How do you sneak past the dog who sees everything? You find a way to put them to sleep. Ralph Wolf finds a surefire method to make Sam Sheepdog sleep on the job by counting the sheep he's supposed to be guarding. But is Sam just as dangerous asleep as he is awake?
The best thing about Looney Tunes is that reading each issue is truly the comic-book form of sitting down and watching classic Looney Tunes cartoons, and this issue keeps that tradition going strong. Read Full Review
For those of us who grew up on these cartoons, I appreciate the comics remaining true to the roots, with flat areas of color, instead of the excessive shading seen in modern animation. In trying to keep the characters relevant, Warner Brothers Animation has seemingly abandoned its core audience. But the Looney Tunes we know and love are alive and well in these pages. Read Full Review
This is a very tough book to review, since it is basically Looney Tunes shorts in comic format. If you love Looney Tunes, you will enjoy these stories since they nail the art of Chuck Jones and the writing of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons.
There are 3 "shorts" in this book. The first is Down for the Count which is your typical Ralph and Sam slapstick, I loved that they showed Wile E. Coyote and Ralph in the same panel, not sure if the cartoon ever addressed they were separate characters. The second stars Daffy and Foghorn. In this short Daffy is holding a play of Macbeth and Foghorn warns him that saying Macbeth on stage causes bad things to happen. The third and longest story involves Sylvester and Tweety, Granny asks Sylves more