What's Up, Doc?
0 sources
What's Up, Doc?
Summary
What's Up, Doc? is an animated short film[1]. What's Up, Doc? ranks in the top 9% of animated_short_film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (156 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- What's Up, Doc?'s instance of is recorded as animated short film[3].
- What's Up, Doc? was directed by Robert McKimson[4].
- Warren Foster wrote the screenplay for What's Up, Doc?[5].
- What's Up, Doc?'s composer is recorded as Carl W. Stalling[6].
- What's Up, Doc? was produced by Eddie Selzer[7].
- What's Up, Doc?'s part of the series is recorded as Looney Tunes[8].
- What's Up, Doc?'s production company is recorded as Warner Bros. Entertainment[9].
- The original language of What's Up, Doc? was English[10].
- What's Up, Doc?'s country of origin is recorded as United States[11].
- What's Up, Doc? was released on January 1, 1950[12].
- What's Up, Doc?'s voice actor is recorded as Mel Blanc[13].
- What's Up, Doc?'s voice actor is recorded as Arthur Q. Bryan[14].
- What's Up, Doc?'s distributed by is recorded as Warner Bros. Entertainment[15].
- What's Up, Doc?'s title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': "What's Up, Doc?"}[16].
- What's Up, Doc?'s fabrication method is recorded as traditional animation[17].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
Body
Authorship and Creation
What's Up, Doc? was produced by Eddie Selzer[7]. What's Up, Doc? was directed by Robert McKimson[4]. Warren Foster wrote the screenplay for What's Up, Doc?[5].
Publication
What's Up, Doc? was published on January 1, 1950[12]. The original language of What's Up, Doc? was English[10]. What's Up, Doc?'s part of the series is recorded as Looney Tunes[8].
Subject and Themes
What's Up, Doc?'s part of the series is recorded as Looney Tunes[8].
Why It Matters
What's Up, Doc? ranks in the top 9% of animated_short_film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (156 views/month).[2]