Advocating greed. The creators of this issue about Duffy Duck have some strange ideas about the Tasmanian devil. They decided to combine a certain predatory beast with a real tornado and pass it off as another brainless cartoon character. And Duffy Duck? He's in his repertoire.
In this episode, a coincidence sits on a coincidence and chases. Surprisingly, the zoo has a post office and instant news service, which in a matter of seconds manages to place in the local newspaper the news that the Tasmanian devil escaped from the cage. What's the point at which Duffy hears the news from a newspaper that says the beast's favorite prey is ducks? Firstly, this is a meaningless coincidence (the plot would somehow stick together without it), and secondly, a brazen lie that denigrates the image of the harmless Australian marsupial, which in fact will not offend cats.
It seems that when Duffy just pronounces the word “money” as he begins a tantrum. Risking his own life, he decides to catch a Tasmanian devil to get a reward for his capture. Was it not disgusting for Americans to create such a cartoon with such a caustic ridicule of themselves? Of course, Duffy falls back into a maelstrom of coincidences, and the message of the series itself is so terrible that it does not withstand any criticism. The issue openly tells us, "Greed is good!" There can be no punishment for her.
These are the cartoons that Warner Brothers produced in the good old fifties. What, if not a unit, can we talk about?
1 out of 10