Fantastic!
A Brilliant Conflict
The joyful confection is coated in a sparkly gloss, bright enough to gleam from the darkest, most cynical corners.
View MoreThe movie really just wants to entertain people.
Bugs Bunny has always been one of animation's best, funniest, most interesting and most iconic characters. While Chuck Jones perhaps had the larger amount of masterpieces, Fritz Freleng was still responsible for some thoroughly enjoyable to great cartoons.While both Bugs and Freleng have done better cartoons than 'Hare Force', there is still a huge amount to enjoy and love. My only real complaint in fact is the character design of Bugs, it has been said that Bugs does look off and personally have to agree, the design is a bit scrappy and the movement has been smoother since.That aside, the animation is fine. The colours are vibrant, the backgrounds very meticulous in detail and the drawing fluid and very smooth.Carl Stalling never disappoints and one of my favourite composers in cartoon history, 'Hare Force' does nothing to change that perception. Anybody expecting luscious orchestration, characterful rhythms, clever use of instrumentation and sounds and the ability to elevate gags to a greater level rather than just adding to it will find all of those aplenty.Dialogue is high and delicious in freshness and wit, and the gags are beautifully animated, high in energy and with not a single misfire. Bugs, despite the design, doesn't disappoint in personality and humour, and Sylvester is a very amusing foil and interacts wonderfully with Bugs, even if Bugs is the funnier and more interesting character.Voice acting is terrific all round, especially from Mel Blanc.Overall, great, thoroughly enjoyable cartoon if not among the best from either Bugs or Freleng. 9/10 Bethany Cox
View MoreThis is a Bugs Bunny cartoon produced by Warner Brothers and directed by Friz Freleng. There will be spoilers ahead:The short opens on a dog named Sylvester and his mistress, a grandmotherly type, with the woman wishing the dog good night and the dog comfy and cozy by the fire. There's a knock on the door and the old woman finds Bugs Bunny in the cold. She brings him in and puts him in the dog's spot and covers him with the dog's blanket, saying "Good night, little bunny" as she goes up to bed.The dog becomes angry and jealous, contemplates Bugs's demise in colorful fashion before tossing him out. Bugs, of course, cons his way back inside. It helps that Sylvester isn't the shiniest pebble in the pond and vacillates between seething rage and a suddenly tender solicitude for Bugs.The bulk of the cartoon has the two in a struggle with regard to who gets tossed out and how they get back in again. The best bits are when Bugs retrieves Sylvester when the woman comes down to see to the commotion and when Bugs and Sylvester start behaving like boxers preparing for a fight ("How's the weather, John L.?"). The penultimate scene has the two alternate in being thrown out, to come back in and throw the other out, until the final toss, which is clever. The closing scene is a classic.This short is available on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume Three and is well worth having. Recommended.
View MoreGranny has just tucked Sylvester the dog in for the night when she hears a knock at the door. She opens it and sees a half-frozen Bugs Bunny, who is exaggerating his sorry plight for effect. Granny buys the act and lets Bugs sleep right next to Sylvester in front of the fireplace. But the jealous dog is having none of it. The first chance he gets, he throws Bugs back out in the cold. Bugs plays on the dog's pity to get back in but can't resist a dirty trick. When a snow sculpture of himself melts, Sylvester thinks it's the real rabbit and succumbs to paroxysms of guilt before he discovers the ruse. From then on, the two play a game of one-upmanship that ends when Granny gets in on the game.Bugs Bunny made a smart career move when he began playing a more sympathetic character—still violent but only when sorely provoked. Still, you gotta love the jerk he often was in his early films. He gets Sylvester to feel sorry for his unkind actions; he could have left it at that. But no, he has to go and torment the dog and generally cause trouble. And what Bugs does at the end?"Ain't I a stinker?" Yeah, Bugs, you really are!This cartoon is included in the "Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume Three," Disc 1.
View MoreIn 'Hare Force,' Bugs Bunny is brought in on a cold winter night, where he must share the warm fire with a dog named Sylvester. Of course, Sylvester gets jealous and the two battle it out. 'Hare Force' certainly has some funny bits, but nothing spectacular. Over all, the film seems to drag a bit, pretty unusual for a Bugs Bunny short.
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