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Daffy Duck's Quackbusters

 
Movies:

Daffy Duck: Quackbusters

  • Directors: Greg Ford; Terry Lennon
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Haunted House Film, Horror Comedy
  • Themes: Ghosts, Demonic Possession
  • Main Cast: Mel Blanc, Mel Tormé, Roy Firestone, B.J. Ward
  • Release Year: 1988
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 80 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: G

Plot

This is one of the better Warner Brother's anthologies and features some of Daffy and Friends' greatest adventures that are linked by a horror theme that has Daffy trying to set up his own ghost exorcism service with Porky and Bugs. Among the older cartoon shorts presented is a new short, The Duxorcist. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Credit

Nancy Beiman - Animator, Norm McCabe - Animator, Frans Vischer - Animator, Brenda Banks - Animator, Kathleen Helppie-Shippley - Co-producer, Greg Ford - Director, Terry Lennon - Director, Milt Franklyn - Composer (Music Score), Bill Lava - Composer (Music Score), Robert Givens - Production Designer, Steven S. Greene - Producer, Greg Ford - Screen Story, Terry Lennon - Screen Story, Greg Ford - Screenwriter, Carl Stalling - Featured Music
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Wikipedia: Daffy Duck's Quackbusters
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Daffy Duck's Quackbusters

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Greg Ford
Friz Freleng
Chuck Jones
Terry Lennon
Robert McKimson
Produced by Steven S. Greene
Written by John W. Dunn
Michael Maltese
Tedd Pierce
Starring Mel Blanc
Julie Bennett
Roy Firestone
Music by Milt Franklyn
William Lava
Carl W. Stalling
(majority from old cartoons)
Editing by Treg Brown
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) September 24, 1988
Running time 74 min.
Country  United States
Language English

Daffy Duck's Quackbusters is a 1988 Looney Tunes film with a compilation of classic Warner Bros. Cartoons shorts and animated bridging sequences, starring Daffy Duck. It is the final Looney Tunes project in which Mel Blanc provided the voices of the characters. The film was released to theaters by Warner Bros. Pictures on September 24, 1988.

Contents

Synopsis

The film serves as a kind of follower to the cartoon Daffy Dilly. Street corner salesman Daffy tries to make a pitch to reclusive billionaire and "ailing buzzsaw baron" J.P. Cubish (a dog)---who has offered wealth to anyone who can make him laugh before he passes on---only to be stymied by Cubish's butler (also a dog). Eventually driving off the butler, Daffy becomes Cubish's jester, taking uncounted pies in the face while Cubish laughs uproariously. After Cubish's death soon afterward ("Died Laughing," reports one newspaper), Daffy inherits the Cubish fortune, under the provision that he will use the money to provide an honest service to the community. The now-wealthy Daffy derides the idea ("What a rube!" he says of Cubish), but his deceased benefactor returns as a ghost, making wads from Daffy's pile of money vanish until Daffy agrees to uphold the terms. The irked Daffy vows to use the money to wipe out ghosts (à la Ghostbusters) such as Cubish.

Setting himself up as a "Paranormalist at Large," Daffy persuades Bugs Bunny to appear in commercials, then hires Porky Pig (accompanied by Sylvester) as an underling; Cubish continues to make money vanish whenever Daffy seems to be operating dishonestly. Although Daffy successfully exorcises the ghosts possessing a lady duck, he discovers that Cubish has stripped his money down to his last million ("The money supply is dwindling! I'm down to my last million!"). He then receives a call from Porky, who is returning with Sylvester from an assignment to Dry Gulch, and Daffy reassigns him to the Superstition Mountains, much to Sylvester's chargin. Daffy then calls up Bugs, who is leaving following his encounter with Count Blood Count, and together they go up against Hugo the Abominable Snowman, with Hugo repeatedly mistaking Daffy for a rabbit.

When the city is swept with reports of a tiny elephant (from Punch Trunk), Daffy, presuming it mere hysteria, hopes to profit by soothing the public with his "expert" testimony. However, the elephant turns up on Daffy's own broadcast, making him a laughingstock. When Daffy decides to blame the debacle on the absent Porky, Cubish takes away the last of the money. Egghead appears as a singing telegram, announcing to Daffy that he is being repossessed. After the repo crew takes away his belongings, Daffy gets evicted and his building gets knocked down (with Daffy still in it).

In the epilogue, Bugs is shown enjoying his vacation in Palm Springs (which was what he really wanted) and reading about Daffy's downfall, and Porky and Sylvester are stranded in the Superstition Mountains, with Sylvester as cowardly as ever. After a shot of Cubish's grave, it is revealed that Daffy is back where he started, as a street corner salesman. Unfortunately, when Daffy earns a dollar bill, it instantly vanishes (this seems to imply that Cubish's curse has beckoned Daffy and would continue on for the rest of Daffy's life). The film ends with Daffy angrily shaking his fist at the sky and screaming, "Cubish!", which cuts to a 'Finis' card.

Film segments in order

  • Night of the Living Duck (1988) (opening sequence). This is exclusive to this film
  • Daffy Dilly (1948) (used at beginning when Daffy tries to get to Cubish)
  • The Prize Pest (1951) (used when Daffy recruits Porky)
  • Water, Water Every Hare (1952) (Used for the Paranormalists At Large commercials)
  • Hyde and Go Tweet (1960) (Sylvester encounters Tweety, who changes into a monster without him realizing it, which leads to his paranoia)
  • Claws for Alarm (1954) (Porky and Sylvester's Dry Gulch assignment)
  • The Duxorcist (1988) (Daffy's first assignment, which was successful). This is also exclusive to this film
  • Transylvania 6-5000 (1963) (Bugs' Transylvania assignment)
  • The Abominable Snow Rabbit (1961) (Bugs and Daffy's Himalayas assignment)
  • Punch Trunk (1953) (a miniature elephant wanders through town, having many encounters with various people, with only a drunk man not expressing any shock whatsoever)
  • Jumpin' Jupiter (1955) (seen in epilogue, identified as the Superstition Mountains)

DVD Release

  • The film was released on DVD in the USA for the first time ever on August 4, 2009 from Warner Home Video. 3 bonus cartoons are included as extras.

See also

External links


 
 

 

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