(Cough, cough) Peh, peh, ugh! I cannot do this, I cannot! Oh, what a fowl way for a bird to die. I do not want to die of beak cancer. My lungs are blackening, I can't breathe!
@@EthersCubing I thought I'd comment on this situation. The fact that Pudgy the Parrot with that cigarette shoved into his mouth is morally irresponsible.
I thought he was going to smoke the whole cigarette!😄 I prefer Robin Williams speaking against smoking like in the movie. Man I miss his sense of humor so much.
“What situation?!” “The fact that Pudgy the Parrot, has a cigarette shoved into his mouth, is morally irresponsible!” “This is a cartoon, this is not a friggin’ Oprah Winfrey special!” “Lou, millions of kids see this cartoon, it’s like giving each of them a packet of cigarettes, and saying “Light Up”!
@@royalzavala8545 Daniel, this is costing the studio thousands of dollars! If you wanna get paid you stick to the script, if you wanna play ghandi, then go do it on someone else's time!
At least this was intentional for the movie for the purpose of saying, we get it, it's stupid; where as media today did it solely to insult our intelligence.
@LaumiRez Not his animation, but rather his designs and direction. Bill Littlejohn and Eric Goldberg provide the animation which is still impressive considering Littlejohn was about the same age as Jones at the time.
NO this is not some alternate universe where Daniel Hillard didn't give a shit about what young viewers were being exposed to. The producers just redubbed and used what was in left after Daniel told them to piss off. That world still remains.
1:44- "Eat Your Heart Out, Meryl Streep!" 4:16- "Eat Your Heart Out, Julia Child!" Ironic that sixteen years later, Meryl Streep would receive an Oscar nomination for playing Julia Child in "Julie and Julia."
For those of you missing the point of the weak ending: In the universe where Daniel Hibbert is the voice of Grunge, Pudgy, and Grandma, this cartoon has no ending. Daniel quit in the middle of recording to protest the last scene. They clearly had noone to substitute the voice so they had no ending.
Yes and this animated opening was animated by Chuck Jones animator of the Looney Tunes and creator of Marvin The Martian, Pepe Le Pew, Wile E Coyote and the Roadrunner
What a wonderful voice! Especially with Robin Williams singing "Largo al factotum". Also, LOLed at the funny bits. But the ending is sort of a mind screw, especially with the bird driven to suicide by cigarette. So sad. R.I.P., Robin Williams. You did very well.
Oooo, since the animation cuts away in the movie, I never heard, but the old ladies voice in this is the voice that Daniel uses as Mrs. Doubtfire! Never realized.
I could tell without even looking at the descriptions that Chuck Jones did this. He had such a distinct style to how his characters moved and talked. Even some of his signature gags are in here including the cat getting his tail all wrapped up (believe that was in a Tom & Jerry short by Chuck). God I wished we had a funny cartoonist like him today
When I first watched Mrs. Doubtfire and the animation came up, I never knew Robin Also voice the cat until the camera showed Robin (Daniel) voicing him. Also this video was published 2011, August 11. 3 years before a terrible, sad, depressing, loss. R.I.P Robin Williams you are dearly missed by the whole universe
Oh, I cannot do this! Oh, I can *not!* What a foul way for a bird to die! I don't want to get *BEAK CANCER!* OH, My lungs are *blackened!* It's a voice-over; an interior monologue. Maybe even the voice of God, that's even better: *"Don't, Pudgy! Don't Smoke!"* The fact that Pudgy the Parrot has a cigarette shoved in his mouth is morally irresponsible!
I personally would have to agree with Daniel Hillard (Robin Williams). Millions of kids seeing this cartoon and seeing a cigarette being lit up is like sending them a pack of cigarettes and saying "light up and try one out." Really, on TV shows and in cartoons, cartoon characters shouldn't poison the minds of young children with the chewy thoughts of nicotine and lung cancer. It should never be in their character. As a matter of fact, children should be taught to never ever, no matter what the circumstance, ever smoke cigarettes, because it's caused more health risks factors than anything else, just about the same as cocaine, heroin, and meth. Especially even PCP and marijuana. I never done any of those, and I never will.
And that's why he didn't care about losing his job, and he decided to quit "for reasons of conscience". And this scene is important for the whole movie, because we could realize how responsible Daniel was as a father.
The people who were his boss believed him to be so and didn't care if Daniel is a responsible parent. They were only concerned in making money and thought he was wasting their time when he spoke out against having Pudgy smoke a cigarette. Daniel had a right to quit because he didn't agree with their choice to include it. He knew it's setting a bad example to children who watches the cartoon and is concerned that they may take up smoking.
I wonder if Pudgy & Grunge would have worked as a cartoon tv series on Fox Kids back in the 90s as their version of Tom and Jerry, or Sylvester and Twitty.
That's Pretty Funny Where The Hell Are You Going Hey Listen Buddy I'll Tell You Something if You Leave You're Not Coming Back in I'm Not Taking Any Crap From You Pal
They could have at least ended it instead of leaving the situation unresolved - And now that he is gone, it can never be so... We will miss you, Robin Williams!
The first moment I saw this cartoon in "Mrs. Doubtfire" I knew it was pure Chuck Jones. Two reasons: 1. The design of the characters (the little waves of feathers and fur on their cheeks) 2. The references to his cartoons (EX: "Figaro" tune was used in one of his Bugs Bunny cartoons). God rest Chuck Jones. I wish I knew ye.
+ANNIE STORMBORN Because it's not that dialogue in children's animation used to be more intelligent and not condescending, it's that we mostly only remember the good and memorable show. Source : I'm pushing 30 and I remember watching and enjoying pretty terrible show that can't hold a candle up to the few recent exemple of children's animation I saw :P
Of course there were some that were bad or even horrible, but as whole, children's entertainment is so condescending and lacking in integrity now as apposed to then.
Good thing this cartoon was only made to advance the plot with Daniel in "Mrs. Doubtfire." Its story is too slow, and the characters are too real and uninteresting in their personalities to watch. To put it this way, I'd rather see the bird hurt the cat than hear it yell "911." Gee, interesting cartoon. 🤔
This is great! I never knew the cartoon short existed intact without seeing Robin( or I guess his character Daniel) in the foreground in the studio providing the voice, as is shown in the beginning of Mrs. Doubtfire. Then again I didn't know about the half hour of deleted scenes or that there were actually several hours worth of footage shot for this movie because Robin was so spontaneous and improvisational that there were several different ways each scene could paly out. Apparently the director chose the funniest material. It should be noted that Mrs. Doubtfire could have been a serious drama without a whole lot of comedy in it too. Robin Williams should have won an Oscar for this role.
wow,its great to the whole cartoon rather then bits of it for the mrs doudtfire,did the real cartoon have any words to it,thank you very much for sharing
What? Let's ask the technicians. Do you think it's morally right to promote smoking to the youth of America? (the technicians are all smoking and one shrugs his shoulders) *whistles* They're biased. That's a mistrial.
As much as I find Robin Williams voicing the characters to be quite clever, Daniel was right to walk out of this job. Even if it was right before Miranda lost it with him. And the ending proves why. Anyway I was watching the movie on Disney Plus the other night. So I thought I come here.
I don't remember this scene being so long lol Also where's the "voice over" inner monolog? Robbin got in trouble for speaking when the bird's beak wasn't moving.
Whiel I liked seeing this whole thing completely, I sorta hate how rather terribly cropped it appears when it came out on DVD. It really needs to be in a 1:85.1 or larger than where they had it.