Dog Gone South

1950
6.9| 0h7m| en
Details

Charlie Dog attempts to ingratiate himself to a southern plantation owner.

Cast

Mel Blanc

Director

Producted By

Warner Bros. Pictures

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Reviews

Libramedi Intense, gripping, stylish and poignant
Reptileenbu Did you people see the same film I saw?
Teringer An Exercise In Nonsense
Winifred The movie is made so realistic it has a lot of that WoW feeling at the right moments and never tooo over the top. the suspense is done so well and the emotion is felt. Very well put together with the music and all.
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . as Charlie Dog Morphs from male to female and back again several times, always unsure of "where to go" on Col. Shuffle's premises. Meanwhile, the hulking athletic prodigy Dog of Color Belvedere gets a pass for launching two vicious assaults against an over-powered European ethnic person. Both of these story lines come from coinciding Real Life headlines making World News Sept. 15, 2016. Warner Bros.' always prophetic animation team is mashing together America's "Potty Politics" Scandal with the fact that when it comes to Urban football recruits, it's ALWAYS Open Season on European-American coeds. On the one hand, Brandon Teena will be beaten to death if she tries to use a Boys Room in the Tar Heel State. On the other, her Crimson-Necked Thugs leading the beat-down will drop everything (including Brandon's Phallic Tube Socks) to cheer on the Gridiron Hero ravaging their sister, as long as he has enough decals stuck onto his football helmet. As distasteful as the Looney Tuners may have found it to hang out ALL of North Carolina's Dirty Undies for the whole world to gape at, they soldiered on bravely to Make America Great Again with DOG GONE SOUTH.
Lee Eisenberg By this point, Charlie Dog had thrice invaded Porky Pig's life, so I guess that Chuck Jones wanted to send the pushy mutt on a new kind of adventure. "Dog Gone South" puts Charlie in the deep South, where he tries to get a southern gentleman to adopt him (the southern gentleman looks like Colonel Shuffle from Jones's earlier "Mississippi Hare"). Charlie doesn't interpret the colonel's current dog as an impediment.It impressed me to see what Charlie can do on this different kind of adventure, as opposed to being a nuisance to Porky. My favorite of Charlie's cartoons is his debut "Little Orphan Airedale" (the ending reminded me of the Alan Bates movie "King of Hearts"). But I liked his antics here. It looks as though the South may never get over the Civil War! Worth seeing.
carl170 It one of the best cartoons - Loony tunes ever made. There are others that come to mind. Rabbit Seasoning for instance.....starring Daffy Duck and Buggs Bunny. But this cartoon is in that league...And it has that line, "Oh, Belvedere...Come here boy!...Wonderful slapstick, gags..and I love that American Southern Accent make this into a classic.I would dearly love to be able to get this on DVD.The Colonel and his faithful Hound - Belvedere is brilliant here... If you ever get the chance please watch it.Carl Brown - Ipswich, England
airfareclaire One of the best one off shorts from Looney Tunes. Yes, it features Charlie the Dog once again trying to find a home, but Belvedere and the Colonel are one of a kind characters who aren't too fond of Yankees or Yankee Pot Roast.Aah, magnolias! Charlie puts these two through the ringer trying to replace Belvedere as the Colonel's pet. One of the rarely seen Looney Tunes cartoons during this new age of political correctness. Why are great new cartoons like The Simpsons, South Park, and Family Guy seen as smart and irreverent, but older cartoons like this seen as demeaning or degrading? I can only hope that this great cartoon will eventually hit a DVD collection before some other format comes along and they have to start all over again.