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Bugs and Thugs is a 1954 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Friz Freleng. [1] The short was released on March 13, 1954, and stars Bugs Bunny, with Rocky and Mugsy. [2] The film is a semi-remake of the 1946 cartoon Racketeer Rabbit. It is also the first Warner Bros short to feature Milt Franklyn as a musical director.
Subsequently, Bugs disrupts Rocky's birthday celebration by cleverly infiltrating the event disguised as a flapper, ultimately exposing himself and orchestrating Rocky's arrest under the guise of a police inspector. Despite Rocky's resistance, Bugs ingeniously employs a carrot, which conceals a surprising mechanism, to subdue the criminals.
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Included in The Essential Bugs Bunny DVD, released on October 12, 2010 in the U.S. Included in Looney Tunes Parodies Collection DVD, released on February 4, 2020 in the U.S. The end where Bugs is singing "Home on the Range" is an audio clip from the 1951 short The Fair-Haired Hare. Bugs Bunny's Valentine Special: February 14, 1979 Hare Splitter
Bugs Bunny seeks shelter for the night and unwittingly ends up in an abandoned gothic farmhouse, which serves as the hideout for two gangsters, Rocky (caricature of Edward G. Robinson) and Hugo (caricature of Peter Lorre). A chaotic series of events unfolds when Rocky and Hugo return, pursued by rival gangsters, leading to a frenzied gunfight ...
Only Bugs Bunny cartoon to be a part of the "Censored Eleven". Permanently banned from television in 1969 due to racist depictions of African Americans. Has never been officially released on any home video format, except via unofficial Public Domain bootleg sets. 11 Wabbit Twouble: December 20 MM Bob Clampett: DVD: Looney Tunes Golden ...
Bugs and Thugs: LT: I. Freleng: Manuel Perez, Ken Champin, Virgil Ross, Arthur Davis Bugs Bunny, Rocky and Mugsy: March 2, 1954 Laserdisc – Guffaw and Order: Looney Tunes Fight Crime; DVD – Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 1, disc 4: Looney Tunes All Stars Part 2 (restored) DVD – Public Enemies: The Golden Age of Gangster Films
The only video sources that appear twice are Yankee Doodle Daffy, The Fair-Haired Hare, and the short-lived program The Bugs Bunny Show. The 6 minutes of new animation were digitally painted by Allied Visual Artists, using three of the first low-cost electronic paintboxes in the industry, manufactured by the now defunct Inovion company of Utah ...