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Herr Meets Hare - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Herr Meets Hare

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Herr Meets Hare

Merrie Melodies/Bugs Bunny series


Title card for Herr Meets Hare
Directed by Friz Freleng
Story by Michael Maltese
Voices by Mel Blanc
Music by Carl W. Stalling
Animation by Gerry Chiniquy
Jack Bradbury
Manuel Perez
Virgil Ross
Richard Bickanbach
Studio Warner Bros. Pictures
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date(s) Flag of the United States January 13, 1945
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 minutes (one reel)
Preceded by Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips
Followed by The Unruly Hare
IMDb profile

Herr Meets Hare is a 1945 Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Friz Freleng. This short, coming a few months before the collapse of the Third Reich, was one of the last major wartime cartoons from Warner Brothers. Herr Meets Hare also set up for two important facets of Bugs Bunny: It was the first time that Bugs would realize he "should have made a left toin at Albukoykee", and the extended dance sequence in the middle of the film would later be retooled by Chuck Jones into his Bugs Bunny cartoon What's Opera, Doc?.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The cartoon opens with a faux Walter Winchell voice discussing the end of Germany, saying that "Germany has been battered into a fare-thee-well", and musing about where the high leadership, and "Fatso" Hermann Goering in particular has gone. The scene soon cuts to the Black Forest, where Goering, in bemedalled lederhosen, is "soothing his jangled nerves" marching while on a hunt. Nearby, a familiar furrow in the ground appears, with a hole at the end.

Bugs pops out of the hole, and bemused, asks Goering about the directions to Las Vegas, oblivious to his location. Goering replies "Las Veegas? Why There is no Las Veegas in Germany!" (Variants on this comment would be used in later cartoons as the lead-in to the joke that Bugs did indeed turn wrong somewhere in New Mexico, usually in Albuquerque.) For once genuinely alarmed by his mistaken destination, Bugs hightails it, saying "Joimany? Yipe!", with Goering chasing after him shooting at him with his musket.

Bugs Bunny fools Goering by imitating Hitler.
Bugs Bunny fools Goering by imitating Hitler.

A few chase gags go by in which Bugs insults the integrity of Goering's medals by bending one with his teeth. Goering, suckered into bending one himself, declares them ersatz and mumbles all sorts of anti-Hitler sentiments ("Oh, how I hate that Hitler swine, that phony fuhrer, that..."). Bugs masquerades as Hitler using a bit of mud, and faces the surprised Goering. Goering disappears offscreen in a flash to change into his Nazi uniform adorned with all sorts of medals. After the usual Nazi salute, Bugs berates him in faux German as he strips Goering of his medals (Klooten-flooten-blooten-meirooten-tooten!) and even his belt, causing the latter to exclaim "Oh, I'm a bad flooten-boy-glooten!", a variant on Warner cartoons' frequently-cited Lou Costello catchphrase, "I'm a baaad boy!". Later, when the gig is up, Bugs dresses up as Brünhilde, from Wagnerian opera. Goering, entranced, responds by dressing up as Siegfried. The two dance, before Bugs once again makes a fool of Goering and escapes (a scene later re-used in the Bugs and Elmer cartoon What's Opera, Doc?).

Eventually, Goering captures Bugs, and brings him back to Adolf Hitler (who is playing solitaire), where he identifies him as "Bugsenheimer Bunny" (as opposed to "Weisenheimer" or "wise guy") to Der Führer.[1] As Herr Hitler talks of the great rewards he's going to pile upon Goering for this act of heroism, he opens the bag to reveal Bugs dressed as Joseph Stalin—complete with an enormous pipe—staring back at him.[2] Goering and Hitler flee. As the cartoon ends, Bugs glances back at the camera and asks, in a Russian accent, citing a cigarette ad catch-phrase of that era: "Does your tobacco taste different lately?"

[edit] Controversy

As with many of the World War II-themed cartoons put out by the major studios, Herr Meets Hare was placed under an unofficial ban from broadcast or video distribution by Warner Bros. and other rights-holders (including Turner Broadcasting and AOL Time Warner). In 2001, Cartoon Network had planned on showing each and every Bugs Bunny cartoon made so far as part of its yearly "June Bugs" festival. AOL Time Warner refused to allow the broadcast of Herr Meets Hare, on the grounds that the cartoon was offensive (by today's standards) as it dealt with the Nazis in a joking manner. The cartoon did see limited broadcast (unlike more objectionable cartoons such as Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips) on a special one-hour episode of ToonHeads about cartoons from the WWII era (coincidentally, Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips was shown, albeit in clips while a voiceover explained how grotesque and cruel the Japanese stereotypes in cartoons tended to be in that era). It has also appeared on Turner Classic Movies' Cartoon Alley as recently as January 20, 2007. As of 2007, this cartoon has yet to be released on DVD (but may one day be featured on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection DVD series). It can currently be found on the Bugs & Daffy: The Wartime Cartoons video.

[edit] References

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ During this final sequence, realistic hand prints are visible on a wall map. These prints represent a signature of background artist Robert Gribbroek, who is not credited in this film.
  2. ^ Bugs's Stalin impersonation reminds viewers that, during World War II, the Soviet Union was allied with the U.S. and other nations against Nazi Germany, although there was much U.S. opposition to Communism both before and after the war.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Stage Door Cartoon
Bugs Bunny Cartoons
1945
Succeeded by
The Unruly Hare
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