So, I was just bumming around when the Looney Toons Show came on TV. It made me feel a bit nostalgic, so I watched it all the way through.
There were a few subplots going on, but here was the main one: Cecil the Turtle pretended that Bugs Bunny hit him with his car and ended up cracking his shell. So he guilted Bugs into a scam where he basically extorted money from Bugs to pay for his faked injuries. Later on, Bugs found out that Cecil had been doing this for years to a number of different people, and finally went to confront him about it near the end of the episode. When confronted, Cecil pulls out a (realistic, non-cartoonish) revolver and tells Bugs and Porky to stand in the corner. Then when Bugs asked why Cecil was doing this, he said that it would be fine to tell them both his plan because he was going to shoot them anyway.
When did cartoons get so...blunt, I guess? Back when I was a kid, an iteration of Scooby Doo was pulled because they determined it was too violent. Even later on, in shows such as Samurai Jack, violence between humans was heavily restricted, that the vast majority of his foes were mechanical in nature. The only exception I can really think of is the Scotsman.
Are all modern cartoons like that? With conmen, and threats of deadly force. Because this is marketed towards younger children as far as I can tell. Not really complaining, just...I was really surprised when the turtle just suddenly whipped out a gun and started threatening people like it was NCIS or something.
There were a few subplots going on, but here was the main one: Cecil the Turtle pretended that Bugs Bunny hit him with his car and ended up cracking his shell. So he guilted Bugs into a scam where he basically extorted money from Bugs to pay for his faked injuries. Later on, Bugs found out that Cecil had been doing this for years to a number of different people, and finally went to confront him about it near the end of the episode. When confronted, Cecil pulls out a (realistic, non-cartoonish) revolver and tells Bugs and Porky to stand in the corner. Then when Bugs asked why Cecil was doing this, he said that it would be fine to tell them both his plan because he was going to shoot them anyway.
When did cartoons get so...blunt, I guess? Back when I was a kid, an iteration of Scooby Doo was pulled because they determined it was too violent. Even later on, in shows such as Samurai Jack, violence between humans was heavily restricted, that the vast majority of his foes were mechanical in nature. The only exception I can really think of is the Scotsman.
Are all modern cartoons like that? With conmen, and threats of deadly force. Because this is marketed towards younger children as far as I can tell. Not really complaining, just...I was really surprised when the turtle just suddenly whipped out a gun and started threatening people like it was NCIS or something.