primarily on Bugs Bunny as the main character, with recurring appearances by Yosemite Sam, Wile E. Coyote and Porky Pig, and minor appearances by Daffy Duck, Foghorn Leghorn, Elmer Fudd, the Tasmanian Devil (who portrayed a white-collar worker named Theodore Tasmanian), and Michigan J. Frog (who made a cameo at the end of one short). Like his early shorts, Bugs mostly finds himself outwitting opponents either because they seek to cause him trouble or have done something to wreck his peaceful life. The first season saw the introduction of a few new characters to the Looney Tunes franchise,[14] many of them being new villains Bugs faces, but not without the help of his friends.[15]
Among the new characters introduced in this show are:
According to Kuska, the focus on newer antagonists for Bugs to deal with was described as allowing him to do his 'best when he's up against a really good adversary'. As a result of the inclusion of new villains, Kuska felt that Elmer Fudd might not be 'the man' anymore, having often been a common antagonist that Bugs dealt with in many shorts, despite appearing later on in the series.[14]
After the first season ended, the production team decided to focus on the other Looney Tunes stars besides Bugs, thus the show was retooled and renamed New Looney Tunes for the second season and featured a new intro, with music based on the late 1930's Looney Tunes theme. While the first season focused mainly on Bugs and a handful of returning classic characters, the second season saw the addition of stories centering around the other classic characters including, among others, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Elmer Fudd, the Tasmanian Devil (who was reverted to his original personality starting in Season 2), Foghorn Leghorn, Sylvester, Tweety, Granny, Speedy Gonzales, Marvin the Martian, Road Runner, Pepé Le Pew (who is usually portrayed as a James Bond-esque secret agent), Witch Hazel, Petunia Pig and Lola Bunny. Some episodes saw characters operating as a double act (a plot mechanic mainly used for Daffy and Porky, as had been done in the classic shorts). Several obscure figures from the classic Looney Tunes shorts such as the Goofy Gophers, Michigan J. Frog, Cecil Turtle, Hubie and Bertie, Count Blood Count, Marc Antony and Pussyfoot, Claude Cat, Pete Puma, Blacque Jacque Shellacque, Sniffles and Gabby Goat also made appearances.
Season 3 will feature Axl Rose as a guest star in the episode 'Armageddon Outta Here' and will feature his first studio recording since 2008.[17]
Cast[edit]Main cast[edit]
Additional voices[edit]
Episodes[edit]
Broadcast[edit]
Wabbit premiered on September 21, 2015 on Cartoon Network and on Boomerang beginning October 5, 2015, then went on hiatus for over a year and return on April 7, 2017.[19][20][21][22] The series premiered on November 2 on Boomerang in Australia and New Zealand and on Boomerang in the United Kingdom and Ireland.[23][24] It premiered on November 6, 2015 on Teletoon in Canada[25] and debuted on December 19 on Boomerang in the Middle East and Africa.[26] In India, the series premiered on Pogo TV on 19 December 2015.[27] The series premiered on January 10, 2016 on Cartoon Network Arabic in the Middle East.
New episodes began being broadcast on Boomerang, starting April 7, 2017.
Season 2 premiered on Boomerang UK on September 4, 2017.
The entire first season is available on Netflix in Canada.
The show streams exclusively on the Boomerang premium subscription service, available on Android, iOS, desktop, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Kindle Fire Tablet, Roku and Chromecast.[6]
Home media[edit]
The first half of Season 1 of Wabbit was released onto DVD on April 26, 2016 in the United States. Despite being half of a season, the DVD is subtitled, Hare-Raising Tales. The DVD contains the first 26 episodes (52 segments) but is labeled on the side as Season 1 – Part 1.[28][29] The DVD contains episodes 23–26 which did not air in the United States until April 7, 2017. Disregarding the show's European name, Wabbit: Season 1 – Part 1 was also released in the United Kingdom on July 25, 2016[30] and June 15, 2016 in Australia.[31]
Explanatory notes[edit]
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=New_Looney_Tunes&oldid=917653901'
This is a listing of all the animated shorts released by Warner Bros. under the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies banners between 1950 and 1959.
A total of 278 shorts were released during the 1950s.
Identification numbers
Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons were each assigned identification numbers that would appear directly on title cards shown at the beginning of each short. These numbers included cartoon studio production numbers, Vitaphone release numbers, Blue Ribbon re-release numbers, and MPAA certificate numbers. Not all of these types of numbers were listed in the title cards of every cartoon and the numbering schemes were sometimes inconsistent. For example, until 1943 cartoons listed Vitaphone release numbers but not cartoon studio production numbers. These release numbers, in turn, increased to 9999 but then restarted at 1. Complicating matters was the Warner Bros. Blue Ribbon re-release program, in which some cartoons were re-released in theaters with new title cards that often removed original production credits and substituted production or release numbers with new re-release numbers. In many cases, the Blue Ribbon releases are the only available prints of a cartoon, making it challenging to discern these cartoons' correct original production information.[1]
In the list below, Blue Ribbon re-release numbers are noted with 'BR' and Vitaphone release numbers are noted with 'VP'.
1950
Starting this year, all cartoons are in Technicolor.
1951
Most of the cartoons released this year also received Blue Ribbon reissues.
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959![]()
See alsoNotes
Looney Tunes Classic Cartoons Full EpisodesFurther reading
External links
Looney Tunes Cartoons Full Episodes Bugs Bunny And Daffy Duck
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Looney_Tunes_and_Merrie_Melodies_filmography_(1950–59)&oldid=919325414'
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