Mississippi Hare

1949
7.5| 0h8m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 26 February 1949 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

After getting mixed in with a bale of cotton, Bugs ends up on a Mississippi riverboat, where he meets up with the notorious gambler Col. Shuffle.

Genre

Animation, Comedy

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Mississippi Hare (1949) is currently not available on any services.

Director

Chuck Jones

Production Companies

Warner Bros. Pictures

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Mississippi Hare Videos and Images

Mississippi Hare Audience Reviews

AniInterview Sorry, this movie sucks
VividSimon Simply Perfect
Moustroll Good movie but grossly overrated
Jakoba True to its essence, the characters remain on the same line and manage to entertain the viewer, each highlighting their own distinctive qualities or touches.
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . but maybe what he MEANT to say was that there was nothing NUDE in broad daylight. Bugs Bunny disproves this adage in MISSISSIPPI HARE, as a Promenade Deck Costume Malfunction exposes his nether regions to a Southern Gentleman Admirer and, to quote the Warner star, "Oh well, we almost had a romantic ending." Bugs is either Transgendered or Transvestite in MISSISSIPPI HARE, but the North Carolina legislature cannot say which. However, the buxom bunny is sporting D cups at the very least, and he's already smooched Col. Shuffle full on the kisser. Warner uses MISSISSIPPI HARE to urge the sexually confused American South to "Go jump in the lake!" (or is it "Go leap in the river of fudge-hued sludge"?). Col. Shuffle Takes the Plunge four times, with a cremation thrown in there somewhere. Bugs' Gentleman Admirer also is last seen splashing in the drink, leaving Bugs as Last Mammal Standing. Since Bugs is baled into a giant wad of cotton as this episode begins, only a touch of serendipity (there's a hint of that Great Emancipator Abe Lincoln freeing Bugs below deck of the "Southern Star paddle-wheel steamship) bails him out. Join the Boss, Bruce Springsteen, in boycotting the South, Bugs seems to be saying here on behalf of Warner Bros.
MartinHafer While I can agree that many of the cartoons that Warner Brothers pulled from circulation were quite racist, I think they made a big mistake in the case of "Mississippi Hare". First, I doubt if many people would in any way consider it racist--and I don't think we should always cater to those who the easily offended. Second, it is a pretty good cartoon and it's a shame to ban it (officially or unofficially).The film is set in what appears to be the antebellum South. It begins with a black worker picking cotton and accidentally dropping Bugs Bunny into a hopper that then transfers him to a river boat. What, exactly, is racist about this? In those days and after, a huge majority of people working in the cotton fields WERE black Americans. Should they have made them white or green so as not to offend?! Plus, the person is just a person--no stereotypical facial features (or ANY) are seen--just a brown-skinned arm. My attitude about this is just get over it--it IS a part of our history, like it or not! As for what happens next, Bugs has a run in with Colonel Shuffle--a gambler who is angry Bugs beat him so badly at poker (or course, Bugs having six Aces might also have something to do with it). During the rest of the film, Bugs does he did best with Elmer or Yosimite Sam--he terrorizes the victim repeatedly for our viewing pleasure. It's all pretty funny--particularly the final line. My advice is to download it from archive.org--you're bound to enjoy it.
emasterslake Mississippi Hare is one of the many Bugs Bunny shorts that been censored or banned.Takes place on a Steamboat in the Mississippi River.Bugs Bunny ended up on the Steamboat after he got in the cotton mill and stored with the other cotton. To avoid getting kicked out of the boat. He disguised himself as a rich guy and able to blend in with the crowd.He find the gambling room with a Colonel dude who never loses. He challenges him for a game of poker for 100 dollars worth. After Bugs beat-ed the Colonel, the Colonel gets mad and threw out the whole cartoon the Colonel wanted to get even with Bugs.This short is good. I don't think it deserves to be titled as a banned cartoon. Reason why it was banned is because it had black people picking cotton as a parody to slavery. And a part with the Colonel's face darken after a cigar explosion.I'm not black so I didn't find this cartoon to be offensive. It doesn't seem too racist either. But everyone would have their own opion on this cartoon. I don't know if it'll ever get released on a collection of Banned Looney Tunes. At the moment you're able to see off of internet searches.
TheOtherFool I'm a sucker for banned cartoons but this one doesn't seem to be as racist or otherwise offensive as some others I've seen.Bugs is mistakenly taken for cotton by some cottonpluckers (who, as you would expect, appear to be black), and finds himself back on a boat cruising the Mississippi.Obviously, Bugs doesn't have a ticket but with some changing of clothes everybody thinks he's some rich hot-shot. He wins a poker match against a colonel and then gets involved in a fight with him, and as always a couple of changes in his wardrobe do the trick.There's a little joke in there concerning Uncle Tom's Cabin but it's all not too serious as I'm pondering why this one has been and continues to be banned for so long.The cartoon itself isn't anything special if you'd ask me: 5/10.