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Duck Amuck

 
Movies:

Duck Amuck

  • Director: Chuck Jones
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Children's/Family
  • Movie Type: Family-Oriented Comedy
  • Release Year: 1953
  • Country: US

Plot

Daffy Duck faces a rather bizarre adversary in the classic Merrie Melodies short Duck Amuck, which pits Daffy against a mischievous off-screen animator, who is constantly altering and even sabotaging the cartoon. The trouble begins when, during a Three Musketeers parody, Daffy suddenly notices the background has disappeared, leaving only empty space. He complains to the animator, who then puts him through an ever-changing series of locations, from a barnyard, to snow-covered fields to a tropical island. Daffy tries to adapt, apologizing to the audience for the trouble, but grows increasingly flustered as the changes continue. Soon he and the silent, faceless animator -- Daffy can only see a brush and a white glove -- are arguing over other aspects of the production, from the background colors to the definition of a close-up. Director Chuck Jones and writer Michael Maltese have a great deal of fun with this reflexive premise, gleefully poking fun at the process of animation itself while building towards a superb final punchline. Highlights include the transformation of Daffy's voice into strange sound effects and an improperly adjusted frame line that allows Daffy to get into an argument with himself. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide

Cast

Mel Blanc - Daffy Duck

Credit

Ken Harris - Animator, Ben Washam - Animator, Lloyd Vaughan - Animator, Chuck Jones - Director, Carl Stalling - Composer (Music Score), Mike Maltese - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia: Duck Amuck
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Duck Amuck
Merrie Melodies (Daffy Duck/Bugs Bunny[1]) series
Directed by Charles M. Jones
Produced by Eddie Selzer
Story by Michael Maltese
Voices by Mel Blanc
Music by Carl W. Stalling
Animation by Ben Washam
Ken Harris
Lloyd Vaughan
Layouts by Maurice Noble
Backgrounds by Philip DeGuard
Studio Warner Bros. Cartoons
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date(s) February 28, 1953
 United States
Color process Technicolor
Running time 6:56
Language English

Duck Amuck is a surreal animated cartoon directed by Chuck Jones and produced by Warner Bros. Cartoons. The short was released in early 1953 by The Vitaphone Corporation, the short subject division of Warner Bros. Pictures, as part of the Merrie Melodies series. It stars Daffy Duck, who is tormented by a seemingly sadistic, unseen animator (later revealed to be his friend and rival Bugs Bunny) who constantly changes Daffy's location, clothing, voice, physical appearance, and even shape. Pandemonium reigns throughout the cartoon as Daffy attempts to steer the action back to some kind of normality, only for the animator to either ignore him or, more frequently, to over-literally interpret his increasingly frantic demands.

In 1994 it was voted #2 of The 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field, and was included on Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 1. A Nintendo DS game, Looney Tunes: Duck Amuck was made after it.

Contents

History

Scene from Duck Amuck.

According to director Chuck Jones, this film demonstrated for the first time that animation can create characters with a recognizable personality, independent of their appearance, milieu, or voice. Although in the end, the animator is revealed to be Daffy's friend and rival Bugs Bunny (who famously declares "Ain't I a stinker?"), according to Jones the ending is just for comedic value: Jones (the director) is speaking to the audience directly, asking "Who is Daffy Duck anyway? Would you recognize him if I did this to him? What if he didn't live in the woods? Didn't live anywhere? What if he had no voice? No face? What if he wasn't even a duck anymore?" In all cases, it is obvious that Daffy is still Daffy; not all cartoon characters can claim such distinctive personality.

Duck Amuck is included in the compilation film The Bugs Bunny-Road Runner Movie, along with other favorite Chuck Jones cartoons including What's Opera, Doc?

Mel Blanc performed the voices. It was directed by Chuck Jones with a story by Michael Maltese. The film contains many examples of self-referential humor, breaking the fourth wall.

In 1999 the film was deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. This was the second of three animated shorts by Jones to receive this honor (the others are 1957's What's Opera, Doc? and 1955's One Froggy Evening). Jones has the distinction of being the only director (as of 2006) with three animated shorts in the registry.

The cartoon's plot was essentially replicated in one of Jones' later cartoons, Rabbit Rampage (1955), in which Bugs Bunny turns out to be the victim of the silly animator (Elmer Fudd). A similar plot was also included in an episode of Baby Looney Tunes, only Bugs was the victim, Daffy was the animator, and it was made on a computer instead of a pencil and paper.

In Looney Tunes Comics Issue #94, Bugs Bunny gets his back at Daffy Duck by making him the victim, in switching various movie roles, from Duck Twacy in "Who Killed Daffy Duck," a video game character, and a talk show host, and they always wound up with Daffy starring in Moby Dick (the story's running gag). After this, Bugs comments, "Eh, dis guy needs a new agent."

Synopsis

Daffy first appears on-screen dressed as a musketeer who as he carries on across the screen, he finds there is no scenery and whispers to the animator to draw some in. However, the animator keeps painting different backgrounds, including a barnyard scene, an arctic winter scene (complete with an igloo) and a Hawaiian scene. Each time the scenery changes Daffy changes his attire and behavior to match, only to find himself misplaced again. Eventually, he again finds himself with no scenery and starts to rant at the animator, only to be erased with a pencil rubber.

When the invisible Daffy complains, he is redrawn dressed as a cowboy armed with a guitar, but no sound comes from the guitar when he plays to which Daffy holds up a sign that says "SOUND PLEASE". The animator adds in inappropriate sound effects for the guitar (such as a gun being fired, and a car horn), and later Daffy when he tries shouting at the animator. But instead of his voice, offensive sounds come out (rooster crowing, jungle sounds, squeaky toy sound, etc.). Daffy flips out and throws a tantrum, finally ending it by screaming "And I've never been so humiliated in all my life!"

More scenery is drawn at Daffy's request, but all it turns out to be is a crudely drawn cityscape. When Daffy asks for it to be in color, he is instead colored in a wacky color scheme of spots and stripes. Daffy shouts "Not ME, you slop artist!", is promptly erased except for his face, and is redrawn as a bizarre creature with a flower-shaped head, an amphibian body and a flagpole for a tail; the flag features a picture of a wood screw and a baseball ("screwball"). Daffy sees his reflection in a mirror, freaks out and scolds the animator.

Daffy is erased yet again and redrawn as a sailor, complete with sailor suit and sailor hat. Daffy comments on how he always wished to do a sea epic. However, when Daffy requests some appropriate scenery, the animator paints an island with palm trees and a volcano, and an ocean which Daffy promptly falls into after singing Anchors Aweigh. He appears on the faraway island and calls for the animator give him a close-up, but the animator mocks him, first by reducing the scenery frame while keeping Daffy at background distance, and then an extreme camera zoom that leaves only Daffy's bloodshot eyes visible on-screen.

Daffy steps back from the close-up and says, "Let's have an understanding." But he is interrupted when the frame of the scene starts collapsing from above. (This actually represents the animator taking his request far too literally, for Daffy is, in fact, "standing under" something.) The animator draws a stick for him to support it, but it soon breaks and Daffy fights the encroaching black frame until it engulfs him. He screams and rips it apart. Catching his breath, he demands "Let's get this picture started!", prompting an iris-out to black and a "The End" title card. Daffy pushes the ending scene aside in desperation, screaming "NO! NO!" in a tormented voice as he does so, and apologizes to the audience for the problems and starts dancing. The film suddenly slips out of frame, creating two Daffys who get into a fight. One is erased, leaving the other to punch into empty air.

Daffy is suddenly drawn into a World War II-era fighter airplane, which he eagerly flies around. However, the animator paints a mountain onto the screen, causing Daffy to crash into it (offscreen). Daffy leaps to safety with a parachute, which the animator changes into an anvil. Daffy crashes to the ground and in a dazed phase, recites "The Village Blacksmith", while he hammers the anvil which is repainted as an artillery shell, blowing up Daffy ("Under a spreading chestnut tree, The village smithy stands; The smith, a mighty man is he, with strong and sinewy (boom) ..hands").

Humiliated and enraged, Daffy roars with anger at the unseen artist, demanding to know who he is, and the artist simply blocks out Daffy's cries by painting a door and closing it on him. The camera pulls back to show the entire scene, revealing Bugs Bunny to be the animator at the root of Daffy's troubles. Bugs turns to the camera and comments "Ain't I a stinker?".

Referenced in other works

  • The Bugs Bunny short Rabbit Hood contains a title card similar to this short.
  • The 1955 Chuck Jones short Rabbit Rampage was an alternate version of Duck Amuck, which cast Bugs into the role of beleaguered cartoon character, with Elmer Fudd being the animator.
  • The 1960s short A-Haunting We Will Go, which is a kind of remake of Broom-Stick Bunny has some in-jokes related with Duck Amuck. First, Daffy is again transformed into a flower-faced, spotted, blue, four-legged creature. Later, when Daffy use a parachute, the witch transforms it into an anvil (as the animator did in Duck Amuck) and then impact in the same rock that the animator draw to stop Daffy's plane in Duck Amuck.
  • The Super NES video game Bugs Bunny in Rabbit Rampage merges both premises from Duck Amuck and Rabbit Rampage, the result being Bugs portrayed as Daffy's victim.
  • In the Nintendo 64 video game Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2 Century, in one of the final levels' segments, Daffy must once again endure his transformation into the flower-faced, spotted, blue, four-legged creature.
  • In the first episode of Tiny Toon Adventures, after drawing up Buster Bunny, the animator briefly transforms him into a flower-faced creature. (This gag was only shown in the episode's original broadcast and was cut for time in reruns.)
  • A clip from the short was used on Animaniacs in the Slappy Squirrel segment "Critical Condition".
  • In a parody of The Terminator printed in issue #3 of the Pinky and the Brain comic book, one change that Brain makes to the Verminator's blueprints results in the Verminator briefly enduring Daffy's transformation.
  • On October 9, 2007, Warner Bros. Interactive released a Nintendo DS game based on the cartoon called Looney Tunes: Duck Amuck.[2] Nintendo Power magazine briefly describes the game in June 2007's issue "try to drive Daffy Duck stark raving mad."
  • This cartoon was parodied in the last episode of the short-lived series Clerks: The Animated Series. The final scene of the series even mirrors the ending of the original short, with Jay and Silent Bob in place of Bugs.
  • Duck Amuck was referenced in a 30-second short cartoon gag in Johnny Bravo.
  • It was used in the Babylon 5 in the episode "Conflicts of Interest", where Michael Garibaldi was listening to it. This was used for ironic effect, as Garibaldi himself was unknowingly being manipulated by a seemingly-omnipotent force at the time.
  • In The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy episode "Complete and Utter Chaos", Grim is transformed into the same flower-faced and spotted creature that Daffy is turned in to. Grim responds to this by uttering Daffy's catchphrase, "You're despicable!"
  • On the original VHS release of Batman, a short ad for Warner Bros. merchandise was shown featuring both Daffy and Bugs. Throughout the ad, an unseen animator "draws" items such as t-shirts, movie books, and posters (and in classic fashion, when Bugs mentions ties, the animator draws a rope around Bugs, effectively tying him up, to which he response, "that's NECK-ties!"). In the end, Daffy begins to lose his cool, ending in his being erased from the ad by the animator.
Daffy Duck tries to prevent Duck Amuck from fading out.
  • Robert Smigel did a similar cartoon in his "TV Funhouse" segment on Saturday Night Live, where Michael Powell, FCC Chairman at the time, played Daffy Duck and Howard Stern played Bugs Bunny.
  • Drawn Together's episode "Nipple Ring-Ring Goes to Foster Care" does a parody of it when Foxxy Love goes from foster home to foster home in search of Ling Ling.
  • Genre a 1996 short film features a similar plot.
  • In Baby Looney Tunes, the episode "Duck Reflects" Baby Daffy bothers Baby Bugs by changing his picture.
  • In an episode of The Simpsons Homer sees a museum picture drawn by series creator Matt Groening and remarks that Groening can't even do good cartoons just then a giant pencil's eraser end is rubbing against Homer's head making the audience assume as well as Homer think that Matt Groening is the unseen animator erasing him similar to Duck Amuck. Though it later turned out that the pencil was another museum exhibit.

See also

References

  1. ^ Until the end of the cartoon, he is an unseen character
  2. ^ gonintendo.com

External links

Preceded by
Fool Coverage
Daffy Duck Cartoons
1953
Succeeded by
Muscle Tussle

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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