Edgar Allan Pooh
. . . a compilation of references to such William Shakespeare plays as MACBETH, ROMEO & JULIET, AS YOU LIKE IT, and HAMLET. However, on a deeper level A WITCH'S TANGLED HARE--by its very title--proves to be yet another in Warner Bros. Animated Shorts Division's Prognostications of Upcoming Calamities, Catastrophes, Cataclysms, and Apocalypti, particularly regarding 21st Century America. In fact, more than 100 Looney Tunes deal explicitly with the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election Campaign, including this one that is so blatantly devoted to Crooked Hillary's tangled hair. Just as Pinnochio's nose grew longer with each of his "fibs," Hillary's fur grows nappier each time her mouth emits words. (Or, as the Bard put it, "What a tangled web we weave, when we Whitewater to deceive.") Warner Bros. deftly warns of this phenomena 2:20 into TANGLED, with the following recipe for "Brew 1002" (or the original "Hillary Care" scheme): "1 cup butterfly toenails, 10 gallons nectar of rattlesnake, 1/2 cup minced spider webs, 1 fresh rabbit, 3 cups sifted dust." Witch H. (that is, Hillary) is attacking the "fresh rabbit" of America (that is, US!) with her foul rattlesnake concoction, and it will be dust-to-dust for all of us if she's elected come November!
utgard14
Bugs Bunny runs afoul of Witch Hazel while a struggling writer watches it all go down. Lots of funny lines in this one. Love all the Shakespeare references. Bugs and Hazel are a great comedy pairing; she's probably the best of his later foes. June Foray does a wonderful job providing the voice for Hazel. Mel Blanc is excellent as usual as Bugs and the writer. Energetic music from Milt Franklyn. The animation is a little sketchy for my taste but at least it appears to be a stylistic choice not denoting some cheapness on the part of the studio, as was sometimes the case with later Looney Tunes shorts. It's actually very nice to look at. The colors are bright and lovely. It's a funny cartoon with enjoyable characters and lots of laughs.
Chip_douglas
Behold! The Bard arrives at the setting of 'The Scottish Play'(where even the mail box is shaped castle-like).But woe, the players all are off to wager war,lest our attention be turned to Witch Hazel and her brew 1002.When the fourth ingredient, a bunny named Bugs takes leave,"Zsa Zsa" gives chase on a broomstick from 'Fantasia' borrowed.
A duel follows of cackles, wits and Shakespearean quotes.While all of the time, the bard takes notesAs becomes a character in this Renaissance setting,Hazel offers many a self indulging aside to her public.
Had she spent on her hair a jot more care,she might not have as many creatures living there.Bugs Bunny proves adept at handling the words of the bard,while ever ahead remaining of the old broad."T is the bard himself who sets up the final gag(which is not as funny as it ought).For never was there an ending with such a contrived punAs that of Witch Hazel, and her Bugsy Bun.A five out of ten must be my rating.