| Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Robert McKimson |
| Story by | John Dunn |
| Produced by | David H. DePatie Friz Freleng |
| Starring | Mel Blanc |
| Music by | Bill Lava |
| Animation by | Ted Bonnicksen Warren Batchelder George Grandpré |
| Layouts by | Robert Gribbroek |
| Backgrounds by | Robert Gribbroek |
| Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 7 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare is a 1964Warner Bros.Merrie Melodies theatrical cartoon short directed byRobert McKimson. The short was released on March 28, 1964, and starsBugs Bunny and theTasmanian Devil.[1]
This marks the final pairing of Bugs and Taz, as well as the final appearance of Taz in theGolden age of American animation. It was Bugs' final cartoon in theMerrie Melodies series. It is also the only cartoon where Bugs and Taz both lose in the end.
The Tasmanian Devil approaches the Jungle. Awoodpecker sees the Tasmanian Devil approaching and taps a warning on a tree which we see as a subtitle on the bottom on the screen: "Warning! Tasmanian Devil approaching at 9 o'clock!" Twogiraffes hear this and end up running, and twobeavers use their tails to beat out the message on the log that translates as "Take Cover! Devil is Coming! Take Cover! Repeat - Take Cover!". Abear and amoose fighting hear this and end up running as well, and as a stampede of animals leave the jungle, Bugs is bathing in a nearby pond unaware that Taz has spotted him.
Disliking the taste of Bugs' soap, Taz washes it off and puts ketchup on Bugs. Bugs acts as though he thinks it is blood and freaks out, telling Taz to find adoctor. Taz runs to an infirmary, only to find Bugs dressed as a doctor instead. After a few checkup procedures, Bugs puts spotted glasses on Taz and asks him if he sees spots on his eyes and Taz says he does. Then Bugs gives him nitroglycerine and puts an electric belly firmer vibrating belt on Taz and Taz explodes.
Then Bugs dressed asSigmund Freud makes Taz lie on a couch and talk about his childhood. Taz talks about how he was a bad boy. Bugs declares closing time and folds Taz and the couch into a suitcase and puts it in a mailbox, which gets picked up by a mail truck. It comes back by a mail truck covered with stickers from all the countries he has been to. Taz searches for Bugs and ends up in a hospital zone. Bugs rolls himself by on a gurney. Inside the hospital. Bugs is anurse and congratulates Taz and gives Taz a bundle presumably a baby boy. Taz gives Bugs a cigar and unwraps the baby which is actually an exploding bomb. As Bugs walks away, the cigar that Taz gave him turns out to be anexploding cigar.
As Taz spins in, Bugs dressed as asurgeon calls Taz as his assistant. Bugs leaves the room and Taz looks at the patient. It ends up being a roboticFrankenstein's monster which then grabs Taz and beats up Taz offstage. Then in a backfiring moment, the robot heads for Bugs as the monster goes out of control. It ends with Bugs being beaten up by the monster, also off stage, and both the dazed Bugs and Taz staggering back onscreen, bruised and bandaged. Bugs then asks if there is a doctor in the house: "Huh? Is there? Ohh…"
Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare is available, uncensored and uncut, on theLooney Tunes Super Stars' Bugs Bunny: Hare Extraordinaire DVD. However, it was cropped to widescreen. It is also shown as uncensored, fully screened and uncut, on theLooney Tunes Platinum Collection: Volume 1 Blu-ray box-set.
| Preceded by | Bugs Bunny Cartoons 1964 | Succeeded by |