Slick Hare

November. 01,1947      NR
Rating:
7.6
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Humphrey Bogart visits the Mocrumbo Restaurant. He orders fried rabbit and Elmer Fudd has twenty minutes to serve it.

Mel Blanc as  Bugs Bunny / Waiter / Bartender / Ray Milland (voice)
Dave Barry as  Humphrey Bogart (voice) (uncredited)
Arthur Q. Bryan as  Elmer Fudd (voice) (uncredited)

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Reviews

Diagonaldi
1947/11/01

Very well executed

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Lovesusti
1947/11/02

The Worst Film Ever

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Portia Hilton
1947/11/03

Blistering performances.

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Fatma Suarez
1947/11/04

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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JohnHowardReid
1947/11/05

"Bugs Bunny", "Elmer Fudd", and caricatures of Leopold Stokowski, Gregory Peck, Ray Milland, Frank Sinatra, Humphrey Bogart, Sydney Greenstreet, Carmen Miranda, Lauren Bacall.Copyright 20 December 1946 by the Vitaphone Corp. Merrie Melodies (Bugs Bunny Special) Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc. U.S. release: 1 November 1947 (sic). 1 reel. 7 minutes.COMMENT: Prices have climbed a bit since we visited Ciro's for Hollywood Steps Out. Dinner at the Macrumbo is $600, but small down payments are accepted. Although Steve Schneider likes this one, selecting it as both a Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd "best", I would not give it such a high rating. The spot gags (Milland paying for his drink with a typewriter and receiving three miniature typewriters for change; Sinatra drinking himself into a glass tumbler; Bugs imitating Groucho opposite Elmer's Harpo; and what is the point of the gag with Gregory Peck - or is it supposed to be Tyrone Power in The Razor's Edge?) are not all that funny. But Bugs eventually does get to dine with Bogey and Baby and in the meantime dances up a storm in a nice Carmen Miranda take-off. The rabbit is full of his usual vitality, and we like his snappy white tie and tails. Fudd has some "waughable" business too including a quick-witted trick with a mirror.

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Hot 888 Mama
1947/11/06

" . . . it's rabbit Baby gets." So ends this Merrie Melodies cartoon, after nearly 7 minutes and 44 seconds of mayhem in the kitchen of a restaurant seemingly populated only by celebrities. "Baby" refers to Lauren Bacall, who is dining out with her fried rabbit craving husband Humphrey Bogart. Other Mel Blanc impersonations here include Jack Carson, Sydney Greenstreet, Chico and Harpo Marx, Frank McHugh, Ray Milland, Carmen Miranda, Gregory Peck, Zachary Scott, Alexis Smith, Barbara Stanwyck, Leopold Stokowski, and Clifton Webb--many of whom have been dead so long and are regarded as being of such little importance in the current century that their surnames come up as typos on this site's spell checker. The ageless Bugs Bunny himself, despite his possible double entendre at the close, is imperiled throughout this brief animation by his nemesis, Elmer Fudd (the eatery's cook\waiter here). Though director Fritz Freleng feels compelled to resort to a cream pie barrage by the end of the film, a root canal certainly would be a more painful experience than watching this colorful artifact from the 1900s.

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TheLittleSongbird
1947/11/07

Man how I loved this Looney Tunes cartoon. The animation is excellent, colourful, fluid and lively, and the music is dynamic and expressive. The dialogue is witty and moves fast, the story doesn't fall into the trap of being predictable and the sight gags are consistently impressive. Both Bugs and Elmer are great foils for each other, and Mel Blanc and Arthur Q. Bryan both do superb jobs with the vocals. It is the celebrity caricatures that made Slick Hare so entertaining, what a delight to see all those famous faces- Gregory Peck, Ray Milland, Carmen Miranda, Groucho Marx, Frank Sinatra, Sydney Greestreet, Leopold Stokowski, Lauren Bacall and especially Humphrey Bogart. Overall, hugely entertaining and definitely recommended. 10/10 Bethany Cox

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RSmythe42
1947/11/08

This is absolutely hilarious!!... It is my favorite BB cartoon. Bogie,Groucho, Ray Milland....its fabulous. Then hiding in Carmen Miranda's hat followed by the dance. Priceless. The fact that a cartoon character can provide laughs like this is living proof of the talent the creators had. If you want to see the essential "wise-guy" that was in essence the character itself, this is the one to see. This, along with the cartoon in which he is offered the "oscar", shows that this was one that played in the big-leagues. It also provides a little bit of a history lesson for the younger generations. It shows the "star power" that was in place at that time...and a mixture of comedians, dramatic actors and musical entertainers.

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