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Showing posts with label Bugs Bunny Coloring Pages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bugs Bunny Coloring Pages. Show all posts

Monday, November 30, 2009

Bugs Bunny Christmas

Here are some pictures collection about Bugs Bunny Christmas below. do you like it?
Bugs Bunny Christmas

bugs bunny christmas
bugs bunny christmas

bugs bunny christmas

Bugs Bunny Christmas

Bugs Bunny Christmas
Bugs Bunny Christmas

Thursday, November 8, 2007

Bugs Bunny Wallpaper

Bugs Bunny is an Academy Award-winning animated rabbit/hare who appears in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of animated films produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions which became Warner Bros. Cartoons in 1944. Today, he is the corporate mascot for Warner Brothers, especially its animated productions.

According to his biography Bugs Bunny: 50 Years and Only One Grey Hare, he was "born" in 1940 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York and the product of many creators: Ben "Bugs" Hardaway (who created a prototypical version of Bugs Bunny known around Termite Terrace as Bugs' Bunny) Bob Clampett, Tex Avery (who directed A Wild Hare, considered Bugs' formal film debut), Robert McKimson (who created the definitive Bugs Bunny character design), Chuck Jones, and Friz Freleng.

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According to Mel Blanc, the character's original voice actor, Bugs Bunny's accent is a Flatbush accent, an equal blend of the Bronx and Brooklyn dialects. Bugs Bunny remains one of the most popular and recognizable cartoon characters in the world. In 2002, he was named by TV Guide as the greatest cartoon character of all time. His catchphrase is a casual "What's up, Doc?" usually said through a mouthful of carrot. Source: Wikipedia.

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bugs bunny christmas

bugs bunny christmas

bugs bunny christmas

bugs bunny christmas
Bugs Bunny Wallpaper

Friday, October 5, 2007

Thug Bugs Bunny

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A number of animation historians believe Bugs Bunny to have been influenced by an earlier Walt Disney character called Max Hare because he had similar big teeth. Max, designed by Charlie Thorson, first appeared in the Silly Symphony The Tortoise and the Hare, directed by Wilfred Jackson. Tex Avery, one of Bugs' creators, did admit to having copied Bugs' design from Max, although Avery's design of Bugs was less cute and innocent looking than Thorson's design of Max, so that Bugs' appearance would fit better with his sarcastic demeanor. Avery has been quoted as saying: "I practically stole it. It’s a wonder I wasn’t sued. The construction was almost identical." In fact, it was the drawing by Bugs Hardaway in 1938 that was chosen from among others as the direction for the character's personality. This drawing came to be known around the "Termite Terrace" as Bugs' Bunny, when the possessive apostrophe was eventually dropped, the name stuck. Bugs himself would eventually appear in three variations on The Tortoise and the Hare. Source: Wikipedia.

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Thug Bugs Bunny

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Bugs Bunny Robin Hood

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Bugs evolved in a generally Bugs-like direction for a couple of years, emerging fully-developed in the Oscar-nominated A Wild Hare (1940), directed by Tex Avery. It was there that he first munched a carrot, first uttered his trademark line, "Eh, what's up, Doc?", and first kissed Elmer Fudd. The only thing missing was his name. He'd been referred to as "Bugs's Bunny" from the beginning, but it was only in Elmer's Pet Rabbit (1941), directed by Chuck Jones, that he was first called "Bugs Bunny" on-screen.

Friday, November 10, 2006

Bugs Bunny Easter

Easter is almost here and that means pretty soon the Easter Bunny will be coming. I thought this would be a good time to pay homage to all of those fictional floppy eared, bushy tailed rabbits we've grown to love over the years. Oh and if you're a child and you are reading this then the word fictional means definitely, totally, absolutely real.

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Easter Bunny
Of course the Easter Bunny is on the list. The Easter Bunny not only brings us candy to enjoy every year but he also entertains us by playing a game with us. The Easter Bunny hides his eggs and we have to find them! Fun! What other fictional rabbit besides the Easter Bunny comes complete with candy and a game? I always wondered why the Easter Bunny used eggs though and where did the Easter Bunny get the eggs and what connection does the Easter Bunny have to Jesus' crucifixion?

Bugs Bunny
Bugs Bunny was not my favorite Looney Tune. I'm more of a Daffy Duck man myself. You can't leave Bugs Bunny off the list though, he is the iconic rabbit. Even though Bugs Bunny is pretty smug and full of himself, there are some times when you can't help but laugh at the things he does. Also Bugs Bunny teaches us to eat our vegetables. There are so many classic things Bugs Bunny has given us like his "What's up Doc" catch phrase. Bugs Bunny also perfected the anvil dropping, sign switching and the give-Taz-the-item-with-the-bomb-attached tricks.

Bugs Bunny Easter

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Bugs Bunny Drawing

So, what's up, doc? What else would you ask the man who directed 250 cartoons featuring a certain wascally wabbit and other Warner Bros. stars?

Chuck Jones is still hard at work, creating fine art drawings -- his work is exhibited at hundreds of art galleries and museums -- and new animated short subjects.

And he's happy to chat about his approach to animation. As a young fan long ago observed, Jones didn't draw Bugs Bunny -- he drew pictures of Bugs Bunny. "Once I got in with Bugs Bunny, he had to take some knocks himself," said the 86-year-old Academy Award-winner. "I had to make him human instead of super." The many sides of the toon heartthrob will be on display for 48 hours starting ...

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Bugs Bunny Drawing

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Bugs Bunny Coloring Pages

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Bugs Bunny's origin was as a goofy antagonist for Porky Pig in the Warner Bros. cartoon Porky's Hare Hunt (1938), directed by Cal Dalton and Ben "Bugs" Hardaway, for whom the hare is named. Plotwise, it was virtually a repeat of the previous year's Daffy Duck intro, Porky's Duck Hunt, Back then, the Bunny was much smaller and more rabbit-like, and completely white — but in wit, resourcefulness, and the sheer relish with which he demolished his antagonist, he very much resembled his later self.

Bugs Bunny Coloring Pages

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Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Bugs Bunny Character

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Bugs Bunny is this funny rabbit appearing in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of cartoons, and is one of the most recognizable characters, real or imaginary, in the world. According to his biography, he was "born" in 1940 in Brooklyn, New York and the product of five fathers: Bob Clampett (who created a prototypical version of the character in 1938), Tex Avery (who developed Bugs' definitive personality in 1940), Robert McKimson (created the definitive Bugs Bunny character design), Chuck Jones, and Friz Freleng. But according to Mel Blanc, his voice actor, his accent is an equal blend of someone from the Bronx and someone from Brooklyn.

Bugs Bunny Character
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He is noted for his signature line of "Eh, what's up, doc?" and his feuds with Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Marvin the Martian, Daffy Duck, and even Wile E. Coyote, who usually takes on the Road Runner. Almost invariably, Bugs comes out the winner in these conflicts, because that is in his nature. This is especially obvious in films directed by Chuck Jones, who liked to pit "winners" against "losers". Worrying that audiences would lose sympathy for an aggressor who always won, Jones found the perfect way to make Bugs sympathetic in the films by having the antagonist repeatedly bully, cheat or threaten Bugs in some way. Thus offended, (usually three times) Bugs would often state "Of course, you realize this means war" (a line which Jones noted was taken from Groucho Marx) and the audience gives Bugs silent permission to inflict his havoc, having earned his right to retaliate and/or defend himself. Other directors like Friz Freleng had Bugs go out of his way to help others in trouble, again creating an acceptable circumstance for his mischief. When Bugs meets other characters who are also "winners", however, like Cecil the Turtle in Tortoise Beats Hare, or, in World War II, the Gremlin of Falling Hare, his record is rather dismal; his overconfidence tends to work against him. .
"Bugs" or "Bugsy" as a nickname means "crazy".

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Bugs Bunny Character

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Bugs Bunny Clipart

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Bugs also received an Oscar nomination for Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt (1942), and won the award for Knighty-Knight Bugs (1958). Both were directed by Friz Freleng. Other well-remembered Bugs cartoons include Tortoise Beats Hare (1941), by Avery, which re-enacts the old story; The Old Grey Hare (1944), directed by Robert Clampett, in which Bugs, known for sometimes-spectacular death scenes, tops himself by digging his own grave; Hillbilly Hare (1950), directed by Robert McKimson, which contains the tour-de-force "square dance scene", one of the greatest sustained gags in animation history; and What's Opera, Doc? (1957), by Jones, which crams Wagner's entire Ring Cycle into a seven minute cartoon.

Bugs Bunny Cartoons

Bugs Bunny cartoons, were heavily played on Saturday mornings.
Many of today's U.S. baby boomers and their parents grew up with classic cartoons like Bugs Bunny, a favorite cartoon character since the 1940s. The cartoons, from Looney Tunes and Merry Melodies, were produced by Warner Bros.
Bugs Bunny "warm up" or "opening features" were shown just before the main movie feature in most theaters.

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When televsion became popular, the Bugs Bunny cartoon series usually ran on Saturday mornings as part of a package of cartoons. The Cartoon Channel on cable TV often runs Bugs Bunny cartoons.
The Bugs Bunny character is one of the most recognized image in the world. His famous slogan "..eeh, what's up, doc?" has been uttered around the world.
The "Fresh Hare" episode was banned from television for almost 30 years because it was considered too racey for the time. Bugs Bunny's nemisis, Elmer Fudd, Daffy Duck and Tweedy Bird are also a part of this cartoon series.

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Bugs Bunny Cartoons