Watch Fast and Furry-ous For Free
Fast and Furry-ous
This was the debut for Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner. It was also their only cartoon made in the 1940s. It set the template for the series, in which Wile E. Coyote (here given the ersatz Latin name Carnivorous Vulgaris) tries to catch Roadrunner (Accelleratii Incredibus) through many traps, plans and products, although in this first cartoon not all of the products are yet made by the Acme Corporation.
Release : | 1949 |
Rating : | 7.9 |
Studio : | Warner Bros. Cartoons, |
Crew : | Background Designer, Director, |
Cast : | Paul Julian Mel Blanc |
Genre : | Animation Comedy |
Watch Trailer
Cast List
Related Movies
Reviews
Please don't spend money on this.
Crappy film
Yo, there's no way for me to review this film without saying, take your *insert ethnicity + "ass" here* to see this film,like now. You have to see it in order to know what you're really messing with.
The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
I have to say that the name of this short film is not really familiar to me, but the characters certainly are. Over 65 years ago, this was the birth of Road Runner and Coyote. The trio behind this are Chuck Jones, Michael Maltese and Mel Blanc, who worked on uncountable other Warner Bros. films together. This cartoon here runs also for 7 minutes like all these others. And many more Roadrunner vs. Coyote short films should follow, even several ones in the 21st century. The contents are basically always the same, but it's still funny. Coyote uses all kinds of technical gadgets, sometimes more complicated, sometimes less, to catch Roadrunner and have him for dinner. One the plate, that is. But Roadrunner is simply too smart and too fast for his opponent. In this very first film here, Coyote uses simple stuff like paint or boomerangs, but it's equally useless just like his giant rocket or Superman costume. This cartoon was fun to watch. I would not call it great by any means, but it's certainly the watch and the "meep meep" is simply legendary by now. Recommended.
One of the most brilliant cartoon series of all time, and definitely my favorite, began with this short. Wile E Coyote (not named yet in this cartoon) is the star of this series, and he represents every bad day we've ever had, every gadget that ever misfired on us at the worst possible moment and every impossible dream we've ever thought we could make come true if we only "tried something else". The Road Runner is almost a phantom, darting in and out of the picture at will, taunting us with that relentless smirk and the flick of the tongue. Being the first in the series, you can see Chuck Jones & Michael Maltese had the basic idea in place from the get-go, but would work to refine it over the years. The two characters -- especially Coyote -- aren't quite as cute as they would become, and some of the gags aren't quite as clever. Also, Road Runner is a bit more aggressive in this short, socking Coyote with "Another Genuine Boomerang" (shortly after Coyote had launches his own) and bashing him with a metal trash can lid. In later cartoons, I would become convinced Road Runner was really female, but in this short, the bird seems decidedly male. Yet many of the elements that made this such a brilliant series are present -- the crazy laws of cartoon physics that always favor the Road Runner and always punish the Coyote (the bird can go right into -- and back out of -- a tunnel painted on a rock wall, while Coyote can only smash face-first into it) and Coyote's first reliance on a crazy contraption designed to give him more speed (a refrigerator attached to a meat grinder strapped to his back to give him artificial snow so he can ski in the desert -- and right off the edge of a cliff.. of course the thing sputters to a halt only inches away from the safety of the other side). All in all, a great beginning.. but the best was still to come!
"Fast and Furry-ous" is the first in a series of remarkable cartoons featuring the forever popular Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote. Director Chuck Jones and writer Michael Maltese really got the series off to a great start, and the Road Runner and Coyote eventually became two of the most popular cartoon characters ever devised.It appears to be much easier to remember these Road Runner/Coyote cartoons for their particular gags than for their titles. In any case, here are three of my favorite highlights from "Fast and Furry-ous." First off is the repetitive gag of the Coyote painting a tunnel onto a solid, flat rock and the Road Runner speeding straight through the rock into the imaginary tunnel. But, as always, when the Coyote tries it, he smacks directly into the rock. When the Coyote disguises himself as a little girl and places a school crossing sign in the middle of the road, he gets trampled by the Road Runner as he skips across the road. The cunning bird briefly returns disguised as a little girl as well and holds up a sign that reads "ROAD RUNNERS CAN'T READ." And finally, the most elaborate gag in the picture: in order to successfully ski after the Road Runner, the Coyote straps a large refrigerator onto his back, the idea being that the fridge can churn out ice cubes, which can then be crushed into snow by an attached grinder. This plan works out briefly, but the attached motor gives out (watch the Coyote's troubled facial expression when this happens) and the Coyote plunges off a cliff."Fast and Furry-ous" is an overall enjoyable cartoon that was the start of one of the most beloved animated series ever made. Bravo to Chuck Jones and his entire staff for masterfully creating all these hilarious Road Runner/Coyote cartoons.
Some people love Bugs Bunny. Some people love Daffy Duck. Some Porky Pig and others Pepe LePew (I NEVER understood the love for the last one), I'm not saying those are not great characters, as they ARE (well accept Pepe), but give me a Wile E. Coyote/ Roadrunner short to watch and I'm on cloud 9. This very first ever amazing pairing of the two is nothing short of greatness. The gags are all rapid-fire and they all work. I was laughing throughout the whole short. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!! This insanely great cartoon is on Disk 3 of the "Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 1" It also has an optional commentary as well as a featuretteMy Grade: A+