Fox-Terror (1957) Poster

(1957)

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8/10
Entertaining with the fox a worthy adversary
TheLittleSongbird17 March 2010
I personally wouldn't count Fox-Terror as a classic, like say What's Opera Doc? or Duck Amuck, but it is great fun nonetheless. With a surprise of an ending and some inspired surreal gags it is just fun, despite its rather hectic pacing and somewhat predictable story. The animation is fluid and colourful like a vast majority of the Looney Tunes cartoons, and the music is rousing enough. Also prevalent are some good scripting and stellar vocal performances from Mel Blanc. The characters are their engaging selves, Foghorn is a delight to see, the hound dog is funny, the little rooster is cute and most significantly the fox is a worthy adversary.

Overall, not classic status but an entertaining and recommendable watch. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
"Boll my Weevil!" Foghorn exclaims near the beginning of this brief cartoon . . .
pixrox128 November 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . FOX-TERROR. Perhaps few if any viewers in this our Modern 21st Century have heard of the boll weevil beetle. Wikipedia teaches us that this invasive Mexican scourge has cost the Southern Red States of the Classic Confederacy about $13 Billion since the late 1800's. Infiltrating the Brownsville, TX, area in 1892, baby weevils are gluttons for cotton, scarfing down more of the crop than all the U.S. textile mills combined. American economists estimate that Today's U.S. T-shirt prices would average a nickel, while socks would be selling for a dime a dozen, were it now for weevil depredation. Does this sound to you like something Foghorn should be joking about?
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7/10
Fox molded
lee_eisenberg14 August 2007
"Fox-Terror" has something that I never expected to see: Foghorn Leghorn and Barnyard Dog as friends. In this case, a fox is doing everything possible to keep BD out of the way while he attempts to snatch the chickens, so he gets FL to inadvertently harm BD. Meanwhile, a tiny rooster sounds an alarm but BD never sees the fox and ends up thinking that the little guy is just playing pranks. Until someone takes everything a little too far. Overwhelming? Well, with some of the gags that they pull - namely the suit-changing - you'll never find it bad.

OK, so this cartoon was probably a place-holder between the really great cartoons (1957 also saw the release of "What's Opera, Doc?" and "Birds Anonymous"). But it's always a pleasure to see Foggy do his folksy stuff. Worth seeing.
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Where do they sell yellow plaid suits like that?
Chip_douglas19 February 2004
When measuring Foghorn Leghorn shorts by their co-stars, ‘Fox-Terror' comes out a winner, as it features two inspired new characters. First up is the terror of the title, who got his paws on the most incredible plaid suit that shows the same pattern which ever way he turns. The second new character is a tiny panic stricken rooster in charge of pulling the Fox Alarm cord.

For once Foghorn and the Barnyard Dog (or ‘Mule' as Foggy affectionately calls him) are not interested in hurting each other at all. The rooster only wants to go fish (figure that) while the dog is very adamant about guarding the chickens for a change (shame he misunderstands that tiny rooster all the time). It is that foxy master of disguise who continually tricks them into hurting each other.

This Foghorn feature has a lot more surreal gags than usual. For instance characters change their outfits simply by spinning round (years before Lynda Carter made it hip). This leads to nearly everybody wearing one of those plaid suits and a surprising ending (compared to some other Leghorn shorts I could mention).

8 out of 10
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7/10
"I need a pointer and that dog's got just the head for it. Pointed, that is."
utgard1429 December 2014
A sly fox manipulates Foghorn Leghorn into getting Barnyard Dog away from the hen house but his schemes backfire. I love me some Foghorn Leghorn but here the real star is the fox. He's a fun character. Love the racetrack tout routine. Wish I had a yellow plaid suit like that. The tout seems to be modeled after Sheldon Leonard's character from the Jack Benny radio and TV shows. Foghorn is fun but almost seems like a supporting character in his own short. Barnyard Dog is good, as is the little rooster who keeps pulling the alarm at the hen house. This is a pretty funny short but not one of Foghorn's best. The animation's nice and the voicework from Mel Blanc and Daws Butler is great.
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7/10
Since most if not all of the classic . . .
oscaralbert16 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes from Warner Bros. 1925-1950 Golden Age had a social agenda, it's hard not to look for one in FOX-TERROR. Obviously, Warner intends the title character here to represent the American One Per Cent. The fox has just one thing on his mind: plundering the chickens. The chickens, of course, are meant to represent We, the 99%. The mostly ineffectual "guardian" rooster and "watch" dog stand in here for the U.S. Congress and legal system Constitutionally charged with safe-guarding the 99% from Tyrannical One Per Centers such as Britain's King George III. As FOX-TERROR documents, the Congressional/Rooster/Dog had become the easily bamboozled dumbest among us by the 1950s. Like the little chicken in this cartoon, We the People keep yanking our Congressional/Cop/Courts "Who-are-you-going-to-call? Trust Busters!" alarm chain, but Congress and the Police no longer even bother to answer the calls coming in from the Common Man (or Chicken). Warner appends an optimistic close to this animated short. Few could muster such Hope today.
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