

How do they solve a mystery when they don't have a clue?
14/11/2003
Overview
Fed up with all the attention going to Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck quits Hollywood, teams up with recently-fired stuntman Damien Drake Jr. and embarks on a round-the-world adventure, along with Bugs and The VP of Warner Bros. Their mission? Find Damien's father, and the missing blue diamond... and stay one step ahead of The Acme Corp., who wants the diamond for their own purposes.
Status: Released
Rating: 64%
Original language: EN
Budget: $80,000,000
Revenue: $68,500,000
Official website:
https://www.warnerbros.com/movies/looney-tunes-back-action
Goldmann Pictures

Lonely Film Productions

Warner Bros. Pictures

Warner Bros. Feature Animation

Spring Creek Pictures

Baltimore Pictures

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0318155
Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q834165
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Brendan Fraser
DJ Drake / Tasmanian Devil (voice) / She-Devil (voice) / Self

Jenna Elfman
Kate

Steve Martin
Mr. Chairman

Joe Alaskey
Bugs Bunny-Daffy Duck / Beaky Buzzard / Sylvester / Mama Bear (voice)

Jeff Bennett
Yosemite Sam / Foghorn Leghorn / Nasty Canasta (voice)

Timothy Dalton
Damien Drake

Billy West
Elmer Fudd / Peter Lorre (voice)

Heather Locklear
Dusty Tails
Review by: Filipe Manuel Neto
Written by: Filipe Manuel Neto on 2023-02-01T01:53:19.978Z
Very friendly and well done, it's pure entertainment.
Along with the world of Walt Disney's ducks, "The Muppets" and the various productions of Hanna and Barbera, the "Looney Tunes" and "Merry Melodies" are the largest and most popular sets of North American animation cartoons. And when it comes to the Tunes, we know what's going to happen: there's going to be a lot of crazy animation, explosions and funny effects.
This film will please Tunes fans, putting the most adorable and iconic characters on the big screen, and giving the spotlight, of course, to Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, the duo that is inseparable, even if they are always at odds. It all begins with the dismissal of Daffy and a human employee of the Warner studio, and will end in a kind of fight against evil, in support of the father of that employee who, in fact, is a secret agent in the image of James Bond. A seemingly crazy mix, but one that works thanks to the skill and irreverence of the Tunes.
I won't waste time talking about voice actors. The studio intelligently took advantage of those who usually voice these characters, so we are dealing with professionals who know very well what they do and what the characters ask of them. We have, however, an excellent comic performance by Brendan Fraser, who seems completely comfortable with what was asked of him and even seems to have fun with it all. Jenna Elfman isn't bad either, but she can't keep up with Fraser.
The movie is very good. It's pure entertainment, with classic touches that we're used to seeing in Tunes material. It's the case with that chase in the Louvre, or the various fights between Duffy and Bugs. Being a more humble and sympathetic film than Space Jam, I felt that it doesn't have the weight of excessive publicity against it, besides having a true comic actor in the main human role, and not an amateur trying to act it out.