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The story features three anthropomorphic wolves who build four houses using different types of materials: bricks, concrete, steel, and flowers. A big bad pig tries to destroy the houses made of bricks, concrete, and steel by huffing and puffing, but fails, so he finds a way to destroy those houses by using a sledgehammer for the bricks, a pneumatic drill for the concrete, and dynamite for the ...
The Big Bad Wolf, also known as Zeke Midas Wolf or Br'er Wolf, is a fictional character from Walt Disney's cartoon short Three Little Pigs, directed by Burt Gillett and first released on May 27, 1933. The Wolf's voice was provided by Billy Bletcher. As in the folktale, he was a cunning and threatening menace.
This cartoon tells the story from the wolf's point of view and makes the pigs out to be the villains. The fourth was The Three Little Bops (1957), featuring the pigs as a jazz band, who refused to let the inept trumpet-playing wolf join until after he died and went to Hell , whereupon his playing markedly improved, directed by Friz Freleng .
Pigs in a Polka is a 1943 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon series directed by Friz Freleng. [3] The short was released on February 6, 1943. [5]The film is a parody of two Walt Disney Productions films: 1933's Three Little Pigs and 1940's Fantasia.
The Wolf angrily chases Practical Pig into the Wolf Pacifier. The result is that the Wolf gets assaulted by the contraption's many mechanisms: buzzsawed, smashed on the head by rolling pins, kicked by boots, punched by boxing gloves, tarred, feathered, and shot out of a cannon, with his sons following him.
This short was entitled Three Little Wolves and introduced the Big Bad Wolf's three pup sons, all of whom just as eager for a taste of the pigs as their father. [22] A third cartoon, The Practical Pig, was released in 1939 as the second-to-last Silly Symphony cartoon (two months before the final short in the series, The Ugly Duckling). [23]
It was a re-enactment of the original cartoon in audio, with noticeable differences being all three pigs voiced by Gloria Wood (unlike the originals, where Practical Pig was voiced by Pinto Colvig), the Big Bad Wolf having a more menacing voice (this time by Jimmy MacDonald), and a few additional verses and dialogue that was not present in the ...
Loopy tells a therapist a story of how he tried to fit in as a wolfdog pet. It worked until he confessed to his master (voiced by Don Messick) he was an actual wolf.. Afterwards, the therapist realizes that Loopy is a wolf and drives him out of his office with