When Granny brings her pets to the movies, Sylvester sees the darkened theater as the perfect place for his favorite snack: a bucket of hot buttered Tweety!
RATED E
Artworkis true to the established designs, though I would expect no less. One would believethe cartoon characters to be easy to draw, and to a professional perhaps they are.But as I once learned, Chuck Jones was absolutely right in his strategy ofdrawing a carrot with Bugs Bunny attached to it. Read Full Review
Finally, we complete the Sylvester trifecta, this time he is paired with Porky Pig in Dig That History! (also written by Frank Strom). The pair arrive at a cave to search for fossils, or better yet, the missing link. Porky works diligently, while Sylvester continues to get bonked in various types of ways by a caveman that only he seems to see. It's the traditional bit where Porky looks away each time the caveman shows up. It is, again, a fine story, but does not offer any originality to these traditional characters.If you're looking for a kid comic where you know exactly what you'll get, this is it. There is not anything really new to speak of, but I wonder if that is expected? Read Full Review
Nothing a whole lot to say about Looney Tunes, you get exactly what you expect. These books are basically just new shorts in the style of classic Looney Tunes animations that Warner Bros. haven't really done a whole lot of in the past 30+ years.
The art and writing is spot-on. This one focuses on Sylvester. The thing I always liked about Sylvester, and generally all Looney Tunes characters, is how teaming him up with certain characters can completely change his role and personality. Team Sylvester up with Tweety and he will be always get mauled by dogs while scheming to get a snack. Team him up with his son and he will be a dad who goes to great lengths to impress his more intelligent son, but always fails. Team him up with Pork more