I have always been fascinated by the surreal desert landscapes where these cartoons take place: rocks (sometimes two or three) balanced on a knife-edge, roads clinging to the sides of sheer cliffs, arches, overhangs spanning infinite canyons. They are beautiful.
It's funny when Willy is suspended in mid air, he is just fine, and then the moment he looks down, he looks at the screen with a face of "Oh no" and just plummets. That right there is what makes it so funny about these cartoons
@@AllRequired Actually Treg Brown came with that sound effect,then recycled it many times. Then when he retired,Lee Gunther took over in the DePatie-Freleng era.
@@sidneymarcus8074 Yes, this sounds was recorded in a folly studio, but WW2 bombs did whistle when they're dropped, followed by a loud bang (obviously). I really think that's what they're mimicking, and it would have been the most familiar, identifiable "falling" sound after the war.
I’m in my early 50s and I’m still laughing at this cartoon. Seeing Wile E Coyote fails never gets old. We’ll never see cartoons like this, again. Whoever made this is a genius. Rarely do I see a cartoon with a particular character (Wile E. Coyote) talk 3:15-Wile is looking up and probably saying, “I hate you!” 3:53-I was hoping road runner would run underneath a falling Wile E before he hits the pavement
@@ultmswag3170 i mean let's be real though. Wile would make silly mistakes sometimes but i think he was just tilted because he was actually extremely smart but the universe conspired against him with road runner's plot armor that defies the physics of the universe.
@@ultmswag3170 i think he was always too arrogant with bugs thinking he’s just some dumb rabbit that is easy too catch and underestimates him, if he uses most of his antics with roadrunner with bugs he might have a slight chance.
OMG! The funniest part is at 5:01! He walks in the air!! OMG! I remember it! I used to do my two fingers off tables at this!! I still do, sometimes! Lol
Clip #12 is from “The Wild Chase” which was a crossover between Wile E Coyote, the Roadrunner, Speedy Gonzales, and Sylvester the Cat. Since it was made during the “Depattie Freling” era of Looney Tunes, it relied on using some animation from previous Roadrunner shorts, hence the same exact joke and punchline.
historians agree this is the best similation of the events that transpired during the great emu war of 1932. they used a roadrunner and a coyote to spare australia some humilation.
The beginning is from "The Adventures of The Road-Runner"(with animation from DFE Films). I think Chuck Jones and Rudy Larriva,and even Robert McKimson did good on directing these.
The beginning of this they used from 1962's "The Adventures Of The Road-Runner"(with additional animation from DePatie-Freleng Enterprises and new music score by William Lava).
Bill St. James: The following is a Coyote Moment. Growing physically stronger in his new home, Keiko now displays more typical Orca behavior. Wile E. Coyote explains.
Only problem was, the Roadrunner was huge and the Coyote was tiny. And. He held up a sign saying," you always wanted me to catch him, now what do I do?"
@@LMS5935 Your right! Wile E. Coyote could have been through COVID-19’s peak last year, and he could have been inside a big crowd super spreader without a mask on, and he wouldn’t have died. Wile E. Coyote could survive a war zone like Iraq, or Afghanistan. Wile E. Coyote could have survived 9/11. Wile E. Coyote could survive an air strike. He is immortal..
The last bit's hilarious! "I wouldn't mind but he defies the law of gravity", everyone knows Roadrunners can't fly (well actually, they can but only a bit)
What about the scene in which Wilde E. Coyote falls of a retracted bridge and a cactus falls on him, causing him to shoot upwards screaming. That was from "To Beep or Not to Beep".