@Goddess Shadow I thought none of them had actually relations to any of the Looney Tunes cast and it was more just the next generation of Toons learning from the pros?
@Goddess Shadow well it was cause of their last name and all Though apparently they are making a revival where Babs and Buster are siblings which seems weird to me
Personally it’s the eyes, just before the explosion and he knows he’s screwed. Sometimes he owns it, but mostly it’s just a ‘Oh crap’ mixed with fear look and it’s just so priceless in every single one 😂
@@mrsaxman3602 i love the one where his little cabin is on train tracks and he notices a train heading towards him and he just closes the curtain and accepts his demise
The aftermath every time of Wile E Coyote, looking all frazzled looking at the camera when he’s been blown up cracks me up. The effort the artists put into every one of these scenes is priceless, it’s the same outcome every time but they are all hilarious!
He stole the Time Ring from the Supreme Wabbit and gathered the Super Dragon Balls to switch his body with the Roadrunner's, adopting the name Roadrunner Black. Then, he went to an alternate timeline and recruited another Wile E. He then used the Super Dragon Balls again to give that Wile E an immortal body. Finally, they returned to Roadrunner Black's timeline and started the Zero Roadrunner Plan.
I love how they recycle gags, then change them slightly. Like those back-to-back "bomb and long curvy ramp down mountainside" gags at the start of this montage. I will never not laugh my head off when the bomb explodes in Wile E's face before the match even touches the fuse. Talk about premature detonation, ROFL!
Even if it's just another bomb joke that's been used countless times thoughout the show, there's always a bit of uniqueness to each of them. That's why the bomb jokes never got stale as time goes on and I really like it.
Wile E. Coyote has survived all those explosions and continues to go after the road runner. He’s a cartoon character, how else could he have survived? He is immortalized to entertain people of all ages.
He was a genius the way he structured the jokes and gags. Even though we have seen them many times, there was always a slight difference on its execution which made the gag unique. Chuck Jones will always be my favourite no matter what anyone says.
He would do the same jokes more than a few times with different characters whether it was Bugs or Daffy or Wile E but he never made it seem stale. That was part of his brilliance imo.
4:43 Coyote: Stay down! I’m used to explosions, not you! I don’t want you to get hurt! Wile E Coyote was protecting Sylvester from danger and being kind, that’s called sacrificing!
Or that segment when Wile E. Coyote places dynamite in a culvert as Sylvester watched, the handle on the detonator slowly lowers and touches off the charge, catching Sylvester in the blast. I can hear Wile say to Sylvester "Mention my name at the hospital and get the Wile E. Coyote discount!" 😂😂😂😂
@@sct913 Honestly, my favorite Wile E. Coyote episode has to be a tie between Scrambled Aches and Operation: Rabbit. Both episodes are just genuine classics with both the dehydrated boulders (just add water) and the explosive female decoys ("Ah, my darling… how beautiful you are. How devastating! How lucky! Little did you dream that one day you would marry a genius." That, his "Super Genius" subtitle idea, and his introduction to Bugs have to be my favorite quotes in that episode. XD).
@@GlitchanBlack For Wile E Coyote cartoons, Operation: Rabbit is in a league of its own. Then again, that's exactly what Chuck Jones intended - to give the Coyote a voice and an entirely different dimension than what he normally shows in the Road Runner series.
Wile E. Coyote never fails to make me laugh and/or chuckle. I love his antics and the fact his plans always end up backfiring on him. It's why he's my fav. You gotta wonder though... Just how high is his frickin' medical bill?
I never understood how someone could possibly think this is funny or even entertaining. Times were so simple in the 1960s that this was considered comedy.
He is very smart, I wouldn’t have thought of a magnet car pulling a grenade. In the Bugs Bunny shorts, Bugs is just smarter than him. In Roadrunner, the actual nature forces go against him, like slicing a portion of a bridge to sink the Roadrunner on it and collapsing the cliff and not the bridge. However, I must admit, he does do some dumb decisions, like staying under a bridge when he means to collapse it (2:10)
I think I saw once online, someone ACTUALLY totaled up all the ACME products and shipping and taxes... ROFLMFAO... I think it was over 5.6 million $$ ?? Wile E. Coyote must have had a rich BORED uncle !!!
"Well, well, the boy has talent...." *boom* *boom* *boom* *boom* *boom* *boom* *boom* I still find it odd they gave Wile E a voice for his Bugs Bunny cartoons. The voice definitely suits the character, anyway.
Actually, he does talk in a Roadrunner cartoon. He doesn't talk to the Roadrunner, though. Two boys are shown watching Wile E. chasing the Roadrunner on TV and having a dialog about the show. One of the boys then poses the question, why does the Coyote chase the Roadrunner? Wile E. then screeches to a sudden stop (as if there were such a thing as interactive television back then) and breaks the fourth wall to answer the boy's question in great detail, complete with charts and other various visual aids that were apparently prepared well in advance. In another Roadrunner cartoon, the action cuts away from one of the Coyote's many failed chases to show him analyzing his tactics, watching films, viewing slides and taking notes from the comfort of his cave/lair. Wile E. gives the viewers a behind-the-scenes look at how all the action is filmed, demonstrating various camera placements and angles.
Wile E Coyote is just like Lobo. Neither Heaven or Hell refuse to take Wile E Coyote whenever he get splat from fall, or getting shot, or from a explosion.
8:19 EEEEE-YAAHH!! Hilarious! LMAO! ROFL! Wile E. is one of the best drawn characters, with some priceless facial expressions ! 10:52 Oh, good; he FINALLY got a break! :-) Since Wile E. and me have the same kind of luck, we should be added as co-authors of Murphy's Law LOL
10:50 - end That ending is worth it. For both the viewers and the Coyote. He's been through enough and he deserves a happy ending, one where he doesn't get blown up.
As a child in Akron, Ohio in the 1960s I was absolutely positive that Wile E Coyote got his explosives and anvils from our Acme grocery stores! And I'll bet I wasn't the only 7 year old there who thought so.
I'm from Brazil and my first encounter with the word acme was through the cartoons. When I saw the store logo in an NFL Stadium I laughed and thought "it's among us, at last"
DanyelATH I love to see him open up that tiny umbrella over his head! As if that could protect Wile E. from being injured by the boulders/bombs/whatever is about to land on him! 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣
no offense noy saying Will.E.Coyote cartoons are bad It's not my favorite Looney Tunes but it still has it's moments and is better than modren B.S. but I feel like Tex Avery,Bob Clamppet and sometimes Chuck Jones who produced these have done impeccable good zany ass cartoons
6:31 He fell for the exact same trap as Private Snafu did in "Booby Traps." Same song and note even! I have to imagine that's no coincidence, in fact I could imagine some of the same people being involved in the production of both.
It’s a running WB gag. They’ve used it in many Looney Tunes shorts like “Show Biz Bugs” and “Ballot Box Bunny”. They have even used it in Animaniacs in “Slappy Goes Walnuts”.
The Chuck Jones Formula... 😆= 🐺 + 🐦 +💣 + 🔫 + 🔧🔨 + 🚦 Also, I would like to add that Acme is a wonderful Corporation. It's how you use their products thats key...
@@daleburrell6273 That Whole Term Life Insurance also covers his medical, dental, visual, and product replacement. Plus, he gets instant discounts with ACME products and services. If there's any form of insurance I'd want, it's Wile E. Coyote's!
and after 11 minutes and 80 explosions later Wile E Coyote isn't 'wasted' yet. He still alive and ready to make yet another hilarious explosive shenanigans
I can say only one thing about Wile E. Coyote and that he was a real glutton for punishment for everything that always happens to him when dealing with that bird.
That one scene where he tried to get the Road Runner with a grenade which backfired when it hit power lines and bounced back up to blow up in his face and he let go of the pin only for another grenade to come up out of nowhere and blow up in his face for a second time was really hilarious.
Lisa Dooley I wanna know what his income like? Because you cannot spend all of your money on these failed products and not filing for chapter 11 bankruptcy.
The guys who wrote and drew these must have had so much fun figuring out new ways for the coyote to get blown to bits. Those must have been some great writers'/producers' meetings.
Actually there were 79 explosions. Number 80 was the last one that didn't go off; but it should've been 80, because one explosion was left out. The one that was left out came in the aftermath of explosion #57.
Allow me to introduce Myself. My name is Wile E. Coyote. Genius. I am not selling anything nor am I working my way to college. So let's get down to cases. You are a Rabbit and I'm going to eat you for supper. Now don't try to get away. I am more Muscular, More Cunning, Faster, and more Larger than you are. And...I'M a Genius! While you can hardly pass the entrance exams to Kindergarten. So I'll give you the Customary 10 Minutes to say your prayers
Brandon Kohout Or scavenge food like real coyotes? That coyote is risking his life trying to catch his prey (the road runner), who is faster and smart enough to avoid hungry predators.
I remember when I was a kid, Saturday morning meant pancakes and the bugs bunny roadrunner show, followed by a day as a free range child. Such great memories.