Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid
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Bugs Bunny Gets The Boid | |
Merrie Melodies/Bugs Bunny series | |
Screenshot of Title and Ending of Cartoon |
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Directed by | Bob Clampett |
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Animation by | Rod Scribner Robert McKimson |
Voices by | Mel Blanc Kent Rogers Sara Berner |
Music by | Carl Stalling |
Produced by | Leon Schlesinger Productions |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date | July 11, 1942 |
Format | Technicolor, 7 mins |
Language | English |
IMDb page |
Bugs Bunny Gets The Boid is a 1942 Merrie Melodies cartoon, directed by Bob Clampett, produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions, and released to theatres by Warner Bros. Pictures. It marks the first appearance of Beaky Buzzard in a Warner Bros. short.
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[edit] Plot
The cartoon begins with a mother buzzard instructing her children to go out and catch something for dinner (horse, steer, moose, and cow, respectively). Three out of four agree to their mom's food choices and take off right away. Then Mother notices one of her kids remaining with his back turned. This is where we meet Beaky (called "Killer" in this short, presumably as a pet name or nickname), painfully shy and a little on the slow side. Against his will, his mother kicks him out of the nest with instructions to catch a rabbit. Beaky spots Bugs Bunny and soars down to catch him. Bugs makes like an air-traffic controller and "guides" Beaky to the ground with a crash. Upon getting up, he is greeted with the familiar "Eh, what's up Doc?" A chase ensues ending with Bugs crashing into the ground underneath the skeleton of a dead animal. He cries because he thinks he's dead, then laughs it off when he realizes otherwise. Beaky ends up the same way, and just as he begins to call for his mother in panic, she shows up. At first the mother buzzard thinks Bugs did something to her son. Bugs pulls Beaky out of the ground; at which time the mother buzzard kisses Bugs, causing him to blush and say "nope, nope, nope" just like Beaky.
[edit] Trivia
The part where Bugs and Killer are temporarily fooled into thinking that the bones are theirs is a reference to a Harold Lloyd film, The Freshman.