TV Shows on DVD has a full list of the cartoons to be included on the second volume of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, arriving this autumn. Though no official date has been announced, it’s a good bet that it will be released around November, as last year’s first volume was. The bad news? As the site puts it, “No Tasmanian Devil. No Pepe Le Pew. No Marvin the Martian. No Foghorn Leghorn. No Speedy Gonzales. It looks like we’ll have to wait until Volume 3 to see more of these great characters. But let’s face it: the Looney Tunes vaults are very deep, and mining all these gems is going to take quite some time. Be patient! Your favorites will arrive sooner or later, have no fear! For now, we are getting some terrific entertainment to enjoy while we wait for the next box set, including some highly-desirable classics!”
“This time around it will contain 60 cartoon shorts ranging from 1936 to 1958. Included is another disc of just Bugs Bunny ‘toons, plus a LOT of favorites from the Road Runner/Wile E. Coyote, AND a large group just from Sylvester & Tweety! It sounds like Warner listened to the fans who missed seeing more of those particular match-ups on the first release.” Also included are director Chuck Jones’ crown jewels, What’s Opera, Doc? and One Froggy Evening, as alluded to in this post’s headline. To see the entire list of shorts, read on here: [More…]
“Hare-Brained Hypnotist” (Bugs Bunny/Elmer Fudd – 1942)
“Little Red Riding Rabbit” (Bugs Bunny – 1944)
“Stage Door Cartoon” (Bugs Bunny/Elmer Fudd – 1944)
“Hare Conditioned” (Bugs Bunny – 1945)
“Rhapsody Rabbit” (Bugs Bunny – 1946)
“The Big Snooze” (Bugs Bunny/Elmer Fudd – 1946)
“Slick Hare” (Bugs Bunny/Elmer Fudd – 1947)
“Bugs Bunny Rides Again” (Bugs Bunny/Yosemite Sam – 1948)
“Gorilla My Dreams” (Bugs Bunny/Gruesome Gorilla – 1948)
“Bunny Hugged” (Bugs Bunny – 1951)
“French Rarebit” (Bugs Bunny/Louis and Francois – 1951)
“Baby Buggy Bunny” (Bugs Bunny/Baby-Faced Finster – 1954)
“Hyde And Hare” (Bugs Bunny – 1955)
“Broom-Stick Bunny” (Bugs Bunny/Witch Hazel – 1956)
“What’s Opera, Doc?” (Bugs Bunny/Elmer Fudd – 1957)
“Beep Beep” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1952)
“Going! Going! Gosh!” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1952)
“Zipping Along” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1953)
“Stop! Look! and Hasten!” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1954)
“Guided Muscle” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1955)
“Ready.. Set.. Zoom!” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1955)
“Gee Whiz-z-z-z!” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1956)
“There They Go-Go-Go!” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1956)
“Scrambled Aches” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1957)
“Zoom And Bored” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1957)
“Whoa, Be-Gone!” (Road Runner/Coyote – 1958)
“Porky In Wackyland” (Porky Pig – 1938)
“Old Glory” (Porky Pig – 1939)
“Book Revue” (Daffy Duck – 1946)
“Show Biz Bugs” (Bugs Bunny/Daffy Duck – 1957)
“Kitty Kornered” (Porky/Sylvester – 1946)
“Tweety Pie” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1947)
“Back Alley Op-Roar” (Elmer Fudd/Sylvester – 1948)
“Bad Ol’ Putty Tat” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1949)
“All a Bir-r-r-rd” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1950)
“Room And Bird” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1951)
“Tweet Tweet Tweety” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1951)
“A Bird In A Guilty Cage” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1952)
“Ain’t She Tweet” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1952)
“Gift Wrapped” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1952)
“Snow Business” (Sylvester/Tweety – 1953)
“You Ought to Be in Pictures” (Daffy/Porky – 1940)
“Duck Soup To Nuts” (Daffy/Porky – 1944)
“Baby Bottleneck” (Daffy/Porky – 1946)
“The Great Piggy Bank Robbery” (Daffy Duck as “Duck Twacy” – 1946)
“I Love To Singa” (“Owl” Jolson – 1936)
“Have You Got Any Castles?” (1938)
“Katnip Kollege” (Johnny Cat – 1938)
“Hollywood Steps Out” (1941)
“The Heckling Hare” (Bugs Bunny/Willoughby – 1941)
“Tortoise Beats Hare” (Bugs Bunny/Cecil Turtle – 1941)
“The Dover Boys at Pimento University or ‘The Rivals of Roquefort Hall'” (1942)
“The Hep Cat” (Hep Cat – 1942)
“Corny Concerto” (Doc and Champ – 1943)
“Rabbit Transit” (Bugs Bunny/Cecil Turtle – 1947)
“Mouse Wreckers” (Hubie and Bertie/Claude Cat – 1948)
“Bear For Punishment” (Henry, Ma, & Junyer Bear – 1951)
“Cheese Chasers” (Hubie and Bertie – 1951)
“One Froggy Evening” (Michigan J. Frog – 1955)
“Three Little Bops” (1957)