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Cartoon video games
Cartoon video games









Giant Kite Kit, Bomb, Detonator, Nitroglycerin, Bird Seedīird Seed, Triple Strength Fortified Leg Muscle Vitamins One feature-length film that combines live action and animationĪspirin, Matches, Rocket-Powered Roller SkatesĪn anvil, a weather balloon, a street cleaner's bin, and a fan.One half-hour special released theatrically (26 minutes).49 shorts, mostly about 6 to 7 minutes long, but including three web cartoons which are "three-minute, three-dimensional cartoons in widescreen (scope)".According to animation historian Michael Barrier, Julian's preferred spelling of the sound effect was either "hmeep hmeep" or "mweep, mweep". Julian voiced the various recordings of the phrase used throughout the Road Runner cartoons, although on-screen he was uncredited for his work. The Road Runner's " beep, beep sound" was inspired by background artist Paul Julian's imitation of a car horn. Early model sheets for the character prior to his initial appearance (in Fast and Furry-ous) identified him as "Don Coyote", a pun on Don Quixote. is heard pronouncing it with a diphthong ( / k aɪ ˈ oʊ t eɪ/ ky- OH-tay). The coyote's surname is routinely pronounced with a long "e" ( / k aɪ ˈ oʊ t iː/ ky- OH-tee), but in one cartoon short, To Hare Is Human, Wile E. is a pun of the word "wily." The "E" stands for "Ethelbert" in one issue of a Looney Tunes comic book. Jones modelled the coyote's appearance on fellow animator Ken Harris. Coyote-Road Runner cartoons as a parody of traditional " cat and mouse" cartoons such as MGM's Tom and Jerry. He is always hungry." Jones said he created the Wile E. Jones based the coyote on Mark Twain's book Roughing It, in which Twain described the coyote as "a long, slim, sick and sorry-looking skeleton" that is "a living, breathing allegory of Want. Coyote in its 2013 list of "The 60 Nastiest Villains of All Time". To date, 49 cartoons have been made featuring these characters (including the four CGI shorts), the majority by Chuck Jones. The Road Runner vocalizes only with his signature sound, " Beep, beep", recorded by Paul Julian (although some viewers claim it sounds more like "meep meep"), and an accompanying "popping-cork" tongue noise. Coyote-Road Runner shorts, he speaks with a refined accent in these solo outings (except for Hare-Breadth Hurry), beginning with 1952's Operation: Rabbit, introducing himself as "Wile E. While he is generally silent in the Wile E. The coyote appears separately as an occasional antagonist of Bugs Bunny in five shorts from 1952 to 1963: Operation: Rabbit, To Hare Is Human, Rabbit's Feat, Compressed Hare, and Hare-Breadth Hurry. It was originally meant to parody chase cartoons like Tom and Jerry, but became popular in its own right.

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The characters star in a long-running series of theatrical cartoon shorts (the first 16 of which were written by Maltese) and occasional made-for-television cartoons. in 1948 by animation director Chuck Jones and writer Michael Maltese, with Maltese also setting the template for their adventures. The characters were created for Warner Bros. This is followed, a second or two later, by the rising of a dust cloud from the canyon floor as the coyote hits. After he goes over the edge, the rest of the scene, shot from a bird's-eye view, shows him falling into a canyon so deep, that his figure is eventually lost to sight. Another running gag involves the coyote falling from a high cliff. One running gag involves the coyote trying (in vain) to shield himself with a little parasol against a great falling boulder that is about to crush him. Many of the items for these contrivances are mail-ordered from a variety of companies that are all named the Acme Corporation. Instead of his animal instincts, the coyote uses absurdly complex contraptions (sometimes in the manner of Rube Goldberg) to try to catch his prey, which comically backfire, with the coyote often getting injured in slapstick fashion. In each episode, the cunning, devious and constantly hungry coyote repeatedly attempts to catch and subsequently eat the Road Runner, but is successful (in catching the Road Runner, not eating it) only on extremely rare occasions. Coyote and the Road Runner are a duo of cartoon characters from the Looney Tunes series of animated cartoons, first appearing in 1949 in the theatrical cartoon short Fast and Furry-ous. Paul Julian (1949–1994, 1996–present vocal archives only) The duo as seen in To Beep or Not to Beep (1963)









Cartoon video games