Due to poor quality animation and low budget in this era (De-Paite Freleng era/Warner Bros Seven Arts-1964 to 1969), This only allowed Warner Bros to use a handful of Looney Tunes e.g. Daffy Duck, Speedy Gonzales, Wile Coyote and Roadrunner. But sadly, Bugs Bunny and the rest of the gang couldn't be found in this era, not to mention both Daffy and Roadrunner were badly flunderised because they both acted like villains in a case where Roadrunner would do less of "Meep Meep" or "Beep Beep" and try to harm Wile, whilst Daffy was probably the worst since he would be very grumpy and gruesome most of the time, and most of the shorts in this era were either repetitive, frustrating, annoying and/or boring, and not to mention these shorts were just remastered versions using gags from older, better cartoons. The intro was insanely low budget due to the moving lines and the incorrect tone of the warner bros logo, and the merrie melodies lost its "merrily we roll along" variant and both Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies use this slightly clunky variant of the original version, not to also mention the music in this era sounded like it wouldn't belong to Looney Tunes, the reason being because the low budget forced Bill Lava to work with a small orchestra instead of the full Warner bros orchestra."A Haunting We Will Go" isa 1966 short that is a ripoff of a 1950s short Staring Bugs Bunny and Witch Hazel, "Cats and Bruises is a 1965 short Starring Sylvester and Speedy and uses a gag from an older cartoon in which the dogs wouldn't have their mouths open from the first shot, and Shot and Bothered is a 1966 short that uses a shot when Wile Coyote wouldn't disappear after a boulder falls on him for the first time. However, the Warner Bros Seven Arts era worsened the problem, because at this rate, Daffy had Speedy were the only characters from the original cast of the classic Looney Tunes, so the company had to add characters of their own to replace the original, Most notably Cool Cat and Merlin, They didn't even hire Mel Blanc to voice them. Daws Butler was pretty good for the first voice of Merlin, then Larry Storch voice Cool Cat and Metlin in 1968, but even though Storch tried his very best, he just wasn't as funny as Blanc. Mel Blanc only voiced the following: Daffy and Speedy The two Bunny and Claude shorts The one shot Chimp and Zee short The last short to feature the classic origin cast (Daffy and Speedy) was the 1968 short "See Ya Later, Gladiator" was considered the worst Warner Bros short of all time to be released due to the constant use of Hanna Barbera sound effects and terrible music, plus the same shots of Daffy walking to the window. The Last Warner Brothers short, Injun Trouble (Not to be confused with the 1938 short because of the same name) wasn't a good way to end the theatrical era of Looney Tunes. This was because most shorts such as Hocus Pocus Powwwow and Run Run Sweet Roadrunner didn't have many merits because of copyright intendents used during the late 1950s to early 1960s. And going back two years, as the years progressed, the Looney Tunes variant was getting remixes. In 1969, Warner Bros Seven Arts closed down their cartoon studio, ending the golden age of Looney Tunes. And During that year, the golden age of American animation came to an end.
This theme is a reminder, if you see this logo and this music it means you have to skip it, just do you a favour do not watch these shitty shorts and only the pre 1964 ones
Their attempt to make the black and white shorts more appealing also it was their attempt to get an copyright on those shorts while letting select shorts fall into public domain.
Due to poor quality animation and low budget in this era (De-Paite Freleng era/Warner Bros Seven Arts-1964 to 1969), This only allowed Warner Bros to use a handful of Looney Tunes e.g. Daffy Duck, Speedy Gonzales, Wile Coyote and Roadrunner. But sadly, Bugs Bunny and the rest of the gang couldn't be found in this era, not to mention both Daffy and Roadrunner were badly flunderised because they both acted like villains in a case where Roadrunner would do less of "Meep Meep" or "Beep Beep" and try to harm Wile, whilst Daffy was probably the worst since he would be very grumpy and gruesome most
of the time, and most of the shorts in this era were either repetitive, frustrating, annoying and/or boring, and not to mention these shorts were just remastered versions using gags from older, better cartoons. The intro was insanely low budget due to the moving lines and the incorrect tone of the warner bros logo, and the merrie melodies lost its "merrily we roll along" variant and both Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies use this slightly clunky variant of the original version, not to also mention the music in this era sounded like it wouldn't belong to Looney Tunes, the reason being because the low budget forced Bill Lava to work with a small orchestra instead of the full Warner bros orchestra."A Haunting We Will Go" isa 1966 short that is a ripoff of a 1950s short Staring Bugs Bunny and Witch Hazel, "Cats and Bruises is a 1965 short Starring Sylvester and Speedy and uses a gag from an older cartoon in which the dogs wouldn't have their mouths open from the first shot, and
Shot and Bothered is a 1966 short that uses a shot when Wile Coyote wouldn't disappear after a boulder falls on him for the first time. However, the Warner Bros Seven Arts era worsened the problem, because at this rate, Daffy had Speedy were the only characters from the original cast of the classic Looney Tunes, so the company had to add characters of their own to replace the original, Most notably Cool Cat and Merlin, They didn't even hire Mel Blanc to voice them. Daws Butler was pretty good for the first voice of Merlin, then Larry Storch voice Cool Cat and Metlin in 1968, but even though Storch tried his very best, he just wasn't as funny as Blanc. Mel Blanc only voiced the following:
Daffy and Speedy
The two Bunny and Claude shorts
The one shot Chimp and Zee short
The last short to feature the classic origin cast (Daffy and Speedy) was the 1968 short "See Ya Later, Gladiator" was considered the worst Warner Bros short of all time to be released due to the constant use of Hanna Barbera sound effects and terrible music, plus the same shots of Daffy walking to the window. The Last Warner Brothers short, Injun Trouble (Not to be confused with the 1938 short because of the same name) wasn't a good way to end the theatrical era of Looney Tunes. This was because most shorts such as Hocus Pocus Powwwow and Run Run Sweet Roadrunner didn't have many merits because of copyright intendents used during the late 1950s to early 1960s. And going back two years, as the years progressed, the Looney Tunes variant was getting remixes. In 1969, Warner Bros Seven Arts closed down their cartoon studio, ending the golden age of Looney Tunes. And During that year, the golden age of American animation came to an end.
What if this was used in the last LT/MM cartoon in the Golden Age of Animation, "Injun Trouble" (1969)?
"Fistic Mystic" is the only short to use this theme
And Injurn Trouble
@@marella-yoplaitlimited7745Nope.
Taken from Injurin Trouble (1969), and the real one had the 1964 ending music
wait who in hell's name would dislike this
EVERYONE
This is injun trouble the last Merrie Melodies Episode
Fistic Mystic
@@JeremyZyxo761 I know it’s fistic mystic but the that one is injun trouble
the rarest of the rare
Like 2 eyes doing a take.
It's W7
Seen It On Fox In 2000.
Warner Bros. Seven Arts present Merrie Melodis
Taken from freeze frame 1969
la primera vez que vi eso me parecio extraño cuando veia looney tunes en cartoon network 😲
i want to do a custom one
Might Be The Last Episode Of Looney Tunes And Merry Melody.
1942.
Wrong year, try 1969.
0:00 to 0:15
111 likes 11 dislikes
This theme is a reminder, if you see this logo and this music it means you have to skip it, just do you a favour do not watch these shitty shorts and only the pre 1964 ones
Don't forget most of the first batch ofPorky redrawns done in 1968/1969. God, why.
Their attempt to make the black and white shorts more appealing also it was their attempt to get an copyright on those shorts while letting select shorts fall into public domain.
P