Banty Raids
Banty Raids
| 28 June 1963 (USA)
Banty Raids Trailers

A horny hipster rooster, attracted to the hens in Foghorn Leghorn's barnyard, disguises himself as a baby foundling on Foghorn's doorstep. Foghorn adopts the girl-crazy rooster as his son, giving him access to all the chickens on the farm!

Reviews
utgard14

The last Foghorn Leghorn cartoon made during the classic era is a funny one, directed by Robert McKimson. The plot has Foghorn dealing with a young "hip" Romeo rooster. Seeing this diminutive rooster with sunglasses on spouting his beatnik lingo and singing his Buddy Holly-esque rock song is pretty cute. Foghorn and Barnyard Dog are both amusing but all the big laughs here come from the little rooster. Great voice work from Mel Blanc. The animation is nice, if not particularly impressive. The music is credited to Bill Lava, mostly known for using stock music in his cartoons. I don't know if the rock song the little rooster sings is an original compositions of Lava's or not but it's fun. Most of the Looney Tunes characters fizzled out in the '60s with some fairly dreadful shorts. I'm happy to say at least Foghorn went out with a good one.

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TheLittleSongbird

While not my favourite Looney Tunes character- either Bugs Bunny or Daffy Duck- Foghorn Leghorn is still an interesting and distinctive one and also one that I appreciate more as a young adult than as a child 10+ years ago(same I feel about Pepe LePew also). Banty Raids was his last cartoon, and at the same time one of his best. Okay like with most Foghorn cartoons you do know exactly how the story is going to map out. But knowing that isn't enough to ruin the enjoyment of watching them, especially when it is paced in such a jovial manner that it is impossible to be bored for one second during it. The animation makes Banty Raids one of the better-looking Looney Tunes cartoons of the 60s, while more fluid in character designs in earlier entries there is a lot of vibrant colour and detail. The music is catchy and has a great deal of energy, while the dialogue is razor sharp and extremely witty- some repetition but that is a unique part of the Foghorn cartoons' charm- and the gags imaginative and as funny as you'd expect. Barnyard Dog and the rooster(who refreshingly is a counterpoint that reflects the time in which Banty Raids was made) are vastly entertaining characters, but as usual it is Foghorn who steals the show. Mel Blanc's vocals are characteristically brilliant. Overall, a lot of fun and one of Foghorn's best despite being his last. 9/10 Bethany Cox

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Hugh Terry

Saving the best for last, the final Foghorn short is quite simply the funniest, wittiest short cartoon in the whole Warner Brothers library. Yes, the ending even tops Some Like It Hot!There are so many memorable images - and great lines - in Banty Raids that it's hard to know what to pick. The whole script is hilarious, and while Foghorn fans will have some idea what to expect, the introduction of a new character (the beatnik rooster) gives the usual set-up an unusual, updated flavour. Finger-clickin' good!!That it still hasn't been released (along with another great Foghorn classic Fox Terror) on DVD is utterly disgraceful. But mere words in a review cannot do this little gem justice - you just gotta see it and you know, like, dig it man! Wow.

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Chip_douglas

Foghorn Leghorn cartoons often feature one-off guest stars to add something to the old rooster-dog feud. In his last starring role, Foghorn is paired with a character representing the decade the film was made in. Quite a rarity on the otherwise timeless Foghorn farm.Foggy adopts a young Rooster. Of course he does not realize this is a full grown (albeit small in stature) hepcat cock who was kicked off his own farm for chasing too many chicks. Fatherly Foghorn immediately starts teaching ‘Sonny boy' the goal in life of every rooster: to inflict pain on the local watchdog. But the slick hipster is only interested in the chicks and starts moving in on Foghorns henhouse harem.After all these years the vocabulary of the Beatnik Rooster is still a gas, if you can dig it. As usual Barnyard Dog doesn't start to use his brain until the end, when he comes up with another one of his ingenious machines (only using material found on the farm) to take revenge on Foghorn. It seems he was inspired by `Some like it hot' this time. 7 out of 10

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