The Birth of a Notion

The Birth of a Notion
Looney Tunes (Daffy Duck) series
Directed by Planned by:
Bob Clampett (uncredited)
Finished by (uncredited)/Directed by (credit only on the original issue):
Robert McKimson (credited on the original issue)
Produced by Edward Selzer (uncredited)
Story by Warren Foster (uncredited on the Blue Ribbon reissue)
Voices by Voice characterizations:
Mel Blanc (uncredited on the Blue Ribbon reissue)
Stan Freberg (uncredited)
Music by Musical direction:
Carl Stalling
Orchestra:
Milt Franklyn (uncredited)
Animation by Richard Bickenbach
Cal Dalton
I. Ellis
Rod Scribner
(all uncredited on the Blue Ribbon reissue)
Inbetween:
Lloyd Turner (uncredited)
Additional animation:
John Carey
Manny Gould
Anatole Kirsanoff
Fred Jones
Fred Abranz
(all uncredited)
Effects animation:
A.C. Gamer (uncredited)
Layouts by Cornett Wood (uncredited on the Blue Ribbon reissue)
Backgrounds by Richard H. Thomas (uncredited on the Blue Ribbon reissue)
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release date(s) April 12, 1947 (US)
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 minutes
Language English

The Birth of a Notion is a Looney Tunes cartoon animated in 1946 and released in 1947. It was reissued as a Blue Ribbon Merrie Melodies cartoon, retitled Birth of a Notion, with the ending theme song still being that of the Looney Tunes cartoon. It features Daffy Duck, as well as a dog named Leopold and an unnamed mad scientist. Director Robert McKimson used his "Barnyard Dawg" character design as Leopold, while the scientist is a caricature, both visually and vocally, of Peter Lorre. The title is a play on The Birth of a Nation, but there is no other connection to that 1915 film.

The Birth of a Notion is one of three shorts that had been scheduled for direction by Bob Clampett before he left Warner Bros. Cartoons; the other two were Bacall to Arms and The Goofy Gophers, both of which were finished by Arthur Davis. Mel Blanc voiced Daffy Duck, Leopold and Joe Besser Duck, while an uncredited Stan Freberg voiced the mad scientist.

Plot

Daffy is not going to fly south for the winter like other ducks. He manages to convince the rather simple-witted dog, Leopold, to let him stay for the winter by pretending to have saved Leopold's life. Unfortunately, Leopold's master is a mad scientist who needs the wishbone of a duck for his experiment.

Daffy is insulted by the scientist's requirement and tries to get rid of him, while Leopold interferes to save his master. At one point, Daffy throws a baseball bat at the scientist from behind, and Leopold grabs it, but cannot stop it in time from hitting the man. The scientist misunderstands, taking the bat away and calmly scolding Leopold while breaking the bat into many pieces with his bare hands before going to sleep. Daffy's assassination attempt fails and the scientist turns the tables, trying to kill Daffy with numerous booby traps around the house. Meanwhile, Leopold feels left out of the cartoon.

Daffy finally leaves, but the master wants a dog's wishbone, so Leopold flees as well. As Daffy tries to con his way into another house, a grey duck (with a Joe Besser-like personality) is already occupying the place and kicks Daffy into the sky, southbound. On his flight, he is surprised to find he has company: Leopold, aided by a fan strapped to his back, is flying south, too.

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