![]() ![]() Carrot Bombs - Hold down A to throw it further, then wait until it blows up.Homing Carrots - Flies straight towards the target.Bull's-Eye Carrots - Aims directly at the target.Carrot Weapons - Found in the Hare-abian Nights level.Glue Pot - Found in the Duck! Rabbit, Duck! level can be used to slow down Daffy.Bonus Star - Collect three of them to access the Bonus Level.Giant Silver Carrot - Grants the player an extra life.Canned Carrot - Refills the health meter.Invulnerability Potion - Gives the player temporary invincibility.Speed Shoes - Increases the player's speed.Spaced Out Bunny (Genesis version only).The main levels are loosely based on various classic Bugs Bunny cartoons, such as " Duck! Rabbit, Duck!", " Bully for Bugs", " Knighty Knight Bugs" and many more, including a bonus level which is accessed by collecting Bonus Stars in the main levels, only in the Genesis version. The game stars Bugs Bunny and features pre-rendered 3D graphics. Porky's voice sounds a little like Bugs' voice before being sped, and Daffy's is Sylvester's sans the slobbering.Bugs Bunny in Double Trouble is a Looney Tunes video game developed by Atod AB for the Sega Genesis and Game Gear, released in 1996. Examples are Tweety, Speedy Gonzales, Porky Pig and Daffy Duck. Many of the voices he did for Looney Tunes were sped up after being recorded. Not only did it give greater recognition to voice artists from then on, it helped to bring Blanc to the public eye.Įpitaph on headstone at his burial site in Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood reads, "That's All Folks!"īlanc legally changed his last name from Blank to Blanc because of a nasty school teacher who used to make fun of it. ![]() After Blanc was turned down for a raise at Warner Brothers, they added his name as "Vocal Characterizationist" to the credits as a compromise. Originally, voice artists were not given screen credit on animated cartoons. After his death, American Express began running the commercial again, showing his name with birth and death years on the bottom of the screen at the end of the commercial, both to promote their card, and pay tribute to the vocal genius. He appeared in a television commercial for the American Express charge card, where he performed several character voices in quick succession. Mel responded, in Bugs Bunny's voice, "What's up, Doc?" After talking with several other "characters", the doctors eventually led Mel out of his coma. Finally, a doctor, who was also a fan of his cartoon characters, asked Mel, "Bugs? Bugs Bunny? Are you there?". While in a coma after a cataclysmic automobile accident, doctors unsuccessfully tried to get Mel to talk. He asked for, and received, a Ford Edsel. Shortly before his death, the executives of Time-Warner (owners of Warner Brothers) asked Mel Blanc if there was anything, literally anything, that they could give him to thank him for his life's body of work. He did the voices of his characters in both his home bed and his hospital bed, in a full body cast, and with all his Flinstones co-stars and recording equipment crowded into the same room. Was in an almost fatal car accident in 1962, while many of the productions that required his services were still in production. Since Blanc's death, his son Noel has taken up some of his father's mantle. cartoon pantheon, including Porky Pig, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Tweety & Sylvester both, Yosemite Sam et al. Widely recognized as the voice of virtually every major character in the Warner Bros. Thus he often did the eating sounds last in a recording session and had the sound technicians edit them in the soundtrack as needed. Famous for doing Bugs Bunny, although ironic that he had a dislike of raw carrots. ![]()
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