Overview
Contact:
View
company
contact information for Rabbit of Seville on
IMDbPro.
Release Date:
16 December 1950 (USA)
more
Awards:
1 nomination
more
User Comments:
An absolutely brilliant cartoon, possibly exceeding even "What's Opera, Doc?"!
more
Crew believed to be complete
Additional Details
Runtime:
7 min
Color:
Color (Technicolor)
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1
more
Fun Stuff
Goofs:
Continuity: When Bugs cuts the straps off Elmer's pants his underwear is red with flowers, a bit later on when an electric shaver comes to life and rips open his pants his underwear is white.
more
Quotes:
Elmer Fudd:
Ooh, wait 'till I get that wabbit!
Bugs Bunny:
[
Disguised as a Spanish lady] What would you want with a wabbit? / Can't you see that I'm much sweeter / I'm your little seņoriter / You are my type of guy / Let me straighten your tie / and I shall dance for you.
more
Soundtrack:
The Barber of Seville Overture
more
FAQ
What scenes have been censored from TV prints?
List: Bugs Bunny dresses in drag
Which series is this from: Looney Tunes or Merrie Melodies?
more
more
Message Boards
Discuss this movie with other users on
IMDb message board for Rabbit of Seville (1950)
Recommendations
Related Links
Warner Bros. Cartoon Department was a factory that churned out the best cartoon shorts in history over a period of thirty years, over ninety per cent of these cartoons above the level most studios could hope to reach. But if that hadn't been so, if all the hundreds of cartoons that were turned out over the decades were complete crap, "What's Opera, Doc?" would come and give the studio world-wide renown. "Rabbit of Seville" seems to be in the same league. It's one of the handful of cartoons that really has no visible flaws. After repeated viewings (thanks to DVD) I still can't see anything wrong with it. The music and the animation are perfectly synchronized, and might be equal Disney's "Nutcracker Suite" sequence from "Fantasia." The action and the music sometimes get so frantic and so fast that your heart beats 200 times a minute. The gags are perfectly ingenious, nobody thought of those kinds of gags before and they were never repeated. Bugs and Elmer are great actors. No cartoons but possibly "Duck Amuck" and "What's Opera, Doc?" match it. Bugs's songs are fantastic, if you can keep up with the words. Nobody had seen anything like "Rabbit of Seville" before and nobody has seen anything similar since. So many trademarks that seem like Warner Bros. staples now were actually only used in "Seville." It really is unmatched. Beautiful.