Daffy Duck and Egghead: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (cleanup categories)
m (revise quote template spacing)
Line 6: Line 6:
=== Tropes Used in This Short: ===
=== Tropes Used in This Short: ===
* [[Attention Whore]]: Daffy, as per usual.
* [[Attention Whore]]: Daffy, as per usual.
{{quote| ''(to the audience, after bouncing on the surface of the pond)'' Ain't I some cutey? I think I'll do it ''again!''}}
{{quote|''(to the audience, after bouncing on the surface of the pond)'' Ain't I some cutey? I think I'll do it ''again!''}}
* [[Born in the Theatre]]: The infamous moment when Egghead [[No Fourth Wall|shoots a member of the audience that was distracting him from his hunt.]]
* [[Born in the Theatre]]: The infamous moment when Egghead [[No Fourth Wall|shoots a member of the audience that was distracting him from his hunt.]]
* [[Epic Fail]]: Egghead failing to shoot the apple on Daffy's head, even when it's at ''point blank range''. See the example below.
* [[Epic Fail]]: Egghead failing to shoot the apple on Daffy's head, even when it's at ''point blank range''. See the example below.

Revision as of 16:44, 7 August 2014

Two Nuts For The Price of One.

The one short that practically kicked off the Screwy Squirrel-type cartoon, "Fred" Avery's Daffy Duck and Egghead, a Merrie Melodies short from January 1, 1938, while not the first in which Daffy Duck appears, is the first one in which Daffy is named, the first one in which Elmer Fudd (or rather, a prototypical version of him named Egghead) goes hunting, and the prime example of early Daffy Duck at his daffiest. Full of great gags, a song from Daffy and perfect pacing, it's a classic short to behold.


Tropes Used in This Short:

(to the audience, after bouncing on the surface of the pond) Ain't I some cutey? I think I'll do it again!