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Looney Tunes: Back in Action is a platform game developed by Warthog Games and co-published by Electronic Arts and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment in 2003 for PlayStation 2, GameCube, and Game Boy Advance. It is based on the movie of the same name by Joe Dante.
Looney Tunes: Back in Action was released on November 14, 2003, originally planned to open earlier that summer. The film grossed $68.5 million worldwide against a budget of $80 million. [10] [11] Warner Bros. was hoping to start a revitalized franchise of Looney Tunes media and products with the success of Back in Action.
Looney Tunes Collector: Martian Revenge! (EU) Looney Tunes: Marvin Strikes Back! (NA) Looney Tunes: Sheep Raider (NA) Sheep, Dog 'n' Wolf (EU) 2001: Microsoft Windows (Europe Only) PlayStation. Loons: The Fight for Fame: 2002: Xbox: Looney Tunes: Back in Action: Electronic Arts: 2003: PlayStation 2. Game Boy Advance. GameCube. Looney Tunes ...
Owl Jolson appears in several levels of the video game Looney Tunes: Back in Action, singing "I Love to Singa" via archive audio. Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck will comment upon Owl when they get close enough. As a short published in 1936 with its copyright renewed, the short will enter the public domain on January 1, 2032. [5]
Tiny Toon Adventures is a cartoon set in the fictional town of "Acme Acres", where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live. The characters attend "Acme Looniversity", a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Wile E. Coyote and Elmer Fudd.
The new photobook “LAN Party” looks back at the era of online gaming, and gamers, in the 1990s and early ’00s — a time when web-based technology was in flux. ... A nostalgic look back at ...
This view is mockingly introduced by the Looney Tunes-style opening cartoon, “Me and My Shadow,” in which Arthur’s alter ego emerges to kill Murray Franklin, then disappears in time for ...
It was the final theatrical production in which Mel Blanc provided the voices of the various Looney Tunes characters before his death in July 1989. Unlike previous compilation films, Quackbusters uses pre-existing music from older Looney Tunes shorts composed by Carl Stalling, Milt Franklyn and William Lava for both the new animation and ...