Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003)
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are up to their feuding ways again. Tired of playing second fiddle to Bugs, Daffy has decided to leave the Studio for good. He is aided by Warner Bros.' humor impaired Vice President of Comedy, Kate Houghton, who releases him from his contract and instructs WB security guard/aspiring stunt man DJ Drake to capture and "escort" Daffy off the studio lot.
Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003)
Information
Released Year: 2003
Runtime: 90 minutes
Directors: Joe Dante
Casts: Matthew Lillard, Liz Ramos, Shealan Spencer, Becca Sweitzer, Joe Alaskey, Bill McKinney, Joan Cusack, Bob Bergen, Frank Welker, Jeff Bennett, Dick Miller, Timothy Dalton, Ron Perlman, Allan Graf, Peter Graves, Mary Woronov, Jenna Elfman, Brendan Fraser, Billy West, Steve Martin, Heather Locklear, George Murdock, Roger Corman, Robert Picardo, Bill Goldberg, Kevin McCarthy, Vernon Wells, Brandon Henschel, Louis Kiss, Eric Goldberg, Tara Wilson, Tanee McCall, Gelsey Weiss, Janina Garraway, Archie Hahn, Casey Kasem, Marc Lawrence, Don Stanton, Dan Stanton, Leo Rossi, Austyn Cuccia, Marie-Claude Jacques, Michael Azria, Dan Romanelli, Ryan O'Dell, Brenda Mae Hamilton, Emily Rose Zachary, Alysha Wheeler, Micki Duran, Chi Johnson, Chi Johnson, Shanti Lowry, Erica Gudis, John Munro Cameron, Glen Hambly, Nikki Martin, Laura Orrico, Robert Parigi, Dean Ricca
Storyline
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are up to their feuding ways again. Tired of playing second fiddle to Bugs, Daffy has decided to leave the Studio for good. He is aided by Warner Bros.' humor impaired Vice President of Comedy, Kate Houghton, who releases him from his contract and instructs WB security guard/aspiring stunt man DJ Drake to capture and "escort" Daffy off the studio lot.
Trailer
Reviews
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Premiere -
It's flat-out comedy all the way, head-spinningly clever (you'll be talking about a sequence set in the Louvre for weeks) and always engaging. For my money, it's the comedy of the year.
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer -
The film is an across-the-board charmer that should appeal to children as well as their parents, aficionados of animation and old-movie buffs who will be challenged to sort out the blur of seemingly hundreds of classic film references.
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The Hollywood Reporter -
It will never be confused with the groundbreaking "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," but when it comes to a zippy live-action-meets-animation kid flick with plenty of grown-up gags, Looney Tunes: Back in Action does not disappoint.
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L.A. Weekly -
The movie looks like it cost a fortune, with Dean Cundey's glistening widescreen compositions and Bill Brzeski's towering, storybook sets providing the backdrop for seamless visual effects. What's more, it's equally rich in ideas.
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Philadelphia Inquirer -
Fraser and Elfman are goofily endearing even if they seem more sincere acting opposite the rabbit and the duck than they do each other.
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Related Movies
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are up to their feuding ways again. Tired of playing second fiddle to Bugs, Daffy has decided to leave the Studio for good. He is aided by Warner Bros.' humor impaired Vice President of Comedy, Kate Houghton, who releases him from his contract and instructs WB security guard/aspiring stunt man DJ Drake to capture and "escort" Daffy off the studio lot.
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are up to their feuding ways again. Tired of playing second fiddle to Bugs, Daffy has decided to leave the Studio for good. He is aided by Warner Bros.' humor impaired Vice President of Comedy, Kate Houghton, who releases him from his contract and instructs WB security guard/aspiring stunt man DJ Drake to capture and "escort" Daffy off the studio lot.
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are up to their feuding ways again. Tired of playing second fiddle to Bugs, Daffy has decided to leave the Studio for good. He is aided by Warner Bros.' humor impaired Vice President of Comedy, Kate Houghton, who releases him from his contract and instructs WB security guard/aspiring stunt man DJ Drake to capture and "escort" Daffy off the studio lot.
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck are up to their feuding ways again. Tired of playing second fiddle to Bugs, Daffy has decided to leave the Studio for good. He is aided by Warner Bros.' humor impaired Vice President of Comedy, Kate Houghton, who releases him from his contract and instructs WB security guard/aspiring stunt man DJ Drake to capture and "escort" Daffy off the studio lot.