Bah, Humduck!: A Looney Tunes Christmas

7.1
200646m

Production

Logo for Warner Bros. Animation

In this adaptation of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, Daffy Duck is the greedy proprietor of the Lucky Duck Mega-Mart and all he can think about is the money to be made during the holiday season.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Bah, Humduck!  A Looney Tunes Christmas 2006 DVD trailer

Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas 2006 DVD trailer

Cast

Photo of Joe Alaskey

Joe Alaskey

Daffy Duck / Sylvester the Cat / Marvin the Martian / Pepe Le Pew / Foghorn Leghorn (voice)

Photo of Bob Bergen

Bob Bergen

Porky Pig / Speedy Gonzales / Tweety Bird (voice)

Photo of Billy West

Billy West

Bugs Bunny / Elmer Fudd (voice)

Photo of June Foray

June Foray

Granny (voice)

Photo of Maurice LaMarche

Maurice LaMarche

Yosemite Sam (voice)

Photo of Jim Cummings

Jim Cummings

Tasmanian Devil / Gossamer (voice)

Photo of Tara Strong

Tara Strong

Priscilla Pig / House Mother (voice)

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Reviews

F

Filipe Manuel Neto

4/10

**“A Christmas Carol”, over and over again.**

I've lost count of the versions, adaptations, rereadings and reconstructions I've seen of Charles Dickens's “A Christmas Carol”. I've heard it said that, with this tale, Dickens invented Christmas. I am not able to go that far, but I recognize that the tale changed the way we face this season: instead of being just a religious festival, it became a family celebration, much more secular and almost returning to its pagan roots. This is just another movie based on the tale.

For that reason, I won't waste my time talking about the script, we know how it ends. And perhaps because of this condition, I felt that this film lacks an additional dose of irreverence and humor, which tends to be more evident whenever the Looney Tunes are called. Here, the humor is essentially based on the amount of aggression, slaps and deformations that poor Daffy Duck can withstand for forty-five minutes. This ends up tiring after a while. I also felt that Bugs Bunny is lefting in the film, he acts almost like a “jiminy cricket”, a voice of conscience, and not like a plot character.

The film is technically very good and features several well-known voices for those familiar with the Tunes. Joe Alasky and Bob Bergen are especially good, however they are masters of the task at hand and I doubt this film was too challenging for them. Visually, the film is very elegant. I don't know if it was made using digital animation, I believe so, but the truth is that it seems to respect the aesthetics and traditional appearance of the dolls we grew up with.

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