The Million Hare
Bugs races Daffy to get to the TV station first and win the prize on the "Beat Your Buddy" show.
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- Cast:
- Mel Blanc
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Reviews
Truly the worst movie I've ever seen in a theater
Memorable, crazy movie
Am i the only one who thinks........Average?
The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
"The Million Hare" is a Warner Bros. short film from 1963 directed by the famous Robert McKimson and starring the voice talent of the even more famous Mel Blanc. This one already had its 50th anniversary a couple years ago and, even if others may think differently, I believe that this little movie is evidence of Looney Toons still going strong in the 1960s. Sure there could have been more wit, but the chaotic and slapstick comedy is still working nicely and pretty funny on some occasions, plus the ending is kinda entertaining. Poor Daffy! It is about two pals going against each other in a race to a television studio, so the winner gets one million bucks. Will our two heroes' friendship survive this race. Watch for yourself. I enjoyed it and give it a thumbs-up. Certainly worth seeing for cartoon lovers.
. . . and being a nice (or subtle) meanie. This "Merrie Melodies" animated short, THE MILLION HARE, does an excellent job of doing just that. Daffy Duck, staying "on vacation" (From what? Quacking?) at "friend" Bugs Bunny's home in the far boondocks, deftly models what being a mean meanie is all about. He steals his host's motor boat. He sets off an avalanche in Bugs' path. For Daffy's big finale, he snatches Bugs off the top floor of a high-rise, and gets him all cut up in an antique glass shop. Meanwhile, Bugs' interactions with Daffy are far more subtle. He accidentally-on-purpose sabotages his own boat. He puts PES (Performance Enhancing Springs) on his feet. Daffy falls off two cliffs and a high bridge on Bugs' watch. So Bugs remains the "good guy," while playing the part of a nice meanie to the hilt. Forced by his HAREless devious nature into becoming the mean meanie, Daffy continually self-implodes, snatching defeat from the jaws of victory at the very end. The moral of this story? Good guys may finish last, but bad guys pretending to be good will win most of the time.
Lesser Bugs & Daffy short, made during the DePatie-Freleng period and directed by Robert McKimson. The plot involves a TV game show called "Beat Your Buddy." The premise of the show is that the announcer draws the names of two buddies and the first one to make it to the studio wins a prize. Not surprisingly, the announcer draws the names of Bugs and Daffy, who are watching the show at home. The two race to the studio, sabotaging each other along the way. The animation is colorful but flat with a sketchy style that I don't care for. The music, by Bill Lava, is generic and uninspired. The voice work is solid but I would expect no less from the great Mel Blanc. None of the gags are particularly funny and, worse, there are no good lines for Bugs or Daffy. The final joke is just dumb. Really this feels very tired and forced. I mean, it's just six minutes of your life so what's the harm, but don't expect much.
A parody of game shows, buddy flicks or chase films? The cartoon never quite decides, and by the end, much of the potential humor is lost in this tired, pedestrian effort by the dying W-B production team. Twenty years before, the story idea would likely have been tossed out--the fact this was made indicates the lack of inspiration that had overcome Warner Brothers. Not surprisingly, within a year the original W-B studio production team would close down.