Weasel Stop (1956) Poster

(1956)

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6/10
Foghorn feuds with an ugly dog
utgard1431 December 2015
Decent Foghorn Leghorn short, directed by Robert McKimson. The story has Foghorn helping a weasel try to get into the chicken coop, for no other reason than to tick off the guard dog. The dog, by the way, is not Barnyard Dog but a new one voiced by Lloyd Perryman. The weasel (and this basic plot) was used more than once in Foghorn cartoons. It always seemed like the Looney Tunes version of a crackhead jonesing for a fix. This one also includes the famous "numbered feathers" bit. Solid voice work from Mel Blanc and Lloyd Perryman. Lively music from Milt Franklyn. The animation is nice and colorful. Can't say I care for the character design for the dog, though. It looks like an old dirty carpet or something. It's not a great Foghorn cartoon but it is enjoyable enough. The weird country dog and the crackhead weasel keep things interesting and Foghorn gets some funny lines.
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8/10
More Foghorn Leghorn fun...
TheLittleSongbird13 February 2013
While Foghorn Leghorn is not my favourite of the Looney Tunes characters, he is always fun to watch and I take much pleasure in his cartoons. Foghorn himself is an interesting and distinctive character and while the stories are fairly routine they are brightened by the humour and the rapport between Foghorn and his supporting characters(Barnyard Dog and Henery being the popular ones). Weasel Stop is very entertaining, I prefer Weasel While You Work, but a lot of what I liked about that cartoon is here as well. The animation quality has some lovely colours but generally could have been sharper. However, the music is characterful, with a mix of arrangements of familiar tunes and original themes as always with Looney Tunes, and beautifully orchestrated. Weasel Stop is very funny. The dialogue is very witty, sharp and precise, not the most quotable but I had a good laugh and smile throughout. I liked the folksy sayings too, though some may find they might go over their heads. The gags come by thick and fast and have a good deal of imagination and freshness. Of the characters, Foghorn of course steals the show, even worse in his treatment of those around him than usual but also gets his just desserts in the end. The dog is a nice addition, and the weasel- looking more like a squirrel rat if I may say so- likewise. Mel Blanc is faultless as usual. In conclusion, not Foghorn's best for me but much fun to be had. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Barnyard Dawg's relative?
lee_eisenberg7 July 2008
One thing that strikes me about Robert McKimson's Foghorn Leghorn short "Weasel Stop" is the absence of Barnyard Dawg (who has on ongoing feud with FL). In his place there's an inattentive mutt whom a weasel - one of the recurring characters in FL cartoons - plans to trick in order to steal chickens. Foggy is only too happy to help the little guy (just to play his usual practical joke on the barely reactive hound). However, things don't go quite as planned...

This was far from my favorite Foghorn Leghorn cartoon; I usually like it when FL and BD get to carry out their regular shenanigans. But in the grand scheme of things, just about any, I say just about any Foghorn Leghorn is good Foghorn Leghorn. Worth watching, that is.
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10/10
My favorite Foghorn Leghorn
llltdesq14 October 2000
This particular Foghorn Leghorn is my favorite one and that's largely because of a dog that that strikes me as part Andy Griffith and part Bugs Bunny. Old Foggy (who is, I admit, a bit of a blowhard and worse than usual in this one) doesn't stand a chance! The script is particularly good here, although the dog's folksy sayings wll not suit everyone's taste. I think they're great! There are some good sight gags here and it's well worth your time, especially if you like to see Foghorn take his lumps now and then.
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8/10
A joy to watch
nnwahler7 July 2023
I get real pleasure from watching nearly all these 1956-57 Bob McKimson shorts. He'd just assembled a brand-new animation staff,after the Warner cartoon studio reopened (briefly having closed down on account of the short-lived 3D boom). He inherited animator Ted Bonnicksen from Freleng's unit, Keith Darling from Jones's unit, and adding veteran Russ Dyson. Background/layout artist Richard H. Thomas was the only member of the unit to return.

Teamed with writer Tedd Pierce, McKimson turned out some very good-to-excellent cartoons. The dog in this Foghorn episode is a shaggy, mid-southern hick who does little or nothing to outsmart Foggy and the weasel (that little guy's always awesome!). Wisely, McKimson would bring back the usual potbellied Brooklyn hound to do battle with Foggy.
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8/10
For all of its urbane, suave humor, this brief cartoon might . . .
tadpole-596-91825628 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . merit a rating of "10" out of a possible 10, were it not for an inexplicable conundrum popping up out of nowhere toward the finale. Specifically, the giant white rooster seems to have erected an even more gigantic, towering image of himself (reminiscent of the giant Buddhas destroyed by the insurgent artillery miscreants over in Asia as target practice for their subsequent attack upon New York City, Washington, DC and Pennsylvania). To what end has anyone erected the looming icy fowl (off-camera, of course)? Such a project would have taken weeks if not months to complete (and winter would have been long gone BEFORE the Icy Giant raised his ugly head). Viewers must wonder if the creators of WEASEL STOP were trying to compete with GODZILLA.
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5/10
Warner's obsession with "numbered feathers" . . .
oscaralbert10 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . continues in WEASEL STOP. It seems like every other outing featuring either Daffy Duck or Foghorn Leghorn Rooster involves an explosion or varmint plucking Daffy or Leghorn nude (save for their boxer shorts), after which the bare bird says, "Fortunately, I keep all my feathers numbered." That begs a question. I might keep all my toothpaste tubes--past and present--carefully enumerated, but what good would that do once all the white stuff has been Squooze out? Next time you take your Thanksgiving turkey out of your oven, try inserting all of its feathers BACK into the holes you carefully numbered when you plucked it. See for yourself if "Tom" suddenly becomes the "life of the party." Jeffrey Dahmer "experimented" for years on all creatures great and small in his parents' basement before he moved up to humans. I think the Hollywood Cold Case Squad should try to correlate the whereabouts of the Looney Tunes "numbered feathers"-obsessed writer with the Blue Dahlia Murder Case and similar unsolved Kinkster Killings.
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5/10
Is "Willy the Weasel" in the middle of the pack, or up among the front runners . . .
pixrox128 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . when it comes to the title of the most hated Loony Tune character? Certainly, if viewers are forced to limit their ballots to secondary characters, Willy will be right up there among such misfires as Henry the diminutive chicken hawk, Sylvester, Jr., Egghead the bookworm rooster, Miss Prissy (Egghead's mom), Hippie Hopper and, of course, the original creep-creep: Mr. Roadrunner. If such obnoxious title characters as Henry the Skunk, Daffy Duck, Elmer and Tweeting Bird are included, there are more than enough miscreants to give Willy a run for his money.
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