Water, Water Every Hare
Water, Water Every Hare
| 19 April 1952 (USA)
Water, Water Every Hare Trailers

Bugs Bunny is too sound a sleeper to notice that a rainstorm has flooded his rabbit hole and sent his mattress floating downstream toward the castle of an evil scientist who needs a brain for his mechanical monster. Bugs tries to escape and save his brain from the clutches of Rudolph, the scientist's giant orange monster.

Reviews
GurlyIamBeach

Instant Favorite.

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Platicsco

Good story, Not enough for a whole film

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Curapedi

I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.

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Dirtylogy

It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.

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Mightyzebra

This is an in-between short for me on the scale of my favourite to my least favourite Bugs Bunny episode (at the top is "Bugs and Thugs" and at the bottom is "Easter Yeggs"). In this episode, I enjoyed the plot, the animation and the jokes. I do not find these three parts incredibly good, but I find them pretty good. I think my favourite part of the episode is when Bugs becomes a hair-stylist - classic! :-) I shall remember that till I am 40 if I do not watch this episode again until then. Basically this episode starts when Bugs Bunny is asleep in his flooded house (this part is also very funny). It continues when Bugs, along with his duvet and mattress, floats out of his burrow down a river. At the edge of a waterfall, an evil scientist has nearly completed his giant robot and he needs a living brain to finish him. When he spots Bugs, he "fishes" him into his castle, with exciting results...I recommend this Bugs Bunny episode to people who like unusual Bugs Bunny episodes and to people who like funny Bugs Bunny quotes. Enjoy! :-)

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tavm

Six years after Hair-Raising Hare, Chuck Jones and Michael Maltese revisit the Bugs-encounters-an-evil scientist(with neon letters saying "EVIL SCIENTIST" on his castle)-and his pet monster premise with Water, Water Every Hare. In this one, instead of Peter Lorre, the scientist looks like Boris Karloff with green skin in an inside joke to his Frankinstein's Monster role. And the fully red-haired giant monster is named Rudolph here instead of Gossamer. This time, Karloff wants a brain for his giant robot so Bugs conveniently becomes the target. Of course, Bugs escapes both the scientist and Go...I mean, Rudolph and when ether makes everything go slow, Bugs escapes and then sleeps as the water that flooded his hole-in-the-ground takes him back there and as he wakes back up, he says, "Must have been a nightmare." What happens after that brought big laughs from me! This short was just as funny, maybe even more so, as HRH and, once again, I loved when Bugs turned into a gossip-chattering nail filer shooting the breeze with the fully red-haired monster who doesn't realize how crafty the rabbit really is. Most definitely recommended.

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ccthemovieman-1

Bugs is flooded out of his hole, still asleep in bed. The bed floats for miles and winds up at an "evil castle" (it says so in neon lights!) with a green-headed Boris Karloff-imitated voiced Dr. Frankenstein guy in charge. Bugs finally wakes up, sees all the crazy sights, panics and runs. The scientist unleashes his reddish-orange hairy monster "Rudolph" to capture the rabbit.I enjoyed the artwork in this animated short, but the story didn't have a lot of laughs, certainly as much as it should have had considering the premise.

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mjsmith

...Which proven again, that Bugs Bunny HAVE disposed of the monster, once and forever! The slo-mo chase is a Classic!!! So does the shrinking of the monster, and the ending!

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