The Grey Hounded Hare

1949
The Grey Hounded Hare
7.2| 0h7m| en| More Info
Released: 06 August 1949 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Cartoons
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Bugs goes to the dog track, falls in love with the mechanical rabbit there, and has to outsmart the dogs to get to her.

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Cast

Mel Blanc

Director

Producted By

Warner Bros. Cartoons

Trailers & Images

Reviews

utgard14 Funny Bugs Bunny short directed by Robert McKimson. This time Bugs shows up at a greyhound racetrack, where he mistakenly thinks a fake rabbit used as a lure for the dogs to chase is real. So Bugs tries to rescue the rabbit and winds up fighting with the dogs. A simple but fun cartoon with some good gags and lines. The animation is beautiful, with well-drawn characters and backgrounds. Love the colors. Carl Stalling's music is quite nice and the voice work from Mel Blanc is, as usual, excellent. This isn't one of my favorite Bugs cartoons but it is a good one that movies along quickly. The stuff with the racetrack announcer is probably my favorite part of the short.
phantom_tollbooth Robert McKimson's 'The Grey Hounded Hare' is a really lovely cartoon. Bright and colourful, it pits Bugs Bunny against a whole racetrack full of greyhounds as he attempts to save the female mechanical rabbit they are all chasing. Warren Foster's script is great, filled with knowingly dreadful puns involving the greyhounds' unusual names and a great running commentary during the race section. Bugs rids himself of the majority of the dogs at the halfway mark but is left with the tough No. 7 who keeps fighting to the last. McKimson directs the whole thing with aplomb, making Bugs an aggressive and determined character who, in the end, is as gullible as those he dupes, falling in love with a mechanical rabbit who administers violent electric shocks to anyone who gets fresh! I've loved 'The Grey Hounded Hare' since I was a kid but one thing trouble me even back then. At the cartoon's climax, it genuinely appears to me that Bugs is kissing the mechanical rabbit's bottom!
Robert Reynolds An enjoyable short, though not one of the best Bugs Bunny shorts. It has more than a few moments and an entertaining ending. Because i want to discuss some details, this is a spoiler warning: Bugs winds up at a dog racetrack and decides to check out the dogs. He goes over to where they're being fed and pokes and prods them, going so far as to stop one of them from eating so he can check out his teeth. The dog makes it clear that he doesn't like rabbits.At one point, there's a panning shot of the dogs in the upcoming race, with a very pun-filled voice-over describing the dogs (for example, "Motorman's Glove will have a hand in it!") and then the race begins.That's when Bugs discovers that a (mechanical) rabbit is used to get the dogs to run and Bugs falls in love with this "hunk of feminine pulchritude!", but then he realizes that the dogs are *GASP* chasing his "dreamboat". Declaring that "Chivalry is not dead!", Bugs begins setting out to prevent the dogs from harming his "lady" fair, with disastrous consequences for the track and the dogs. The voice-over is hilarious.Naturally, Bugs has to have a primary nemesis and it's the dog he got into a scuffle with earlier. They have several encounters, most of which go badly for the dog, until the dog surrenders toward the end. Bugs can now join his "dreamboat", who has been ignoring his advances and running in circles. The ending is cute, so I won't spoil it here. This short is available on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume 4 and is well worth seeing. Recommended
Spleen All too often, Bugs Bunny resembles the stereotypical American tourist, bigoted, unable to understand why he's not welcome, incapable of realising that he got things wrong the first time round. (That's the stereotype, anyway. I've yet to encounter it in real life.) He is BEYOND brash, his rhinoceros-thick hide so impenetrable that the creature inside must be regarded as merely stupid. We long for his comeuppance, are galled to discover it will never come, and insulted by the request that we be GLAD that it will never come.At least, that's what happens here. Bugs falls in love with a mechanical racetrack hare, and rushes off to save it from the slavering greyhounds chasing it - and he never learns his error, as I kept hoping he would, so that he'd go away and leave the rest of the world alone. It's not always like this with Bugs. He's impossible to dislike in a wonderful work like "Rabbit of Seville", for example, because Chuck Jones is a master director who knows how to make the character work for rather than against the cartoon. But it's important to realise that Robert McKimson's sin here is purely negative. He doesn't MAKE Bugs irritating; the character is irritating already. Rather, McKimson's stale and unimaginative direction does nothing whatever to alter or subvert or compensate for the character, leaving us with a tiresome, earthbound cartoon about an odious loudmouth.