RATING:  
                  PG for some mild language and innuendo 
                  RELEASE: 
                  November 2003 
                  GENRE: 
                  Action, Adventure, Comedy  
                  STARRING: 
                  Brendan Fraser, Jenna Elfman, Steve Martin, 
                    Joan Cusack, Heather Locklear, Timothy Dalton, Bill Goldberg, 
                    Robert Picardo, Matthew Lillard (cameo)  
                  DIRECTOR: 
                  Joe Dante 
                  Looney Tunes Movie   
                    Web Site  
                    
			 
							 
							
							
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				MOVIE REVIEW
				
				Looney Tunes: Back in Action
				
				By Holly McClure 
  Reviewer, Crosswalk.com 
  
				  
				
				 
  CBN.com   
    Special Notes:  In 1930, Warner Bros. debuted the celebrated 
    "Looney Tunes" series of animated film shorts in conjunction with cartoon 
    producer Leon Schlesinger. While most Hollywood movie studios were producing 
    pre-feature cartoon shorts at the time, none became as beloved as the series 
    of irreverent six-minute comedy films featuring early Warner characters. Bugs 
    Bunny, Daffy Duck and stuttering Porky Pig were joined over the next four 
    decades by Elmer Fudd, the Tasmanian Devil, Yosemite Sam, Road Runner, Wile 
    E. Coyote, Tweety Bird, Sylvester, and many, many others. Warner Bros. employed 
    a powerhouse of animation talent to bring the characters to life, led by such 
    legends as Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Tex Avery, Bob Clampett, Bob McKimson, 
    voice character legend Mel Blanc and musical director Carl Stalling. These 
    artists became legends of cartoon comedy, winning numerous Academy Awards 
    and entertaining generations of fans throughout the world for over 70 years. 
     
    Plot:  On her first day, the new no-nonsense VP of comedy 
    at Warner Bros. Studios, Kate Houghton (Elfman), decides to fire the egocentric 
    Daffy Duck and a security guard, the son of the studio's biggest action star. 
    Daffy is tired of playing second to Bugs with the famous rabbit getting all 
    the fame. But Bugs realizes he needs the narcissistic Duck to make his act 
    work and that Looney Tunes would fail without him. So Bugs convinces the head 
    honchos that they need Daffy Duck.  
  Meanwhile the security guard D.J. (Frasier) finds out that his actor father, 
    Damian Drake (Dalton), is really a secret agent who was hunting for a mysterious 
    diamond known as the Blue Monkey, a supernatural gem with powers that can 
    turn humans into monkeys. He's been kidnapped by the evil head of the Acme 
    Corporation (Martin) who wants to turn all humans into monkeys and make 
    them slave laborers. As the chase sends the group around the globe, they meet 
    up with various undercover operatives like a showgirl in Vegas (Locklear) 
    and a caretaker to the creatures, Mother (Cusack). Will Bugs find Daffy and 
    save the studio (and the day)? Stay tuned. 
     
    Good:  If only the plot had carried on with the theme 
    of Daffy on the skids, this movie may have had a better chance of avoiding 
    the loony course it took. The "Looney Tunes" characters haven't been seen 
    on the big screen since the 1996 hit "Space Jam," and once again, this story 
    mixes the live-action world with the irreverent animated icons. The story 
    unfolds on the studio back lot and then careens all over the map in "Looney 
    Tunes" style in an adventure that takes them from Hollywood to Las Vegas, 
    to Paris and the jungles of Africa. The animation is well done, but director 
    Joe Dante ("The 'Burbs") makes the story too wild and wacky and in the process 
    loses sight of the most important ingredient in any kids' movie -- a 
    compelling story. Don't get me wrong, there are some laugh-out-loud funny 
    parts, and in true WB style, the movie pokes fun at almost everything with 
    comic zingers from the WB gang -- Bugs, Daffy, Porky, Yosemite Sam 
    and Foghorn Leghorn. My favorite part takes place in the Warner 
    Bros. commissary where a stuttering Porky Pig complains about being politically 
    incorrect with Speedy Gonzales and the animated Shaggy and Scooby-Doo rip 
    apart actor Matthew Lillard for playing Shaggy in the live-action movie "Scooby-Doo." 
    If the story would have stuck with this kind of humor, the movie would have 
    been watchable and brilliant. But moments like these can't cover or overcome 
    a ridiculous and annoying plot. 
      
    Bad:  Sometimes the mix of cartoon and real characters 
    works ("Who Framed Roger Rabbit?") and sometimes it doesn't. Although Fraser 
    has had practice with this kind of acting ("Monkeybone") and easily interacts 
    with his animated co-stars, Elfman has not and not only looks uncomfortable 
    trying to interact with the green screen, she isn't at all convincing. I was 
    looking forward to Martin's performance because I am a huge fan, but his character 
    was the biggest disappointment of all. He's more cartoonish than the cartoons 
    and never lives up to his enormous comic potential with his over-the-top, 
    angry schoolboy with knee socks and matted-down hair character who never grew 
    up. He comes off as ridiculous, annoying and simply not funny. The man of 
    a thousand voices and original creator of these characters, Mel Blanc, was 
    a phenomenon who gave each character personality and an identifiable screen 
    persona. But, sadly, the voices are now imitated and although they may sound 
    the same, the personality, wit and charm that Mel infused into each character 
    is obviously missing.  
  Aside from a few words like "butt" thrown around, there's nothing more crude 
    than that. But it's the sexual innuendoes and cartoon violence that should 
    concern parents. Since some of the action takes place in Las Vegas (a strange 
    setting for a children's cartoon), there are dancers who wear skimpy costumes, 
    women shown with revealing cleavage and Elfman wears a low-cut blouse. There 
    are also a couple of references to an animated character's cross-dressing, 
    but that will probably fly over kids' heads.  
  The cartoon violence throughout the movie is probably something kids have 
    watched on Saturday mornings in your living room, but when you see it on the 
    big screen for an hour and a half it feels like a bit much. Characters are 
    shot, punched, squashed, set on fire and even have their eyes fall out and 
    roll on a table. There are too many scenes to mention, but you get the idea. 
    Cartoon violence is prevalent, but there's violence between the human characters 
    as well (Elfman jumps off the Eiffel Tower, a man is tied to railroad tracks, 
    etc.). By a certain age, children can usually process cartoon reality. But 
    there's a big difference between watching Wily E. Coyote falling off a cliff 
    and the violence we see in this movie. 
     
    Bottom Line:  Parents, this is one of those movies that 
    will probably entertain your little ones and may even amuse your older kids 
    (ages 8 to 10), but you'll be exhausted with all of the silliness. Watching 
    a cartoon at home in your living room for a few minutes is far different than 
    sitting in a theater being bombarded with 80 minutes worth. If they would 
    have stuck with a simple story about a rabbit versus a duck, this movie would 
    have been far funnier and memorable.  
   
  Holly McClure writes movie reviews for Crosswalk.com. 
						
							
 
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