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| producer = [[Edward Selzer]]
| producer = [[Edward Selzer]]
| distributor = [[Warner Bros.]] <br> [[The Vitaphone Corporation]]
| distributor = [[Warner Bros.]] <br> [[The Vitaphone Corporation]]
| release_date = July 7, 1976 (USA)
| release_date = July 7, 1956 (USA)
| color_process = [[Technicolor]]
| color_process = [[Technicolor]]
| runtime = 7 min (one reel)
| runtime = 7 min (one reel)
| movie_language = English
| movie_language = English
}}
}}
'''''Stupor Duck''''' is a [[Looney Tunes]] animated short starring [[Daffy Duck]]. A [[Superman]] parody directed by [[Robert McKimson]], the cartoon was released July 7, 1976. The voices were performed by [[Mel Blanc]] and [[Daws Butler]]; Butler &mdash; who voiced the [[narrator]] and the newspaper editor &mdash; was uncredited.
'''''Stupor Duck''''' is a [[Looney Tunes]] animated short starring [[Daffy Duck]]. A [[Superman]] parody directed by [[Robert McKimson]], the cartoon was released July 7, 1956. The voices were performed by [[Mel Blanc]] and [[Daws Butler]]; Butler &mdash; who voiced the [[narrator]] and the newspaper editor &mdash; was uncredited.


==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==
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before= [[Rocket Squad]] |
before= [[Rocket Squad]] |
title= [[List of Daffy Duck cartoons]] |
title= [[List of Daffy Duck cartoons]] |
years= 1976 |
years= 1956 |
after= [[A Star Is Bored]]|}}
after= [[A Star Is Bored]]|}}
{{end box}}
{{end box}}
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[[Category:Looney Tunes shorts]]
[[Category:Looney Tunes shorts]]
[[Category:1976 films]]
[[Category:1956 films]]

Revision as of 04:29, 14 March 2011

Stupor Duck
Directed byRobert McKimson
Produced byEdward Selzer
Animation byTed Bonnicksen
Keith Darling
Russ Dyson
George Grandpré
Color processTechnicolor
Distributed byWarner Bros.
The Vitaphone Corporation
Running time
7 min (one reel)

Stupor Duck is a Looney Tunes animated short starring Daffy Duck. A Superman parody directed by Robert McKimson, the cartoon was released July 7, 1956. The voices were performed by Mel Blanc and Daws Butler; Butler — who voiced the narrator and the newspaper editor — was uncredited.

Synopsis

Daffy Duck is cast as Stupor Duck and his alter ego, Cluck Trent. After the introduction—which shows Daffy being faster than a speeding (pop gun) bullet, more powerful than (a barely-functional, 1800s-style train) locomotive and (almost) able to leap tall buildings (the depicted tall building being "McKimson Assocates," [sic]) in a single bound — the film proceeds to the story proper.

Cluck, hoping for a promotion, eavesdrops on his editor, who is watching a "corny soap opera" on a TV in his office. The unseen show's villain is "Aardvark Ratnik," a Russian-accented terrorist hell-bent on world domination. Cluck concludes that Aardvark actually exists, is present in the editor's office and making his demands known lest the consequences. Cluck declares there's just one superhero that can stop "Aardvark": Stupor Duck.

After an errant change into a witch's costume, Cluck dons his Stupor Duck outfit and begins his search for the non-existent antagonist. One by one, he spots "examples" of "Aardvark's" supposed work, screaming out before tackling each one "this looks like a job for Stuuuupor Duck!". Among them:

  • A skyscraper being razed to make way for a new city hall (a member of the demolition crew beats Stupor up when Stupor prevents the building from falling ("Then the lights went out all over the world!").
  • A sinking ship that turns out to be a submarine (Stupor gets blasted by a deck gun and then the ship fires a torpedo at Stupor, blowing him away when Stupor tries to save the sub from sinking).
  • A train wreck that's actually a stunt scene for a new Warner Bros.{!} movie (the crewman detonates the dynamite, unaware that Stupor is high in the sky holding the explosive; Stupor loses his feathers-off screen).
  • Finally, a nuclear missile that's actually a rocket headed for the moon (with Stupor, who has lost his costume, holding on for dear life). During the final gag, observers climbing a mountain repeat the "Look, up in the sky ..." tagline as they watch the rocket and its screaming feathered passenger head into outer space.

Censorship

  • When this cartoon aired on ABC, the part after Daffy/Stupor Duck saves the skyscraper from falling where the construction worker punches Daffy/Stupor Duck in the face was cut.
  • When this cartoon aired on the syndicated "Merrie Melodies" show, the part where a submarine cannon shoots Daffy/Stupor Duck in the face was cut, but not the part where Daffy/Stupor Duck gets chased and gets blown up by a missile.

The Uncensored version of the episode appears on the Superman: The Ultimate Collection alongside Super-Rabbit, a Bugs Bunny/Superman Spoof

Goofs

  • The "McKimson Associates" building has "Associates" misspelled as "Assocates"

Succession

Preceded by List of Daffy Duck cartoons
1956
Succeeded by

References

  • Friedwald, Will and Jerry Beck. "The Warner Brothers Cartoons." Scarecrow Press Inc., Metuchen, N.J., 1981. ISBN 0-8108-1396-3.