Animation Magazine

That Wascally Wabbit’s Back!

We get the latest info on Warner Bros. Animation’s much-anticipate­d new Looney Tunes Cartoons, which premieres at Annecy.

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We get the latest info on Warner Bros. Animation’s much-anticipate­d new Looney Tunes Cartoons, which premieres at Annecy.

Almost 79 years after he made his appearance in his first official cartoon, Tex Avery’s A Wild Hare, Bugs Bunny is back in a big way. This June at the Annecy Festival, Warner Bros. Animation is officially premiering the new Looney Tunes Cartoons, which will be coming to a small screen near us sometime soon. (The premiere date hasn’t been announced yet.) The first offering features the voices of toon veterans Eric Bauza as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, Jeff Bergman as Elmer Fudd and Bob Bergen as Porky Pig.

We caught up with the new shorts’ exec producer Pete Browngardt (creator of Uncle Grandpa and Secret Mountain Fort Awesome) and supervisin­g director Alex Kirwan (character designer on DuckTales, Gravity Falls, Mickey Mouse; art director on Wander Over Yonder, Marvelous Misadventu­res of Flapjack) to find out more about their super secret and hugely anticipate­d project.

Animag: OK, so we’re all dying to know how this new series of Looney Tunes shorts came about. Can you tell us a little bit about the genesis of the project?

Pete Browngardt: About two years ago I had lunch with Audrey Diehl (Vice President, Series, Warner Bros. Animation), who was a new creative executive at Warner Bros. Animation, to talk about upcoming opportunit­ies. Unrelated from what we discussed during that meeting I offhandedl­y mentioned my love of Looney Tunes and how I would love to direct a Looney Tunes short, and she said, “How about 1,000 minutes?” So I met with Sam Register (President, Warner Bros. Animation and Warner Digital Series) and pitched what I would do. He liked what I said and we went into developmen­t.

When did you actually start working on the series?

Pete: November 2017.

Alex Kirwan: February 2018.

Where is the animation done and how many people work on the series?

Pete and Alex: We are working with four studios all around the world who are animating for us; with around 50 people in house at Warner Bros. Animation in Burbank.

What animation tools do you use to produce the animation?

Pete and Alex: Toon Boom Harmony and good ol’-fashioned paper and pencil. It’s a mix of digital and hand drawn, depending on the studio.

What would you say was the biggest challenge facing you in re-introducin­g these beloved characters to a new generation?

Pete: It was living up to the legacy of the classic Golden Age Looney Tunes. I tell the crew we are balancing on the shoulders of giants and hoping not to fall flat on our faces.

Alex: The demanding style and complexity of animation were also quite challengin­g.

What do you absolutely love about this 2019

version of the Looney Tunes?

Pete: That we get to go back to basics of artist and gag-driven shorts the way they were produced in the 1930s-50s.

Alex: Having the freedom to play with classic form of comedy and timing.

In the past, we have seen some attempts to update the characters with awkward modern designs and sensibilit­ies. What can you say to the purists to put their minds at ease?

Pete: We are trying our best to honor the look and feel of the classic shorts rather than reinventin­g it. Who are your favorite characters and why? Pete: Daffy and Porky. I always loved in the early Looney Tunes that Daffy and Porky were a comedy duo à la Laurel and Hardy and Abbott and Costello. We have gone back to that classic paring, and it’s been really fun to explore that.

Alex: I also really love a lot of the more obscure characters. And it’s been really fun to put characters like Beaky Buzzard and Hubie and Bertie back in the spotlight where they belong.

What do you hope audiences will take away from these shorts?

Pete: That they feel like we are honoring and continuing the tradition of classic Looney Tunes the best way we can in this modern era.

Alex: We hope new audiences will fall in love with the characters for all the same reasons that earlier generation­s have.

Looney Tunes Shorts will premiere at the Annecy Film Festival’s opening night this month.

No official airdate has been announced.

 ??  ?? A Wild Hare (1940) Looney Tunes Cartoons (2019)
A Wild Hare (1940) Looney Tunes Cartoons (2019)
 ??  ?? Pete Browngardt
Pete Browngardt
 ??  ?? Alex Kirwan
Alex Kirwan
 ??  ?? The Rabbit’s Nemesis: Daffy Duck, who made his first appearance in Porky’s Duck Hunt (1937), continues his madcap adventures in the new Warner Bros. shorts.
The Rabbit’s Nemesis: Daffy Duck, who made his first appearance in Porky’s Duck Hunt (1937), continues his madcap adventures in the new Warner Bros. shorts.
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