People Are Bunny (1959) Poster

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8/10
An episode which falls slightly flat plot-wise, but picks up on jokes.
Mightyzebra12 January 2010
In "People are Bunny," for me it was not the plot that made me enjoy this (which it often is in Looney Tunes) but the jokes, character of Bugs Bunny and random ideas which did not totally connect to the plot. This is also the episode where I have seen Bugs Bunny at his smartest, here he turns into an autistic savant when he answers an incredibly complicated maths sum with no hesitation. The plot was in many ways predictable and when it was not, it was still not very good.

Here, Daffy Duck is watching the TV and when he hears that $1000 will be rewarded to the first rabbit brought to a particular TV studio, he knows just who to look for. He finds Bugs Bunny polishing his gun (?) and various house items in his warren. Daffy Duck forces Bugs Bunny to come along with him, will the rabbit fall victim to the TV company, who want to shoot him..?

In this episode Daffy assumes one of his most greedy roles possible, which is personally my least favourite role of his. I do not recommend this episode for people who prefer the older, crazy Daffy, unless you love Bugs Bunny more/almost as much, as he is particularly good in this episode.

I recommend this episode to people who like strong Looney Tunes characters and to people who love Bugs Bunny. Enjoy "People are Bunny"! :-)
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7/10
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck in People Are Bunny provide some funny parodies of '50s television
tavm31 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Just rewatched this cartoon-I first saw this on an afternoon show called "Bugs Bunny and Friends" in the late '70s-on YouTube. In this one, Daffy Duck watches on TV an offer from a hunting show on QTTV for a big money prize if someone brings the first rabbit to the station. Guess who he tries to get to come with him? I'll stop right there and just mention what I think was one of the most funniest lines associated with Bugs Bunny. It's after he's stuck in a phone booth which Daffy has locked with his rifle. The phone rings and after Bugs picks the receiver, is asked a complicated math question. The rabbit answers correctly right away and gets his millions in coins from the phone. When the person on the other line asks how he got the answer quickly, Bugs replies, "If there's anything we rabbits are good at, it's multiplying." There's also a hilarious parody of Art Linkletter's "People Are Funny" (here, called "People Are Phoney" hosted by Art Lamplighter) in which Daffy tries to help an old lady cross the street despite that lady constantly hitting him on the head! Okay, I think I've said enough so on that note, I highly recommend People Are Bunny.
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8/10
"If there's anything we rabbits are good at, it's multiplying"
TheLittleSongbird11 June 2016
Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny are two of my favourite cartoon characters, two of Looney Tunes' most popular and frequently used for a reason as they are funny and charismatic characters with great, unique personalities.

While not one of their strongest cartoons, individually or in collaboration, 'People are Bunny' still provides 6 or 7 minutes worth of good entertainment and anyone who grew up watching 50s television will find themselves feeling nostalgic. Anyone who loves Bugs and Daffy are very unlikely to find themselves disappointed.

'People are Bunny' is not really a cartoon to watch if you're looking for a strong plot. The story is admittedly fun and gives off a real sense of nostalgia, even for those who didn't grow up in the 50s (speaking as one), but it's pretty thin and basically an excuse to string along as many parodies to recognise as possible, complete with a couple of random parts that don't amount to much. Those who don't like Daffy's greedier personality, personally am not really one of them but know a fair few that don't, may be turned off by him (for me it wasn't a problem, though I do prefer his earlier more manic personality, and this side to them has been written far worse in his cartoons with Speedy Gonzales).

However, the animation in 'People are Bunny' is colourful, with colours that are never flat but never overly-saturated, simple but elegant backgrounds and Bugs and Daffy are well designed and move easily. Taking on music composition duty is the always reliable Milt Franklyn. Franklyn's music is vibrantly orchestrated, used cleverly and with boundless characterful energy, adding a lot to the action if not quite enhancing it quite as effectively as Carl Stalling (my personal favourite of the Looney Tunes composers) does, this said at least it fits which is more than can be said for a lot of Bill Lava's work in the late-60s output.

Luckily, 'People are Bunny' does not forget to entertain. All of it actually is very funny to hilarious, with razor sharp dialogue and inventive and suitably painful-looking sight gags (poor Daffy taking the brunt of it). The highlights were Bugs' "If there's anything we rabbits are good at, it's multiplying", the hilarious parody of "People are Funny" and, agreed, one of Daffy's best and most uproarious exit lines. Bugs and Daffy are on terrific form with a great easy-going chemistry, neither overshadowing the other, as are June Foray, Daws Butler and especially the peerless Mel Blanc providing the voice work.

Overall, very good and entertaining. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Math and more and guns galore . . .
oscaralbert21 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . highlight PEOPLE ARE BUNNY, a Warner Bros. "Merry Melodies" animated short. BOYHOOD's director is caricatured as a TV show host, though Ethan Hawke is nowhere to be seen. Bugs Bunny is proved to be a cutting edge botanist (on par with Matt Damon in THE MARTIAN), as he has a carrot BUSH growing as a potted plant in his living room! Bugs also is a math whiz; ask him to times 1,297 by 142 and he'll demonstrate that rabbits "sure know how to multiply." Though Daffy Duck is holding Bugs hostage at shotgun point for the first half of this story, it is Daffy who gets runs over in traffic, blown up by dynamite, scalped, and shot full of holes by a semi-circular firing squad. Viewers may infer that it is Mr. Hawke who is busy winning television station QTTV's top prizes of the day, such as a Rolls Royce limousine, a largish yacht, and the key to Ft. Knox. After all, in Hollywood it's not WHAT you know (such as the product of 1,297 times 142) but WHO you know that gets you ahead. As Bugs may be the second most prolific prize winner of this day, viewers are bound to wonder when he'll invest in a wallet.
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9/10
Excellent cartoon with Daffy's best exit line ever
llltdesq14 December 2000
This cartoon parodies American television in the latter 1950s in general and several shows in particular (like Art Linkletter's "People Are Funny") and provides opportunities for gags galore for Bugs and Daffy in the process. The cartoon pricipally plays on Daffy's greed to set everything in motion and takes off from there. It ends with the best exit line spoken by Daffy ever! Excellent cartoon well worth watching. Highly recommended.
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7/10
Watching this brief cartoon may prove a bittersweet experience . . .
pixrox113 November 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . for viewers over the age of fifty, and a head-scratching puzzlement for those of Today's generations. During the early part of PEOPLE ARE BUNNY, Daffy marches his Frenemy Bugs at gunpoint into a broadcasting station, and locks him inside something resembling a vertical casket, referred to back in the bygone days of yesteryear as a "phone booth." In the Dark Ages of the 1900's such claustrophobic nightmares were scattered at random across cities, villages and way stations. Since no one had smart phones, if you needed to call someone with an urgent message you had to waste time hunting for one of these inconveniences. To make matters worse, they were often out of order or tied up by some Public Menace just shooting the breeze. Worst of all, phone booth users had to pay for the questionable "privilege" of using these unsanitary gizmos with one or more coins (and most users discovered halfway through their conversations that they did not have enough change available!). Bugs actually gets a slot machine-style payout from the phone in his booth, but such windfalls rarely occurred in Real Life.
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8/10
It turns out that the dude voicing BOTH Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck . . .
tadpole-596-91825622 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . is some guy named "Mel Blanc." At least this is the case for the animated short entitled PEOPLE ARE BUNNY. One has to wonder whether this voice-over man volunteered his "talents" for these cartoons, or if the movie studio actually paid him. If the latter were the case, was Mel paid in cash? After all, wouldn't it be pretty awkward to try to deposit a "Blanc Check" at the local branch of your financial institution? (At the time this series of films came out, I do not believe "direct deposit" of weekly pay had been invented.) This, of course, brings us to the enigmatic ending of PEOPLE ARE BUNNY. The black duck closes this story by offering the hare a "handful of Blanc's." Is this what is known in show biz as an "inside joke?"
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