Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Bugs' Bonnets

From CartoonWiki

Template:Infobox film

Bugs' Bonnets is a 1956 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon, directed by Chuck Jones and written by Tedd Pierce.[1] The short was released on January 14, 1956, and stars Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd.[2] The film has both Bugs and Elmer constantly change social roles and personas, based on a series of hats which land on their heads. The film ends with Bugs and Elmer marrying each other, and moving to a cottage. It is a humorous depiction of a same-sex marriage.

Plot

The narrative begins with an exploration of the impact of clothing on human behavior. Illustrated through a businessman's metamorphosis into a pirate persona and Elmer Fudd's transition from mundane attire to hunting garb, the narrative underscores how attire can evoke distinct behavioral responses.

To further illustrate this phenomenon, an event occurs when a truck from the Acme Theatrical Hat Co. accidentally scatters hats across the landscape. This event leads to a series of exchanges as Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd don various hats, each triggering a corresponding shift in behavior. Amidst a chase replete with hat exchanges, Bugs adopts roles ranging from a military sergeant to a game warden, while Elmer transforms into General Douglas MacArthur and a pilgrim, among others. Each hat exchange catalyzes a temporary alteration in behavior, leading to confrontations and exchanges between the characters.

Ultimately, the narrative culminates in a whimsical mock wedding ceremony. The scene is set to Felix Mendelssohn's "Wedding March" as Bugs carries Elmer to a cottage.

Voice characterizations

Reaction

Reaction to the film has been mixed. Reviews on Letterboxd were more positive than negative, in Rate Your Music they received a 3 star average rating.[3]Template:Deprecated inline Film Music Central also rated it very positively.[4]

Animation historian Michael Barrier said of the film in a Funnyworld magazine essay about Chuck Jones:

The preciosity that destroyed some of Jones' earliest cartoons . . . giving them a mincing, self-conscious quality . . . shows up [in] Bugs' Bonnets, a dreary exposition on the notion that the hat one wears shapes one's personality.[5]

Home media

Bugs' Bonnets is available on the four-disc DVD box set Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 5,[6] as well as the similar, two-disc DVD Looney Tunes Spotlight Collection: Volume 5.

References

Sources

External links

Template:S-start Template:Succession box Template:S-end

Template:Bugs Bunny in animation Template:Elmer Fudd in animation