Behind the Tunes: Looney Tunes Go Hollywood (Video 2004) Poster

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8/10
Some Of It Was Self-Serving & Who Knew The Cartoons Would Still Be Here?
ccthemovieman-115 June 2007
There are a bunch of cartoons from the 1930s and 1940s mimicking Hollywood celebrities of the period and this documentary examines them. Those cartoons are part of this Volume Two DVD set of Looney Tunes Golden Collection.

Al Jolson, W.C. Fields, Katharine Heburn, Laurel & Hardy, Carmen Miranda, James Cagney, Groucho Marx, Edward G. Robinson and a ton of others were all part of several '30s cartoons while other celebrities would pop in, lets say, in a '40s Bugs Bunny cartoon.

As it is pointed out in this short feature, a lot of it, too, was to help promote the Warner Brothers movies of the day. In other words, they would do a parody of Humphrey Bogart just when Bogie had a new film coming out.

And, yes, you have to know these old "stars" to really appreciate the cartoons, but the people who made these cartoons, as someone points out here, had no idea people would still be watching them 50 years from that time. They thought "topical humor" was fine because it would only be seen for a year or two at most. Interesting.
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7/10
Humphrey Bogart and Errol Flynn were NOT U.S. Presidents . . .
oscaralbert1 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . because they frequently were animated into cartoons by Warner Bros., LOONEY TUNES GO H0LLYWOOD reveals. If not for his singing and dancing on Merrie Melodies, Bogart surely could have bested Four-Star Gen. Eisenhower for the White House, a panel of film buffs imply here. (Anyone who knows the American Electorate will find a lot of sense in what they say; Donald Trump was not as well known as Pat Sajak or Steve Harvey until the former bashed USAF War Hero John McCain--now he's the Presumptive President-Elect; if Baldie Old Fogie "Ike" had run on his record of simply winning World War Two, Bogie just would need to have asked, "But what's he done for us lately?") Since Flynn would have dumped Job-Destroying Capitalism in favor of a Scandanavia-like Workers' Utopia, the absence of Errol's face from "the space" between Teddy Roosevelt and Abe Lincoln on Mount Rushmore is even sadder than the fact that none of our coins or bills feature Bogart's mug. Current polls show that most Americans feel that the U.S. has "gone off on the wrong track," no doubt because Ronald Reagan was not important enough to be regularly character-assassinated by Looney Tunes.
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8/10
interesting enough
movieman_kev31 October 2005
This 9 minute featurette, which can be seen as an extra on Disc 4 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 2, focusing on the parody of films and Hollywood personalities in the Looney Tunes shorts. It includes interviews with notable people associated with the shorts as well as showing clips from the actual films alongside the cartoon that parodied it. I found it all very interesting, if a bit on the long side. The clips from the shorts are as great as always and there's a pretty good chance that every Looney Tunes fan will enjoy. Overall I didn't find it as great as say "Behind the Tunes - Crash! Bang! Boom!: The Wild Sounds of Treg Brown" though.

My Grade: A-
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