The Big Snooze
This article is written like a story.(April 2019) |
The Big Snooze | |
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Directed by | Bob Clampett (uncredited) |
Story by | Warren Foster (uncredited) |
Produced by | Eddie Selzer |
Starring |
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Music by | Carl Stalling |
Animation by | |
Layouts by | Thomas McKimson |
Backgrounds by |
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Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
Distributed by | |
Release date |
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Running time | 7 minutes |
Language | English |
The Big Snooze is a 1946 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by an uncredited Bob Clampett. It was his final theatrical cartoon for Warner[1], as he had completed it before he left the Warner cartoon studio. Its title was inspired by the 1939 book The Big Sleep, and its 1946 film adaptation, also a Warner release. The Big Snooze features Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd, voiced as usual by Mel Blanc and Arthur Q. Bryan.[1]
Plot
[edit]Bugs and Elmer are in the midst of their usual hunting-chasing scenario. After Bugs tricks Elmer into running through a hollow log and off a cliff three times (a comic triple of sorts originally used in Avery's All this and Rabbit Stew. In fact, the same animation sequence was recycled for "The Big Snooze", with the stereotypical black hunter being redrawn into Elmer Fudd), Elmer becomes enraged and frustrated that the writers never let him catch the rabbit in the pictures from which they both appear. He tears up his Warner Bros. cartoon contract and walks off the set to devote his life to fishing, stunning Bugs, who piteously protests and unabashedly, ultimately fruitlessly, begs him to reconsider. During a relaxing fishing trip, Elmer falls asleep.
Bugs observes Elmer's nap, sings a little of Beautiful Dreamer and remarks that the dream he notices Elmer is having - that of a classic log and saw, representing snoring - is "a heavenly dream". Then, Bugs decides he had "better look into this", and downs a sleeping pill. He dreams he is inside Elmer's dream, in a boat crooning Someone's Rocking My Dreamboat. He decides to use Nightmare Paint to disrupt the "serene scene".
Within Elmer's dreamland, Bugs creates incidences designed to unsettle: Elmer appears nearly nude, wearing only his derby hat and a strategically placed "loincloth" consisting of a laurel wreath. Next, in a musical parody of "The Campbells Are Coming", and a visual parody of the Pink Elephants on Parade sequence from the 1941 Disney film Dumbo, Bugs creates a situation where "Ziwwions and twiwwions of wabbits" are dancing over Elmer while Bugs' voice is heard singing, "The rabbits are coming. Hooray! Hooray!" When Elmer asks where they are all coming from, Bugs replies, "From me, Doc." Then we see him literally multiplying them from an adding machine.
Looking for another way to torment Elmer, Bugs consults the book A Thousand and One Arabian Nightmares, exclaiming, "Oh, no! It's too gruesome!" before peeking over the book to cheerfully tell the audience, "But I'll do it!" Elmer realizes what Bugs has in mind, pleading, "No, no! No, not that! Not that, pwease!" as Bugs ties him to railroad tracks, just as "the Super Chief" (Bugs in an Indian chief's war bonnet, leading a conga line of baby rabbits) crosses over Elmer's head.
Elmer's anger about a failed pursuit through the surreal landscape - which he demonstrates by shaking his head and making a sound similar to "brrrrr" - is promptly used against him by Bugs who inquires, "What's the matter doc, ya cold? Here, I'll fix dat." Before Elmer can protest, Bugs dresses him like a woman, wrapping his body with green material which transforms into a gown, slapping a wig on him, and applying lipstick. Bugs inspects his handiwork, then lifts the backdrop to reveal a trio of literal wolves in Zoot suits, lounging by the sign at Hollywood and Vine. When the trio notice Elmer, one wolf howls, "Hooooow old is she?" while another begins flirting with Elmer. Bugs enjoys watching the male wolves hit on Elmer, who yells, "Gwacious!" before grabbing the hem of his gown and fleeing from the pursuing wolves; he briefly stops to ask the audience, "Have any of you giwls evew had an expewience wike this?"
Bugs intercepts Elmer and proceeds to engage in the old "run 'this way'!" gag, putting Elmer through a bizarre series of steps which include flipping upside down to run on his hair, hopping on all fours, and dancing a hopak.
As Bugs and Elmer fall off a cliff, Bugs drinks some "Hare Tonic (Stops Falling Hare)" and screeches to a halt in mid-air, while the dream Elmer continues to careen toward earth, finally crash-landing into the real Elmer's snoozing body. He wakes up with a start, exclaiming, "Ooh, what a howwible nightmare!".
Elmer dashes back to the cartoon's original background, pieces his Warner contract back together, and agrees to continue. The chase through the log begins anew. Bugs faces the audience in a closeup, finishing with the catchphrase from the "Beulah" character on the radio show Fibber McGee and Molly,[2] "Ah love dat man!"
Availability
[edit]The Big Snooze is available in a restored, uncensored version on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 2 DVD set, as part of the compilation What's Up, Doc? A Salute to Bugs Bunny on Volume 3, and on the Boomerang streaming service.
See also
[edit]- Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies filmography
- List of Bugs Bunny cartoons
- List of cartoons featuring Elmer Fudd
References
[edit]- ^ a b Template:Bcdb title bcdb.com May 9, 2011
- ^ Billy Ingram. "The Beulah Show". Retrieved September 15, 2006.
External links
[edit]- 1946 films
- 1946 animated short films
- 1940s American animated films
- Looney Tunes shorts
- Warner Bros. Cartoons animated short films
- American films
- Cross-dressing in American films
- Films about nightmares
- Films directed by Bob Clampett
- Films about hunters
- Films scored by Carl Stalling
- American animated short films
- Bugs Bunny films