Amazon has
The Day The Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie (Blu-ray) on sale for
$13.99.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Walmart also has
The Day The Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie (Blu-ray) on sale for
$13.99.
Shipping is free w/ Walmart+ (
free 30-day trial) or on orders of $35+.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
jk6812 for sharing this deal.
About this Movie:
- A new buddy comedy starring Porky Pig and Daffy Duck! This richly crafted, hand drawn 2D animated adventure marks the first fully-animated feature-length film in LOONEY TUNES history, told on a scope and scale that's truly OUT OF THIS WORLD!
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I'm 47
Kids these days don't have the same joy as we do you younger
I'm 47
Kids these days don't have the same joy as we do you younger
I'm 30, I took my 3 year old in the theater and we both loved it
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I'm 47
Kids these days don't have the same joy as we do you younger
"Kids these days.." Congrats on being officially old now
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt34966560/
Also, those talking about the spirit of the old screwball Daffy and voices and stuff, this should be close to the Looney Tunes Cartoons show on Max. There should be some clips/episodes on YouTube, so feel free to check it out for an idea.
Maintaining the Ketchup Entertainment curse of lossy audio, The Day the Earth Blew Up is sadly saddled with a Dolby Digital 5.1 track. Luckily it's at least encoded at a semi-robust 640kpbs which places it well above typical DVD quality, and to my ears still packs a sporadically heavy punch due to the abundance of sci-fi action and adventure on display here. Dialogue is clean and crisp -- except for that above-mentioned slight gauziness of Bauza's character voices, which is unavoidably -- and effects are well-prioritized, from forceful explosions to the heavy roar of flamethrowers (above) and Daffy's habitual tendency to "Woo-hoo!" all up in the side and rear channels. The original score and soundtrack, credited to composer Joshua Moshier with occasional classic song cuts by the likes of Bryan Adams, R.E.M. and others, also adds its own weight when needed. While it's inarguable that a lossless track would've been ideal (especially in its listed original 7.1 format as heard in theaters), this downmix still makes for a decent listen.