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Michael Barrier writes, "Baby Bottleneck, like Book Revue (1946), reveals just how great Bob Clampett's impact was on the Warner Bros. cartoons in the early 1940s... As so often in Clampett's best cartoons, there is a prevailing air of hysteria and madness: The stork is drunk, inexperienced help is delivering babies to the wrong mothers, everything is a mess — and all is bliss."
Presented in the mockumentary style of previous Robert C. Bruce-narrated spot gag cartoons, the story focus on a giant baby that had been delivered by the drunken stork to a married couple. The giant baby escapes the couple from their house and wanders into the streets. The stork eventually delivers the giant baby to its correct parents but ...
Storks is a 2016 American animated comedy film co-produced by Warner Animation Group, RatPac-Dune Entertainment and Stoller Global Solutions, and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures.
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A belated stork catches up with a moving train named Casey Jr. and drops off the expected baby elephant, Jumbo Jr. The other elephants are initially delighted, until they see the baby has revealed far-oversized ears, and mockingly nickname him "Dumbo". Mrs. Jumbo shows her baby great care and love, defending him from the others' abuse.
As a stork comes to town and brings babies, Oggy decides to dump a baby in Bob's garden. However, this results in an all-out infant battle between Oggy and Bob, where both are trying different methods of dumping the babies in the opponent's garden. At the end, Bob calls the stork again to bring a lot of babies in Oggy's garden.
Richard, an orphaned sparrow, is adopted by a family of storks who raise him as one of their own. As the flock's annual winter migration nears, Claudius, his adoptive father and the leader of the flock, informs him that, as a sparrow, he is unable to migrate with them, despite the protests of Richard's adoptive brother, Max, and his adoptive mother, Aurora.
Sylvester, despite his earlier objection, is nonetheless excited at the prospect of being a father- until he learns the baby is a mouseling, at which point he tries to eat it. His wife, who immediately becomes endeared to the mouse after the baby calls her "Mama," quickly stops Sylvester twice (telling him that "mouse or no mouse, he's your son!")