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Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 6--This Is The End - Page 5

post #121 of 151
If character sets do indeed become the next thing, then I'm guessing they would likely start with Bugs and/or Daffy in order to give the sets a good launching pad. I'm fine with that even though both characters were widely featured on the GC's. I'd just like to see the unreleased shorts come out.

With regard to a character like Foghorn, perhaps they could even do a complete collection including the already released ones all together. Then you have everything all at once for your favorite character. Depending on the number of shorts that a particular character starred in, then complete collections could certainly be possible.
post #122 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rain View Post

If character sets do indeed become the next thing, then I'm guessing they would likely start with Bugs and/or Daffy in order to give the sets a good launching pad. I'm fine with that even though both characters were widely featured on the GC's. I'd just like to see the unreleased shorts come out.

 

There is NO ideal solution to this!  But, if Warner holds to its promise of no double-dipping with the LTGCs (which I suspect they will NOT), then character-specific sets are okay - and a good way to finish-off Bugs, Daffy, et al. 
post #123 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Lugoff View Post

If Warner released all 1,000 Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies in chronological order in one great big gigantic 50 DVD set (with extras), how much would you be willing to pay for it?

Why not use Blu-Rays discs with their much greater storage capacity and keep the cartoons at DVD quality (which are still pretty darn good) and cut the number of discs substantially?
post #124 of 151
Does anyone know what the approx % of the Looney Tune shorts that haven't been released?  In other words, how many remain unreleased that aren't included in the GC vol's?
post #125 of 151
Hey Jeff, I have listed 1,005 Looney Tunes cartoons produced by WB. This excludes Pvt. Snafu, Mr. Hook, and all toons produced in the 80s and beyond. There are 374 released in the Golden Collection and therefore 37% complete.
post #126 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeff Willis View Post

Does anyone know what the approx % of the Looney Tune shorts that haven't been released?  In other words, how many remain unreleased that aren't included in the GC vol's?

It's easy to get a rough estimate of it.  Most sources say there were about 1,000 Looney Tunes-Merrie Melodies cartoons.  There were six GC's, each with about 60 cartoons, for a total of about 360, so we can say approximately 36% of the cartoons were released and 64% unreleased.

[Added note:  The other Joe above and I were typing at the same time, and it's nice to see we arrived at about the same answer.]
post #127 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sam Favate View Post




Why not use Blu-Rays discs with their much greater storage capacity and keep the cartoons at DVD quality (which are still pretty darn good) and cut the number of discs substantially?
 

I've mentioned that here in the past when the number of disc that would need to be manufactured was theorized as being a major roadblock to releasing something, and never got a reply back from anyone.

I think its a good idea if allowed. There's certainly SD content (Such as bonus content) on some Blu-Ray releases, so I don't see why a entire disc can't contain a great deal of SD content unless there are Blu-Ray licensing terms that forbid it.
post #128 of 151

This might be slightly off topic, but does anyone feel that the Warner Brothers cartoons were much less enjoyable when Bill Lava started composing the music for them after Milt Franklyn died? Man, do I despise the Lava-scored cartoons. The music by Carl Stalling and Franklyn to me always seemed so inspired, but the Lava stuff was lousy and cheap-sounding.

When Nick used to air its daily 30-minute Looney Tunes program, they would show three cartoons, but it never seemed to fail that one of them always had to be one with music by Bill Lava. That used to drive me nuts.

post #129 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by jquirk View Post

This might be slightly off topic, but does anyone feel that the Warner Brothers cartoons were much less enjoyable when Bill Lava started composing the music for them after Milt Franklyn died? Man, do I despise the Lava-scored cartoons. The music by Carl Stalling and Franklyn to me always seemed so inspired, but the Lava stuff was lousy and cheap-sounding.

When Nick used to air its daily 30-minute Looney Tunes program, they would show three cartoons, but it never seemed to fail that one of them always had to be one with music by Bill Lava. That used to drive me nuts.


Agreed, but he did a fine job scoring F-TROOP!  Maybe scoring cartoons just wasn't one of his talents. 
post #130 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by jquirk View Post

...does anyone feel that the Warner Brothers cartoons were much less enjoyable when Bill Lava started composing the music for them...

Yes and they deteriorated even more when WB outsourced the toons to DePatie-Freleng Enterprises after they shutdown the animation studios.  I cringe anytime one of these Looney Tunes is shown and absolutely hate the fact that some of them found their way into the Golden collections.
post #131 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by BobO'Link View Post



Yes and they deteriorated even more when WB outsourced the toons to DePatie-Freleng Enterprises after they shutdown the animation studios.  I cringe anytime one of these Looney Tunes is shown and absolutely hate the fact that some of them found their way into the Golden collections.

 

Hmmm... So much for "Complete and Chronological"! 

Proving my point to the "Complete and Chronological" True Believers among us! 

Some don't want the early stuff, and others don't want the later stuff. 

Not putting "Bob" or anyone else down for their opinions.  Just illustrating my point of some posts ago. 

"Complete and Chronological" would never work for the vastness that is Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies... and the Golden Collection format is STILL the best way they could have gone in what is a no-win situation for WHV. 

...Too bad they couldn't see fit to continue! 
post #132 of 151
^100% agree.  I appreciate the historical nature of the early material but the toons I truly want to collect are after the shift to color and then stopping ~1962-63.  I think the vast majority of consumers look at them the same way, altlhough I *do* know people who like the ~1963 and up material.  While I think the Spotlight collections were aimed at this group of consumers I found there was enough product from the years I'm wanting to fully justify purchase of the GC over the SC.  Had they been released in chronological sets I feel WB would *have* to have started with the 40's and 50's years to keep interest and sales at respectible levels.  Otherwise I don't think the numbers would have supported continuation.  I believe that's the primary reason the older/newer material is included in the Golden Collections.  While I would probably have not purchased this material separately I'm glad it's there, but will honestly not watch it much, if ever, beyond the inital viewing.  I fully agree with your assessment of the Golden Collections being the best way to do the releases and am saddened by the discontinuation of the series.  I hope Warners will reconsider.
post #133 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Tor1 View Post




Agreed, but he did a fine job scoring F-TROOP!  Maybe scoring cartoons just wasn't one of his talents. 
 

Yeah, Lava obviously was not suited for cartoons. There really aren't many Lava-scored toons on any of the Golden Collection sets, thankfully.
post #134 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Tor1 View Post




Agreed, but he did a fine job scoring F-TROOP!  Maybe scoring cartoons just wasn't one of his talents. 

Perhaps the problem is that the cartoons he did score just weren't that great to begin with, and his scores reflect the lack of enthusiasm all around.
post #135 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Tor1 View Post




Agreed, but he did a fine job scoring F-TROOP!  Maybe scoring cartoons just wasn't one of his talents. 
 
Well F-Troop is like watching a live action cartoon.  I go with the other poster, that maybe the cartoons themselves were not that good.
post #136 of 151
I'd agree that Lava is not to blame for the mediocrity of the later cartoons.    In fact, the worst music for WB cartoons I've ever heard was by someone named John Seeley who only did a few but when he did, the music just didn't fit the mood of a WB cartoon at all.
post #137 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack P View Post

I'd agree that Lava is not to blame for the mediocrity of the later cartoons.    In fact, the worst music for WB cartoons I've ever heard was by someone named John Seeley who only did a few but when he did, the music just didn't fit the mood of a WB cartoon at all.
 

I believe that John Seeley was not a composer of original music for these cartoons -- but was a supplier of "canned music" that was used briefly during a dispute with (or strike by) the musicians. 

Some of that same music can also be heard in the earliest Hanna-Barbera cartoons, before Hoyt Curtin began composing completely original pieces.  Those pieces ended up being used so often that they became "stock" music cues as well. 

That's why Seeley's cartoons are so tightly "bunched together".  They were done for a specific reason during a specific period -- the dispute or strike. 

Others may correct me on this, if I don't have it completely right. 

So, Seeley is not exactly in the same category as Lava. 
post #138 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by MatthewA View Post

Quote:
 


Perhaps the problem is that the cartoons he did score just weren't that great to begin with, and his scores reflect the lack of enthusiasm all around.


That could be it, as well. There really was a marked difference when Lava took over, however, and some of the cartoons produced just before Milt Franklyn died were pretty good ones. There were a handful of good Lava-scored ones, such as "Transylvania 6-5000" and "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare," but even these would have been better if scored by Carl Stalling or Franklyn.

 

But the more probable reason appears to have been something completely out of Lava's hands. Over on Wikipedia, it states Lava "arrived at Warner Brothers shortly before the studio dismantled its full-time orchestra." With that in mind, the reason seems to be Lava did not have much to work with, hence the bad cartoon music.
 

post #139 of 151
Hate to go slightly off topic again, but can someone help me with the title of a certain Looney Tune? It featured a wolf who was starving to death in a cabin during a harsh winter. I remember one scene when he's about to eat the only food in the house - a pea - but a starving mouse grabs it and bounces it around like a basketball before eating it under the wolf's nose. It's apparently not featured in any Golden Collection set.
post #140 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by jquirk View Post

Hate to go slightly off topic again, but can someone help me with the title of a certain Looney Tune? It featured a wolf who was starving to death in a cabin during a harsh winter. I remember one scene when he's about to eat the only food in the house - a pea - but a starving mouse grabs it and bounces it around like a basketball before eating it under the wolf's nose. It's apparently not featured in any Golden Collection set.

I know the cartoon,but can't think of a title.

on a similar note,has anyone put together a list of LT/MM that HAVE NOT yet been released? 
post #141 of 151
I think the lists on Wikipedia are your best bet.
post #142 of 151
DeWilson, here you go....

Adventures Of The Road Runner  (1962)
Africa Squeaks  (1940)
Ain't Nature Grand  (1931)
Ain't That Ducky  (1945)
Ain't We Got Fun  (1937)
A-Lad-In Bagdad  (1938)
A-Lad-In His Lamp  (1948)
Ali Baba Bound  (1940)
All Fowled Up  (1955)
All This And Rabbit Stew  (1941)
Aloha Hooey  (1942)
Along Came Daffy  (1947)
Along Flirtation Walk  (1935)
Angel Puss  (1944)
Ant Pasted  (1953)
Apes Of Wrath  (1959)
Aqua Duck  (1963)
Assault And Peppered  (1965)
Astro-Duck, The  (1966)
At Your Service Madame  (1936)
Aviation Vacation  (1941)
Backwoods Bunny  (1959)
Banty Raids  (1963)
Bars And Stripes Forever  (1939)
Battling Bosko  (1932)
Beanstalk Bunny  (1955)
Beau Bosko  (1933)
Beauty And The Beast  (1934)
Bedeviled Rabbit  (1957)
Bedtime For Sniffles  (1940)
Bee-Deviled Bruin, The  (1949)
Beep Prepared  (1961)
Behind The Meat Ball  (1945)
Believe It Or Else!  (1939)
Bell Hoppy  (1954)
Big Game Haunt  (1968)
Big Hearted Bosko  (1932)
Big Man From The North  (1931)
Bill Of Hare  (1962)
Billboard Frolics  (1936)
Bingo Crosbyana  (1936)
Bird Came C.O.D., The  (1942)
Bird In A Bonnet, A (1958)
Birds Of A Feather  (1961)
Birdy And The Beast  (1944)
Blow Out, The  (1936)
Bonanza Bunny  (1959)
Bone For A Bone, A  (1951)
Bone Sweet Bone  (1948)
Boom Boom  (1936)
Bosko And Bruno  (1932)
Bosko At The Beach  (1932)
Bosko At The Zoo (1932)
Bosko In Dutch (1933)
Bosko Shipwrecked (1931)
Bosko The Drawback (1932)
Bosko The Lumberjack (1932)
Bosko The Musketeer  (1933)
Bosko The Sheepherder (1933)
Bosko The Speed King (1933)
Bosko's Dizzy Date (1932)
Bosko's Dog Race (1932)
Bosko's Fox Hunt (1931)
Bosko's Holiday (1931)
Bosko's Knight-Mare (1933)
Bosko's Mechanical Man (1933)
Bosko's Party (1932)
Bosko's Soda Fountain (1931)
Bosko's Store (1932)
Bosko's Woodland Daze (1933)
Boston Quackie (1957)
Boulder Wham! (1965)
Boulevardier From The Bronx (1936)
Box Car Blues (1930)
Brave Little Bat, The (1941)
Brother Brat (1944)
Buddy And Towser (1934)
Buddy In Africa (1935)
Buddy Of The Apes (1934)
Buddy Of The Legion (1935)
Buddy Steps Out (1935)
Buddy The Dentist (1935)
Buddy The Detective (1934)
Buddy The Gee Man (1935)
Buddy The Gob (1934)
Buddy The Woodsman (1934)
Buddy's Adventures (1935)
Buddy's Bearcats (1934)
Buddy's Bug Hunt (1935)
Buddy's Garage (1934)
Buddy's Lost World (1935)
Buddy's Pony Express (1935)
Buddy's Show Boat (1933)
Buddy's Theatre (1935)
Buddy's Trolley Troubles (1934)
Bug Parade (1941)
Bugged By a Bee (1969)
Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips (1944)
Bugsy and Mugsy (1957)
Bunny and Claude: We Rob Carrot Patches (1968)
Bushy Hare (1950)
Busy Bakers (1940)
Cagey Canary, The  (1941)
Calling Dr. Porky  (1940)
Captain Hareblower  (1954)
Cat Came Back, The  (1936)
Catch As Cats Can  (1947)
Cats And Bruises  (1965)
Cat's A-Weigh  (1953)
Cat's Bah, The (1954)
Cat's Paw  (1959)
Cat's Tale, The  (1941)
Catty Cornered  (1953)
Caveman Inki  (1950)
Ceiling Hero  (1940)
Chaser On The Rocks  (1965)
Cheese It The Cat  (1957)
Chewin' Bruin, The  (1940)
Chicken Jitters  (1939)
Chili Corn Corny  (1965)
Chimp And Zee  (1968)
China Jones  (1959)
Chow Hound  (1951)
Cinderella Meets Fella  (1938)
Circus Today  (1940)
Claws In The Lease  (1963)
Clean Pastures  (1937)
Clippety Clobbered  (1966)
Coal Black And De Sebben Dwarfs  (1943)
Compressed Hare  (1961)
Confederate Honey  (1940)
Cool Cat  (1967)
Corn On The Cop  (1965)
Corn Plastered  (1951)
Count Me Out  (1938)
Country Boy  (1935)
Country Mouse, The (1935)
Coy Decoy, A (1941)
Cracked Quack  (1952)
Crackpot Quail, The  (1941)
Crockett Doodle Doo  (1960)
Crosby, Columbo And Vallee  (1932)
Cross Country Detours  (1940)
Crow's Feat  (1962)
Curious Puppy, The  (1939)
Curtain Razor  (1949)
Daffy Dilly  (1948)
Daffy Doodles  (1946)
Daffy Duckaroo, The  (1942)
Daffy Rents  (1966)
Daffy's Diner  (1967)
Daffy's Inn Trouble  (1961)
Daffy's Southern Exposure  (1942)
Dangerous Dan McFoo  (1939)
Day At The Zoo, A (1939)
Design For Leaving  (1954)
Detouring America  (1939)
Devil's Feud Cake  (1963)
D'Fightin' Ones  (1961)
Dime To Retire  (1955)
Ding Dog Daddy  (1942)
Dixie Fryer, The (1960)
Dog Collared  (1950)
Dog Daze  (1937)
Dog Gone Modern  (1939)
Dog Gone People  (1960)
Dog Pounded  (1954)
Dog Tales  (1958)
Dog Tired  (1942)
Doggone Cats  (1947)
Don't Axe Me  (1958)
Don't Look Now  (1936)
Door, The  (1968)
Double Chaser  (1942)
Double or Mutton  (1955)
Dr. Devil And Mr. Hare  (1964)
Dr. Jerkyl's Hide  (1954)
Ducking The Devil  (1957)
Dumb Patrol (1931)  (1931)
Dumb Patrol (1964)  (1964)
Each Dawn I Crow  (1949)
Eager Beaver, The  (1946)
Early Worm Gets The Bird, The  (1940)
Easy Peckins  (1953)
Egg Collector, The  (1940)
Egg-Cited Rooster, The  (1952)
Egghead Rides Again  (1937)
Elmer's Pet Rabbit  (1941)
Fagin's Freshman  (1939)
Fair And Worm-er  (1946)
Fair Haired Hare  (1951)
False Hare  (1964)
Fast Buck Duck  (1963)
Fastest With The Mostest  (1960)
Feather Bluster  (1958)
Feather Dusted  (1955)
Feather Finger  (1966)
Feather In His Hare, A (1948)
Feline Frame-Up  (1954)
Fella With A Fiddle, The  (1937)
Feud There Was, A (1938)
Feud With A Dude  (1968)
Fiesta Fiasco  (1967)
Fin 'N Catty  (1943)
Fire Alarm, The  (1936)
Fish And Slips  (1962)
Fish Tales  (1936)
Fistic Mystic  (1969)
Flop Goes The Weasel  (1943)
Flowers For Madame  (1936)
Flying Circus  (1968)
Fool Coverage  (1952)
Fowl Weather  (1953)
Fox In A Fix, A (1951)
Fox Pop  (1942)
Fox Terror  (1957)
Foxy By Proxy  (1952)
Foxy Duckling, The (1947)
Fractured Leghorn, A (1950)
Freddy The Freshman  (1932)
Fresh Fish  (1939)
Fresh Hare  (1942)
Freudy Cat  (1964)
From A To Z-z-z-z-z  (1954)
From Hand To Mouse  (1944)
From Hare To Heir  (1960)
Gay Anties, The (1947)
Get Rich Quick Porky  (1937)
Ghost Wanted  (1940)
Girl At The Ironing Board, The (1934)
Go Away Stowaway  (1967)
Go Go Amigo  (1965)
Goin' To Heaven On A Mule  (1934)
Gold Rush Daze  (1939)
Goldilocks And The Jivin' Bears  (1944)
Gone Batty  (1954)
Good Egg, The (1939)
Good Night Elmer  (1940)
Good Noose  (1962)
Goofy Gophers, The (1947)
Goopy Geer  (1932)
Gopher Broke  (1958)
Gopher Goofy  (1942)
Great Big Bunch Of You, A (1932)
Great Carrot Train Robbery, The  (1969)
Greedy For Tweety  (1957)
Greetings Bait  (1943)
Hairied And Hurried  (1965)
Half Fare Hare  (1956)
Hamateur Night  (1939)
Hardship Of Miles Standish, The  (1940)
Hare Brush  (1955)
Hare Lift  (1952)
Hare Splitter  (1948)
Hare Trimmed  (1953)
Hare We Go  (1951)
Hare-Abian Nights  (1959)
Hare-Breadth Hurry  (1963)
Hare-Less Wolf  (1958)
Hare-Um Scare-Um  (1939)
Hare-Way To The Stars  (1958)
Hasty Hare, The (1952)
Haunted Mouse, The  (1941)
Hawaiian Aye Aye  (1964)
He Was Her Man  (1937)
Hen House Henery  (1949)
Henpecked Duck, The  (1941)
Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt  (1941)
Hick, A Slick, And A Chick, A (1948)
High And The Flighty, The  (1956)
High Note  (1960)
Highway Runnery  (1965)
Hip Hip Hurry  (1958)
Hippydrome Tiger  (1968)
His Bitter Half  (1950)
His Hare Raising Tale  (1951)
Hiss And Make Up  (1943)
Hittin' The Trail For Hallelujah Land  (1931)
Hobby Horse Laffs  (1942)
Hobo Bobo  (1947)
Hobo Gadget Band  (1939)
Hocus Pocus Pow-Wow  (1968)
Hold Anything  (1930)
Hold The Lion Please  (1942)
Holiday For Drumsticks  (1949)
Holiday Highlights  (1940)
Home Tweet Home  (1950)
Honeymoon Hotel  (1934)
Honey's Money  (1962)
Hop, Look And Listen  (1948)
Hop, Skip, And A Chump  (1942)
Hopalong Casualty  (1960)
Hoppy Daze  (1961)
Hoppy Go Lucky  (1952)
Horse Hare  (1960)
Horsefly Fleas, A (1947)
Hot Cross Bunny  (1948)
Hot Rod And Reel  (1959)
Hound For Trouble, A (1951)
House Hunting Mice  (1947)
Hush My Mouse  (1946)
Hyde And Go Tweet  (1960)
I Gopher You  (1954)
I Only Have Eyes For You  (1937)
I Taw A Putty Tat  (1948)
I Wanna Be A Sailor  (1937)
I Wanna Play House  (1936)
I Was A Teenage Thumb  (1963)
I Wish I Had Wings  (1932)
Iceman Ducketh, The  (1964)
I'd Love To Take Orders From You  (1936)
I'm A Big Shot Now  (1936)
Impatient Patient, The  (1942)
Injun Trouble (1938)
Injun Trouble (1969)
Inki And The Lion  (1941)
Inki And The Minah Bird  (1943)
Inki At The Circus  (1947)
Into Your Dance  (1935)
Isle Of Pingo Pongo, The (1938)
It's An Ill Wind  (1939)
It's Nice To Have A Mouse Around The House  (1965)
Jack Wabbit And The Beanstalk  (1943)
Jeepers Creepers  (1939)
Jet Cage, The (1962)
Joe Glow The Firefly  (1941)
Johnny Smith And Poker-Huntas  (1938)
Jungle Jitters  (1938)
Just Plane Beep  (1965)
Kiddie's Kitty, A (1955)
Knights Must Fall  (1949)
Kristopher Kolumbus Jr.  (1939)
Lady In Red, The  (1935)
Land Of The Midnight Fun  (1939)
Leghorn Blows At Midnight, The  (1950)
Leghorn Swoggled  (1951)
Let It Be Me  (1936)
Lickety Splat  (1961)
Life With Feathers  (1945)
Lighter Than Hare  (1960)
Lighthouse Mouse  (1955)
Lion's Busy, The (1950)
Little Beau Pepe  (1952)
Little Blabbermouse  (1940)
Little Boy Boo  (1954)
Little Brother Rat  (1939)
Little Dutch Plate  (1935)
Little Lion Hunter  (1939)
Little Orphan Airedale  (1947)
Lone Stranger And Porky, The  (1939)
Lost And Foundling  (1944)
Louvre Come Back To Me!  (1962)
Love And Curses  (1938)
Lovelorn Leghorn  (1951)
Lumber Jack-Rabbit (in 3D) (1954)
Lyin' Mouse, The  (1937)
Mad As A Mars Hare  (1963)
Major Lied 'Til Dawn, The  (1938)
Malibu Beach Party  (1940)
Meatless Flyday  (1944)
Merlin The Magic Mouse  (1967)
Merry Old Soul (1935)
Mexican Cat Dance  (1963)
Mexican Joyride  (1947)
Mexican Mousepiece  (1966)
Mice Follies  (1960)
Mice Will Play, The  (1938)
Mighty Hunters  (1940)
Miller's Daughter, The  (1934)
Million Hare, The  (1963)
Mixed Master  (1956)
Moby Duck  (1965)
Moonlight For Two  (1932)
Mother Was A Rooster  (1962)
Mouse Divided, A (1953)
Mouse Mazurka  (1949)
Mouse Menace  (1946)
Mouse on 57th Street, The (1961)
Mouse-Merized Cat, The  (1946)
Mouse-Placed Kitten  (1959)
Mouse-Taken Identity  (1957)
Mouse-Warming  (1952)
Mr. And Mrs. Is The Name  (1935)
Mucho Locos  (1966)
Muscle Tussle  (1953)
Music Mice-Tro, The  (1967)
Mutiny On The Bunny  (1950)
Mutt In A Rut, A (1959)
Muzzle Tough  (1954)
My Green Fedora  (1935)
My Little Buckeroo  (1938)
Napoleon Bunny-Part  (1956)
Nasty Quacks  (1945)
Naughty But Mice  (1939)
Naughty Neighbors  (1939)
Nelly's Folly  (1961)
No Parking Hare  (1954)
Notes To You  (1941)
Nothing But The Tooth  (1948)
Now Hear This  (1963)
Nutty News  (1942)
Odor Of The Day  (1948)
Of Fox And Hounds  (1940)
Of Rice And Hen  (1953)
Of Thee I Sting  (1946)
One Meat Brawl  (1947)
One Step Ahead Of My Shadow  (1933)
Organ Grinder, The  (1933)
Out And Out Rout  (1966)
Pagan Moon  (1932)
Pappy's Puppy  (1955)
Past Perfumance  (1955)
Peck Up Your Troubles  (1945)
Penguin Parade, The  (1938)
People Are Bunny  (1959)
Person To Bunny  (1960)
Pest That Came To Dinner, The  (1948)
Pests For Guests  (1955)
Pettin' In The Park  (1934)
Phantom Ship, The  (1936)
Picador Porky  (1937)
Pied Piper Porky  (1939)
Pikers Peak  (1957)
Pizza Tweety Pie, A (1958)
Plane Dippy  (1936)
Plenty Of Money And You  (1937)
Plop Goes The Weasel  (1953)
Pop Goes Your Heart  (1935)
Pop 'Im Pop!  (1950)
Porky And Daffy  (1938)
Porky And Gabby  (1937)
Porky The Giant Killer  (1939)
Porky The Gob  (1938)
Porky The Rain Maker  (1936)
Porky The Wrestler  (1937)
Porky's Ant  (1941)
Porky's Badtime Story  (1937)
Porky's Baseball Broadcast  (1940)
Porky's Bear Facts  (1941)
Porky's Building  (1937)
Porky's Cafe  (1942)
Porky's Duck Hunt  (1937)
Porky's Five And Ten  (1938)
Porky's Garden  (1937)
Porky's Hare Hunt  (1938)
Porky's Hero Agency  (1937)
Porky's Hired Hand  (1940)
Porky's Hotel  (1939)
Porky's Last Stand  (1940)
Porky's Midnight Matinee  (1941)
Porky's Movie Mystery  (1939)
Porky's Moving Day  (1936)
Porky's Naughty Nephew  (1938)
Porky's Pastry Pirates  (1942)
Porky's Pet  (1936)
Porky's Phoney Express  (1938)
Porky's Picnic  (1939)
Porky's Prize Pony  (1941)
Porky's Snooze Reel  (1941)
Porky's Spring Planting  (1938)
Porky's Super Service  (1937)
Porky's Tire Trouble  (1939)
Pre-Hysterical Hare  (1958)
Prest-O Change-O  (1939)
Prince Violent (a.k.a. Prince Varmint) (1961)
Prize Pest, The  (1951)
Quack Shot  (1954)
Quacker Tracker, The  (1967)
Quackodile Tears  (1962)
Queen Was In Parlor, The  (1932)
Quentin Quail  (1946)
Rabbit Every Monday  (1951)
Rabbit Stew And Rabbits Too!  (1969)
Rabbit's Feat  (1960)
Rabbitson Crusoe  (1956)
Racketeer Rabbit  (1946)
Rattled Rooster, The  (1948)
Ready, Woolen And Able  (1960)
Really Scent  (1959)
Rebel Without Claws, The  (1961)
Red Headed Baby  (1931)
Rhapsody In Rivets  (1941)
Rhythm In The Bow  (1935)
Riff Raffy Daffy  (1948)
Road To Andalay  (1964)
Road-Runner A Go Go  (1965)
Robin Hood Makes Good  (1939)
Robinson Crusoe Jr.  (1941)
Robot Rabbit  (1953)
Rodent To Stardom  (1967)
Roughly Squeaking  (1946)
Rover's Rival  (1937)
Run Run Sweet Road Runner  (1965)
Rushing Roulette  (1965)
Saddle Silly  (1941)
Sandy Claws  (1955)
Saps In Chaps  (1942)
Scalp Trouble  (1939)
Scent Of The Matterhorn, A (1961)
Scent-imental Over You  (1947)
Scent-imental Romeo  (1951)
Screwball Football  (1939)
See Ya Later Gladiator  (1968)
September In The Rain  (1937)
Shake Your Powder Puff  (1934)
Shamrock And Roll  (1969)
Shanghaied Shipmates  (1936)
Shanty Where Santy Claus Lives, The  (1933)
Sheep Ahoy  (1954)
Sheep In The Deep, A (1962)
Sheepish Wolf, The (1942)
Shell-Shocked Egg, The  (1948)
Shishkabugs  (1962)
Shop, Look And Listen  (1940)
Shot And Bothered  (1966)
Sioux Me  (1939)
Skyscraper Caper  (1968)
Slap Happy Pappy  (1940)
Slap-Hoppy Mouse, The  (1956)
Slick Chick, The (1962)
Slightly Daffy  (1944)
Sneezing Weasel, The  (1938)
Sniffles And The Bookworm  (1939)
Sniffles Bells The Cat  (1941)
Snow Excuse  (1966)
Snow Man's Land  (1939)
Snow Time For Comedy  (1941)
Sock A Doodle Do  (1952)
Solid Tin Coyote, The  (1966)
Speedy Ghost To Town  (1967)
Sport Chumpions  (1941)
Spy Swatter, The  (1967)
Squawkin' Hawk, The  (1942)
Squeak In The Deep, A (1966)
Stage Fright  (1940)
Star Is Hatched, A (1938)
Stooge For A Mouse  (1950)
Stork Naked  (1955)
Strangled Eggs  (1961)
Streamlined Greta Green  (1937)
Street Cat Named Sylvester, A (1953)
Strife With Father  (1950)
Sugar And Spies  (1966)
Sunbonnet Blue, A (1937)
Sunday Go To Meetin' Time  (1936)
Suppressed Duck  (1965)
Sweet Sioux  (1937)
Swing Ding Amigo  (1966)
Tale Of Two Mice, A (1945)
Taste Of Catnip, A (1966)
Tease For Two  (1965)
Terrier Stricken  (1952)
There Auto Be A Law  (1953)
This Is A Life?  (1955)
Those Beautiful Dames  (1935)
Those Were Wonderful Days  (1934)
Three Ring Wing Ding (3-Ring Wing Ding) (1968)
Three's A Crowd  (1932)
Thumb Fun  (1952)
Tick Tock Tuckered  (1944)
Timid Toreador, The (1940)
Tin Pan Alley Cats  (1943)
Tired And Feathered  (1965)
To Itch His Own  (1958)
Tokio Jokio  (1943)
Tom Tom Tomcat  (1953)
Tom Turk And Daffy  (1944)
Too Hop To Handle  (1956)
Touche And Go  (1957)
Toy Town Hall  (1936)
Toy Trouble  (1941)
Trap Happy Porky  (1945)
Tree Cornered Tweety  (1956)
Tree For Two  (1952)
Tree's Knees, The  (1931)
Trick Or Tweet  (1959)
Trip For Tat  (1960)
Tugboat Granny  (1956)
Tweet And Lovely  (1959)
Tweet And Sour  (1956)
Tweet Dreams  (1959)
Tweet Zoo  (1957)
Tweety's Circus  (1955)
Two Crows From Tacos  (1956)
Two Gophers From Texas  (1948)
Two Scent's Worth  (1955)
Two's A Crowd  (1950)
Unbearable Bear, The  (1943)
Uncle Tom's Bungalow  (1937)
Unmentionables, The  (1963)
Unnatural History  (1959)
Unruly Hare, The  (1945)
Ups 'N Downs  (1931)
Upswept Hare  (1953)
Village Smithy, The  (1936)
Viva Buddy  (1934)
Wacky Wildlife  (1940)
Wacky Worm, The  (1941)
Waggily Tale, A (1958)
Wake Up The Gypsy In Me  (1933)
War And Pieces  (1964)
We The Animals Squeak  (1941)
Weasel Stop  (1956)
Weasel While You Work  (1958)
Well Worn Daffy  (1965)
Westward Whoa!  (1936)
Wet Hare  (1962)
What Makes Daffy Duck  (1948)
What's Brewin', Bruin?  (1948)
What's Cookin' Doc?  (1944)
What's My Lion?  (1961)
When I Yoo Hoo  (1936)
Which Is Witch?  (1949)
Who Scent You?  (1960)
Who's Kitten Who?  (1952)
Who's Who In The Zoo  (1942)
Why Do I Dream These Dreams?  (1934)
Wild About Hurry  (1959)
Wild And Woolly Hare  (1959)
Wild Hare, A (1940)
Wild Over You  (1953)
Wise Quackers  (1949)
Witch's Tangled Hare, A (1959)
Woolen Under Where  (1963)
Yankee Doodle Bugs  (1954)
Yodeling Yokels  (1931)
Young And Healthy  (1933)
You're Too Careless With Your Kisses!  (1932)
Zip 'N Snort  (1961)
Zip Zip Hooray  (1965)
Zoom At The Top  (1962)
post #143 of 151
Great list, Joe. It's a good reminder of what has yet to be released on DVD. I totally forgot about "Lumber Jack-Rabbit." I'd like to see a 3D version of that one on DVD. There are so many great ones yet to be released, but Warner is releasing another Spotlight Collection with DVD retreads. What a shame.

Unfortunately, I am still unable to identify the title of the starving wolf cartoon I mentioned earlier. I'm certain it is a Warner Brothers cartoon, in color, that was made sometime between the late 1930s and mid-1940s. I went through your list as well as a list on Wikipedia and researched titles that may fit the bill but with no luck. I remember seeing it a lot on TNT back in the early 1990s.
post #144 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by jquirk View Post

Great list, Joe. It's a good reminder of what has yet to be released on DVD. I totally forgot about "Lumber Jack-Rabbit." I'd like to see a 3D version of that one on DVD. There are so many great ones yet to be released, but Warner is releasing another Spotlight Collection with DVD retreads. What a shame.

Unfortunately, I am still unable to identify the title of the starving wolf cartoon I mentioned earlier. I'm certain it is a Warner Brothers cartoon, in color, that was made sometime between the late 1930s and mid-1940s. I went through your list as well as a list on Wikipedia and researched titles that may fit the bill but with no luck. I remember seeing it a lot on TNT back in the early 1990s.

Could that cartoon have been “Along Came Daffy” (1947)? 
 
There was no “wolf” in it, but there were the two starving Yosemite Sam Clones (One with red facial hair and one with black) in a winter-bound cabin. 
 
I think a mouse took their last olive – and after Daffy leaves the “Sam Brothers” with a sumptuous meal, lots of mice stream out of hiding and consume it – leaving the “Sam Brothers” to want to cook Daffy again when he returns to offer after dinner mints. 
 
I KNOW that one was on TNT a lot, and it may be the one you’re thinking of! 
post #145 of 151
Continuing the thought about the “wolf” cartoon…
 
You might be remembering a wolf and a mouse in Porky Pig’s “Bye Bye, Bluebeard”! 
post #146 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Tor1 View Post




Could that cartoon have been “Along Came Daffy” (1947)? 
 
There was no “wolf” in it, but there were the two starving Yosemite Sam Clones (One with red facial hair and one with black) in a winter-bound cabin. 
 
I think a mouse took their last olive – and after Daffy leaves the “Sam Brothers” with a sumptuous meal, lots of mice stream out of hiding and consume it – leaving the “Sam Brothers” to want to cook Daffy again when he returns to offer after dinner mints. 
 
I KNOW that one was on TNT a lot, and it may be the one you’re thinking of! 

 




Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Tor1 View Post

Continuing the thought about the “wolf” cartoon…
 
You might be remembering a wolf and a mouse in Porky Pig’s “Bye Bye, Bluebeard”! 

I think my memory wires have been getting crossed. "Along Came Daffy" must be what I've been remembering, but my memory spliced it into the cartoon where the starving wolf dresses up as a sheep. I watched "Along Came Daffy" on youtube and there was a scene where a mouse stole the last pea off Yosemite Sam and his dark-haired brother. The mouse, sporting a basketball player uniform, dribbled the pea around before dunking it down his throat.
post #147 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by jquirk View Post

I think my memory wires have been getting crossed. "Along Came Daffy" must be what I've been remembering, but my memory spliced it into the cartoon where the starving wolf dresses up as a sheep. I watched "Along Came Daffy" on youtube and there was a scene where a mouse stole the last pea off Yosemite Sam and his dark-haired brother. The mouse, sporting a basketball player uniform, dribbled the pea around before dunking it down his throat.
 

Yep, that's the one I meant!  I think we've solved the mystery! 

Now, put it on DVD, Warners!  Ahhh, they'll probably have it removed from youtube before they do that, so I'm glad you got to see it again before they do! 
post #148 of 151
Yeah, it's a great cartoon. Hopefully WB includes it on an upcoming DVD release.
post #149 of 151
Quote:
Originally Posted by jquirk View Post

Yeah, it's a great cartoon. Hopefully WB includes it on an upcoming DVD release.

Um... Warners plans an "upcoming release"?  

Of what?  When?   How sad! 
post #150 of 151
So am I correct in understanding that "Looney Tunes GOLDEN Collection Volume 7" will not be released?  If so, does anyone know when?
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