Sugar and Spies
Sugar and Spies | |
---|---|
Looney Tunes (Road Runner) series | |
Directed by | Robert McKimson |
Produced by |
David H. DePatie Friz Freleng |
Story by | Tom Dagenais |
Music by | Walter Greene |
Animation by |
Bob Matz Manny Perez Warren Batchelder Dale Case Ted Bonnicksen |
Layouts by | Dick Ung |
Backgrounds by | Tom O'Loughlin |
Studio | DePatie-Freleng Enterprises |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date(s) | November 5, 1966 (USA premiere) |
Running time | 6 minutes |
Language | English |
Preceded by | Swing Ding Amigo |
Followed by | A Taste of Catnip |
Sugar and Spies is a 1966 Road Runner cartoon. It is the second of two Road Runner shorts directed by Robert McKimson and the only one to feature music by Walter Greene. It is also the final appearance of the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote in the original theatrical Looney Tunes shorts.
The title of the cartoon is a play on the term "sugar and spice".
Summary
During one of his many chases with the Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote is hit with a briefcase, thrown from a crook's car that is evading the police. The briefcase is actually a spy kit containing several gadgets, along with a black coat and spy hat that Wile E. wears throughout the cartoon. The gadgets Wile E. attempts on the Road Runner (which all result in failure as usual), include:
- Sleeping gas: Road Runner dodges the gas and blows it back at Wile E., who sleepwalks off a cliff.
- Do-it-yourself time bomb that Wile E. mails to the Road Runner (to nowhere particular), but is returned to the Coyote by Road Runner (disguised as a mailman) for insufficient postage. As Wile E. takes the package back into his cave for an extra stamp, BOOM!
- Explosive putty which is applied under a huge boulder with a mound of bird seed placed nearby. Wile E. hides behind another boulder farther away and lights the fuse, only to be crushed by the flying boulder.
- Spy car equipped with machine guns, ejection seat and cannon: The bullets from the machine guns ricochet off a bolder and blow away the car top, the Coyote ejects himself from the car while suspended upside down, and the force from the cannon sends the car backwards, running over the Coyote who then fails to dodge the cannonball.
- Remote control flying bombs: Wile E. tests the first bomb on a cactus, then sets the remote control for the next bomb to follow Road Runner, who hides under the Coyote's stool and escapes in time for Wile E. to take the explosion. When the smoke clears, the dazed Coyote has the bomb's wings attached to his arms, prompting the Road Runner to set the remote control for the moon. As Wile E. is sent flying away, the Road Runner triumphantly beeps and runs off the screen, leaving a trail of smoke that spells out the words "The End".
Trivia
- The Spy car gag is a spoof of James Bond's Aston Martin gadget spy car.
- This is the one of only two Wile E Coyote-Road Runner cartoon that has humans in it; {the other has Wile E Coyote explaining to tiny tots watching TV why Coyotes love to eat Road Runners}; usually the gag is that of ACME Trucks or trains of whom the driver cannot be seen-unless it is the Road Runner!
Availability
This cartoon was included in the Supergenius Hijinks DVD.