Difference between revisions of "Two Crows from Tacos"

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Two Crows From Tacos''}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Two Crows from Tacos''}}
{{Infobox movie
{{Infobox movie
|prodcompany= [[Warner Bros. Cartoons]]
|prodcompany= [[Warner Bros. Cartoons]]
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|title_card= [[File:Two Crows From Tacos Title Card.png|300px]]
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'''''Two Crows From Tacos''''' is the four hundred and eighteenth ''[[Merrie Melodies (theatrical shorts)|Merrie Melodies]]'' theatrical short. It was distributed by [[Warner Bros. Pictures]] and [[The Vitaphone Corporation]] on [[November 24]], [[1956]]. It was written by [[Tedd Pierce]], produced by [[Edward Selzer]], and directed by [[Friz Freleng]].
'''''Two Crows from Tacos''''' is the four hundred and eighteenth ''[[Merrie Melodies (theatrical shorts)|Merrie Melodies]]'' theatrical short. It was distributed by [[Warner Bros. Pictures]] and [[The Vitaphone Corporation]] on [[November 24]], [[1956]]. It was written by [[Tedd Pierce]], produced by [[Edward Selzer]], and directed by [[Friz Freleng]].


Two crows, Jose and Manuel, try to catch a little grasshopper. But the little grasshopper outwits them at every turn.  
Two crows, Jose and Manuel, try to catch a little grasshopper. But the little grasshopper outwits them at every turn.  
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==Everlasting influence==
==Everlasting influence==
* Jose and Manuel would later reappear as cats in the [[1959]] ''[[Looney Tunes (theatrical shorts)|Looney Tunes]]'' short ''[[Mexicali Shmoes]]'', then as mice in the [[1961]] short ''[[Cannery Woe]]'', and as crows once more in the [[1962]] short, ''[[Crows' Feat]]''.  
* Jose and Manuel would later reappear as cats in the [[1959]] ''[[Looney Tunes (theatrical shorts)|Looney Tunes]]'' short ''[[Mexicali Shmoes]]'', then as mice in the [[1961]] short ''[[Cannery Woe]]'', and as crows once more in the [[1962]] short ''[[Crows' Feat]]''.  


==Home availability==
==Home availability==
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[[Category:Theatrical shorts]]
[[Category:Theatrical shorts]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. Cartoons]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. Cartoons]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. Pictures]]
[[Category:Written by Tedd Pierce]]
[[Category:Written by Tedd Pierce]]

Revision as of 03:26, 14 June 2024

Two Crows from Tacos
Production company Warner Bros. Cartoons
Distributor Warner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date November 24, 1956
Run time 7:11
Starring Don Diamond
Tom Holland
Music composed by Carl Stalling
Story by Tedd Pierce
Animation Virgil Ross
Art Davis
Director(s) Friz Freleng
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Title card
File:Two Crows From Tacos Title Card.png

Two Crows from Tacos is the four hundred and eighteenth Merrie Melodies theatrical short. It was distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures and The Vitaphone Corporation on November 24, 1956. It was written by Tedd Pierce, produced by Edward Selzer, and directed by Friz Freleng.

Two crows, Jose and Manuel, try to catch a little grasshopper. But the little grasshopper outwits them at every turn.

Detailed Summary

Memorable Quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Jose Don Diamond
Manuel Tom Holland


Locations

Objects

  • Guitar
  • Club
  • Dynamite
  • Cactus disguised as a hombre

Production

Development

Filming

Music

The music was composed by Carl Stalling.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: November 24, 1956 in theatres

Behind the Scenes

  • It was originally shown alongside the feature-length Western film Giant.
  • The title is a play on the 1948 film Two Guys From Texas.
  • This cartoon marks the debut of Jose and Manuel, and is their only solo-short.
  • Jose and Manuel are the second pair of Looney Tunes characters to be redesigned as other animals (in this case, first redesigned as cats and then as mice and then back to birds). Before them, Babbit and Catstello were first designed as cats in A Tale of Two Kitties, then redesigned as dogs in Hollywood Canine Canteen and then as mice in both Tale of Two Mice and The Mouse-Merized Cat.
  • This is the first cartoon to change the "Color by Technicolor" byline on the opening titles to simply "Technicolor" and would be used for the rest of the series.
  • The "That's all folks!" sendoff is done differently in this short. Instead of having writing itself out, it fades in over the beautiful sunset background as the crows sing and play the guitar atop their tree..

Everlasting influence

Home availability

References