Case of the Missing Hare

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Case of the Missing Hare
The Vitaphone Corp.
Release date
  • December 12, 1942 (1942-12-12)
Running time
8:11
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Case of the Missing Hare is a 1942 Warner Bros. cartoon in the Merrie Melodies series, directed by Chuck Jones and starring Bugs Bunny.[1] The short was released on December 12, 1942.[2]

Plot

A bald magician named Ala Bahma nails self-promoting posters everywhere, including a tree in which Bugs is living. Bugs protests having his home encroached and his right to private property compromised, until the magician apologizes and offers Bugs a blackberry pie. After Ala Bahma magically brandishes the pie from underneath his cloth and splatters it in Bugs's face, Bugs vows revenge.

At the Bijou theater, Bugs disrupts Ala Bahma through a series of public humiliations: replacing himself with a carrot and repeating Ala Bahma's hat-trick, and later grabbing another carrot after hitting Ala Bahma with his own mallet. Eventually, the magician barricades his own hat with wood planks and nails to make sure that Bugs does not get out.

Later, Ala Bahma performs an

Aloha 'Oe
" on a ukulele as he descends into the hat.

Production notes

This is one of the few cartoons where Bugs Bunny does not say his catchphrase, "What's up, Doc?",[3] though he does address the magician as "Doc" early in the film. It is also one of few cartoons in the character's filmography to fall into the public domain in the early 1970s due to the failure of the last copyright holder, United Artists Television, to renew the original copyright within the allotted 28-year period.

Background artists Gene Fleury and John McGrew reduced most of the backgrounds to the film to patterns (stripes, zig-zags, etc.) and colored cards. The result was outlandish but Fleury recalled Leon Schlesinger congratulating them. In the theater setting of the film, these backgrounds could be rationalized to represent stage flats.[4]

Michael S. Shull and David E. Wilt consider it ambiguous if this cartoon contained a World War II–related reference. Bugs Bunny pronounces the phrase "Of course you realize, this means war" in a gruff voice that may have been intended as an imitation of Winston Churchill,[5] though it was also used several times in Duck Soup.

See also

References

  1. . Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  2. .
  3. ^ "The Case of The Missing Hare", www.bcdb.com, August 31, 2013
  4. ^ Barrier (1999), unnumbered pages
  5. ^ Shull, Wilt (2004), p. 216

Sources

External links

Preceded by Bugs Bunny Cartoons
1942
Succeeded by