The Great Piggy Bank Robbery

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The Great Piggy Bank Robbery is a Warner Brothers Looney Tunes theatrical cartoon short released in 1946. It was directed by Robert Clampett, written by Warren Foster, and animated by Izzy Ellis, Manny Gould, Bill Melendez, Robert McKimson, and Rod Scribner.

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[edit] Synopsis

Duck Twacy sets out after the Gangsters
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Duck Twacy sets out after the Gangsters

After knocking himself senseless while acting out a scene from his favorite Dick Tracy comic book, Daffy Duck (voice of Mel Blanc) imagines himself to be "Duck Twacy, the famous detec-a-tive." The search for the perpetrators of a piggy-bank crime wave leads him to the gangsters' not-so-secret hideout, where he faces off against all the dangerous criminals in town: Snake Eyes, 88 Teeth, Hammerhead, Pussycat Puss, Bat Man, Doubleheader, Pickle Puss, Pumpkinhead, Neon Noodle, Jukebox Jaw, Wolfman, Rubberhead, and a host of unnamed grotesques (the villains are obvious parodies of Dick Tracy's rogues gallery). In one sequence, the bad guys are seen using well-known Dick Tracy villain Flat Top's head as a landing strip.

After being chased about, Daffy eventually turns the tables on the villains and eliminates them with a machine gun, shooting them through the door (which, if this were not a cartoon, would be a grim scene, echoing the climactic scene from Warner's film The Big Sleep, released the same year). He faces one last adversary, Neon Noodle, whom he defeats by turning into a neon sign that reads "Eat at Joe's" (a standard WB cartoon gag). He then finds the missing piggy banks, including his own. He begins to kiss his bank, waking up to find himself on the farm again, kissing a real pig.

[edit] Notes

  • Daffy's early line about Dick Tracy, "I love that man!" and the pig's closing line, "I love that duck!" are references to a popular catch-phrase of the time, "Love dat man!", said by the character Beulah on Fibber McGee and Molly [1]
  • The cartoon was selected by Jerry Beck's survey of 1,000 animators and cartoon historians as one of the 50 greatest cartoons of all time.
  • Animation historian Steve Schneider said of this picture:
   
“
...Bob Clampett's forever priceless The Great Piggy Bank Robbery is clearly a work of the highest cinematic poetry, for prompting the film's manic hilarity are a sequence of images that remain among the most indelible in cartoon history.[2]
   
”

[edit] References

  1. ^ Billy Ingram. The Beulah Show. Retrieved on 2006-09-15.
  2. ^ Jerry Beck, ed. (1998). The 50 Greatest Cartoons: As Selected by 1,000 Animation Professionals. JG Press, Inc.. ISBN 1-57215-271-0.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links