Difference between revisions of "Whizzard of Ow"

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'''''Whizzard of Ow''''' is the first direct-to-video (DTV) short ''[[Looney Tunes (theatrical shorts)|Looney Tunes]]'' thratrical series, and the four hundred and nintey-second overall. It was distributed by [[Warner Bros. Home Video]] on [[November 1]], [[2003]]. It was written by [[Chris Kelly]], produced by [[Larry Doyle]] and [[Sherry Gunther]], and directed by [[Brett Haaland]].
'''''Whizzard of Ow''''' is the first direct-to-video (DTV) short of the ''[[Looney Tunes (theatrical shorts)|Looney Tunes]]'' theatrical series, and the four hundred and nintey-first overall. It was distributed by [[Warner Bros. Home Video]] on [[November 1]], [[2003]]. It was written by [[Chris Kelly]], produced by [[Larry Doyle]] and [[Sherry Gunther]], and directed by [[Brett Haaland]].


After an epic wizard battle that ends with the two wizards ultimately destroying each other, Wile E. stumbles across an Acme-branded book of magic and uses it and some other Acme products to help him catch the Road Runner.
After an epic wizard battle that ends with the two wizards ultimately destroying each other, Wile E. stumbles across an Acme-branded book of magic and uses it and some other Acme products to help him catch the Road Runner.
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==Release==
==Release==
==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==
* The title is a pun of the [[1939]] musical fantasy film ''The Wizard of Oz''.
* The title is a pun of the classic Frank L. Baum story and that of the [[1939]] musical fantasy film ''The Wizard of Oz''.
* The shoet uses the regular scientific names for both the Road Runner and Wile E.'s species, rather than the usual [[Latin name]] gag.
* The short uses the regular scientific names for both the Road Runner and Wile E.'s species, rather than the usual [[Latin names|Latin name]] gag.


==Errors==
==Errors==

Latest revision as of 18:23, 2 May 2024

Whizzard of Ow
Production company Warner Bros. Animation
Rough Draft Studios
Distributor Warner Bros. Home Video
Release date November 1, 2003
Run time 7:15
Starring Paul Julian
Tress MacNeille
Producer(s) Larry Doyle
Sherry Gunther
Music composed by John Frizzell
Story by Chris Kelly
Director(s) Brett Haaland
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Title card
Whizzard of Ow title card.png

Whizzard of Ow is the first direct-to-video (DTV) short of the Looney Tunes theatrical series, and the four hundred and nintey-first overall. It was distributed by Warner Bros. Home Video on November 1, 2003. It was written by Chris Kelly, produced by Larry Doyle and Sherry Gunther, and directed by Brett Haaland.

After an epic wizard battle that ends with the two wizards ultimately destroying each other, Wile E. stumbles across an Acme-branded book of magic and uses it and some other Acme products to help him catch the Road Runner.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Wile E. Coyote N/A
Road Runner Paul Julian
Robo-Caller Tress MacNeille


Organizations

Locations

Objects

Vehicles

  • Truck (presumed)
  • Train
  • Lawnmower

Production

Development

Filming

Music

The music was composed by John Frizzell.

Release

Behind the scenes

  • The title is a pun of the classic Frank L. Baum story and that of the 1939 musical fantasy film The Wizard of Oz.
  • The short uses the regular scientific names for both the Road Runner and Wile E.'s species, rather than the usual Latin name gag.

Errors

  • The Road Runner beeps like a regular car but was able to fix his own sound effect.

Critical reception

References