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Bedevilled Rabbit

Bedevilled Rabbit (1957)

April. 13,1957
|
7.4
|
NR
| Animation Comedy Family

Hidden in a box of carrots, Bugs lands in Tasmania, where he matches wits with the Tasmanian Devil.

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Solemplex
1957/04/13

To me, this movie is perfection.

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Teringer
1957/04/14

An Exercise In Nonsense

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FuzzyTagz
1957/04/15

If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.

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Tymon Sutton
1957/04/16

The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.

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utgard14
1957/04/17

It's Bugs versus the Tasmanian Devil again in this fun short directed by Robert McKimson. This is Taz's second appearance, three years after his first. After an opening with Bugs (inside a crate of carrots) being dropped via parachute into Tasmania, we pretty much get a rehash of part of the first Bugs/Taz cartoon, Devil May Hare. There's an animal stampede, followed by Bugs reading up on Taz and discovering he eats rabbits, and then the meeting of the two and subsequent back & forth. As with the last cartoon, the premise is very simple but funny. Wonderful voice work from Mel Blanc. The animation is nice and colorful. Taz is far from one of my favorite characters but Bugs provides most of the laughs. Worth a look for most Looney Tunes fans.

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Edgar Allan Pooh
1957/04/18

" . . . toss a mean salad," Bugs Bunny says to the Tazmanian Devil in this Merrie Melodies Short, BEDEVILLED RABBIT. Claude, the devil in question, is a whirlwind of sexual confusion. He's so messed up, he prefers a cross-dressing interspecies partner (Bugs) to his actual spouse, Rosebud. Who could have a problem with that? Those sensitive to racial ridicule, for one group. When Bugs dresses up in his "Marsha" she-devil mode here, he caricatures the Facial Stylings of some African indigenous peoples with a clueless insensitivity. Perhaps just as bad, the devil-known-as-Claude seems to have an avocation of being the Destroyer of Trees. Does Claude use his forest carnage to at least build dams, like those industrious beavers? No, he just girdles trunks through and through, leaving his victim trees as deadly booby traps, liable to Smish unwary passers-by with no warning whatsoever. Finally, Bugs' home-made firework explodes inside Claude, causing no apparent damage. No one would be so careless in Real Life, despite Bugs' bad example, you might think. But at least TWO NFL players lost fingers this month in similar fashion. Just how many "Merrie Melodies" did they see as kids?

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TheLittleSongbird
1957/04/19

I have always loved and enjoyed Looney Tunes. Bugs and Taz are not my favourite pairing, and while I did enjoy Bedevilled Rabbit- it is one of their better cartoons together- I still do feel that. I do find Bugs to be a stronger character, arrogant, intelligent and likable. Taz actually does give one of his better performances, he has things to say and a lot of it like "What for you say you monkey when you got little powderpuff tail like rabbit? RABBIT!!" is hilarious. However compared to Bugs he is a little bland, Bugs does work better generally with Yosemite Sam and Elmer Fudd. The writing is fresh and deliciously witty, and the gags with Bugs reading the list of things Taz loves to eat, Bugs tricking Taz into untying him, what is in Taz's salad(though it is a shock as well) and Bugs disguising himself as a Tasmanian She-Devil. The animation is appropriately colourful and fluid, while the music is full of character and lively orchestration. Mel Blanc is stellar. All in all, a very good cartoon but not one of my favourites. 8/10 Bethany Cox

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Robert Reynolds
1957/04/20

This is the second encounter between Bugs Bunny and an obviously over-matched Taz. Bugs winds up in Tasmania and almost immediately becomes the object of Taz's gustatory interest (Taz wants Bugs to come for dinner, but only as the main item on the menu) and, understandably, our intrepid hero is reluctant to oblige. Taz has some good lines here, but he is clearly out of his weight class against Bugs. Bugs nails him in the end with a decidedly low blow, but when you're in danger of being remembered with fondness as a belch, you don't fight fair. Recommended.

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