A Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur's Court
A Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur's Court
| 23 February 1978 (USA)
A Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur's Court Trailers

Bugs find himself in Camelot and is mistaken for a "dwagon" by Sir Elmer of Fudde.

Reviews
Tockinit

not horrible nor great

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Sammy-Jo Cervantes

There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.

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Sanjeev Waters

A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.

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Zlatica

One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.

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TheLittleSongbird

Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons. Actually appreciate it more now thanks to broader knowledge of directors, studios and animation styles that was not had as much before.Chuck Jones is one of the greatest geniuses in animation history, or at least to me and many others, he deserves his legendary status and his best cartoons are masterpieces. Even his weakest works generally are watchable. 'Bugs Bunny in King Arthur's Court' was one of those cartoons done when Looney Tunes were past prime (which generally they were since the mid-60s) and while not among Jones' best work (nowhere near) or the best representations of Looney Tunes it is worth watching.'Bugs Bunny in King Arthur's Court' is a long way from perfect. The animation is mostly not very good at all. A good deal of the drawing is rough rather than smooth, the backgrounds sparse in detail and the colours sometimes lack vibrancy, coming over as flat. Although Mel Blanc was, and still considered as, one of the greatest voice actors ever, that doesn't mean he wasn't immune from sounding off on occasions. Have never really cared for Blanc's voice work for Elmer, a large part of it may be down to being familiar for goodness knows how long by Arthur Q. Bryan and have always found that Blanc doesn't fit anywhere near as well, his voice too deep and abrasive and his speech impediment not as natural. Some of the material is a bit over-familiar and would have benefitted from more wit and variety.However, Blanc shows with the other characters that he had definitely not lost it, every ounce of the exuberance is present as is his unmatched ability to give individual identities to multiple characters. While having relatively little to do as Porky, he is especially spot on as Bugs and Yosemite Sam.They are the two characters that come off best easily, Bugs is charismatic and both arrogant and likeable while Sam is wonderfully hot-headed and temperamental, for a first time attempt for Jones at the character (being a creation and prolific character of Friz Freleng) he does very well. Daffy is as manic and witty as ever and enjoyed everything with Ray Bradbury. Porky is underused but still likeable and Elmer does have funny moments but would have made more of an impression if Blanc's voice work worked. 'Bugs Bunny in King Arthur's Court' is very amusing on the whole, with some nice dialogue, well-timed gags, a lot of energy and some neat tricks and little things. Things may be predictable but nothing is dull.Jones's trademark humour and directing style is all over the cartoon, showing that he was still going strong rather than running out of steam. The music was better than expected, it is not discordant from the action and it is nowhere near as cheap-sounding as Bill Lava's later work, while not coming close to Milt Franklyn and especially Carl Stalling.On the whole, pretty decent but wasn't mind blown by it. 7/10 Bethany Cox

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

"A Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur's Court" is an American animated short film from 1978, so this one has its 40th anniversary next year. The legendary Chuck Jones and Mel Blanc reunite here to bring back Bugs Bunny in a television special. Unlike the old Warner Bros cartoons, this one runs for over 20 minutes and includes also more characters than those that they usually fit in under 8, also more antagonists. This is set during the days of knights, princesses and dragons (yep SciFi is missing as a genre here) and Bugs really just wants to do his stuff, but the bad guys messing with him obviously only has bad consequences for them. Anyway, like I said earlier this film is not really working. It lacks focus and seems all over the place with the runtime. You can add the overlong title to the "too much" in the title of my review. The only really good aspect is once again Blanc's voice work and he was still at least as good as he was decades earlier, maybe even better. Okay anyway, all in all this one did not leave me impressed and it may have to do a bit with personal bias as the Middle Ages were never a time that interested me too much. Okay mention of Ray Bradbury though. I still believe Mark Twain would not have liked it either. Only worth checking out for the really biggest cartoon enthusiasts.

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Edgar Allan Pooh

. . . that Mel Gibson was drawn and quartered at the end, and he's never been the same since. Bugs Bunny is sentenced to the same Fate during BUGS BUNNY IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT, and while Bugs has not drunkenly ranted anti-Semitic Nazi slurs in Public after COURT was in session during the late 1970s, Bugs too seems greatly diminished since his 1940s heydays. As the historical record documents that the fastidious British always began a good intestinal drawing with the Castration\Penectomy combo, it's not hard to see why this process might get a guy "down in the dumps." The fact that such distasteful fodder was grist for the Looney Tuners' mill by the 1970s simply proves how morally bankrupt this bunch became after Warner Bros. cut most ties with these Uncontrollable Pervs. TWO Mark Twain novels are mentioned here, counting a passing reference to SAINT JOAN. As Mr. Clemens famously observed, a UPA-style minimalist animation outing is a good cartoon spoiled.

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Kat Miss

"A Connecticut Rabbit in King Arthur's Court", which is retitled for home video as "Bugs Bunny in King Arthur's Court", is a real treat for all Looney Tunes fans. Chuck Jones takes the original Mark Twain novel and turns it upside down. This is not the novel, but a truly original reworking of it.Bugs Bunny is the "Connecticut Yankee", which in itself is kind of odd because Bugs is from Brooklyn, NEW YORK, but never mind, we'll except the premise. Daffy Duck is King Arthur, Porky Pig is Sir Loin of Pork and Yosemite Sam is the Black Knight. The story is so well known that I won't bother retelling it here.This short subject is smart, funny and original. This in itself is amazing since most animation is often uninspired, particularly when it comes from literature. But Chuck Jones, by planting the Looney Tunes characters into the plot and by making this 100% new footage, rather than most of the TV specials which are edited from the shorts, has made one of the most memorable TV specials ever.**** out of 4 stars

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