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Bei uns dreht sich alles um Essen. Wir essen gern, wir kochen gern, wir fotografieren Essen und wir sprechen beim Essen von Rezepten und Restaurants. 2,942 Best Cook Free Video Clip Downloads from the Videezy community. Free Cook Stock Video Footage licensed under creative commons, open source, and more! Jan 06, 2016 SisterChef Asia This episode: The Naked Spaghetti 🍽 Enterprise. Get your team aligned with all the tools you need on one secure, reliable video platform.
Tie your apron and sharpen your knives – it’s time for a crazy cooking adventure in WHAT’S COOKING? – Tasty Chef! Starting as an amateur cook with a small kitchen, you’ll combine ingredients to create over 700+ recipes and serve delicious dishes to hungry customers. Customize your restaurant, upgrade your kitchen and improve your skills to become the world’s greatest master chef!
WHAT’S COOKING? – TASTY FEATURES
⦁ Combine ingredients to discover and cook 700+ recipes
⦁ Customize your restaurant and kitchen with unique themes
⦁ Level up your chef to unlock new ingredients and recipes
⦁ Upgrade your kitchen with new equipment
⦁ Visit the market and play mini-games to get common, rare or epic ingredients
⦁ Cook your diners’ favorite dishes for extra rewards!
⦁ Become a master of the kitchen and cook 5-star dishes!
How To Download Video From Vimeo
SOURCE THE BEST INGREDIENTS
Part of any chef’s job is to find the highest quality ingredients available! To cook the best dishes you’ll have to visit the market. But there’s a catch – you’ll have to win your ingredients in a card game. You are given 10 attempts to flip over cards and discover the ingredients you want, try not to lose… you need ingredients to cook with!
COOK & DISCOVER OVER 100+ RECIPES
As you level up your chef you’ll unlock delicious new recipes and ingredients to find at the market. With so many combinations available, there are over 100+ amazing dishes to discover! Have fun to combine ingredients and discovering brand new dishes to serve to your hungry restaurant diners.
UPGRADE YOUR RESTAURANT
When you serve delicious food to your restaurant diners, you’ll earn coins – you run a business, after all! Why not spend these coins on upgrading your restaurant and kitchen? Unlock a variety of new kitchen tools to cook faster and better dishes, or customize your restaurant with new themes which give EXP bonuses to certain dishes!
BECOME A MASTER CHEF!
Level up your chef by earning EXP and cooking some amazing food in your bistro, or invest some coins in training. To become the world’s greatest master chef you need to master each ingredient and learn to cook 5-star food – are you ready for the challenge?
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What's Cookin' Doc? | |
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Directed by | Robert Clampett I. Freleng(clip from Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt) |
Produced by | Leon Schlesinger |
Story by | Michael Sasanoff |
Starring | Mel Blanc (uncredited) |
Narrated by | Robert C. Bruce (uncredited, opening) |
Music by | Carl W. Stalling |
Animation by | Bob McKimson Rod Scribner (uncredited) |
Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. |
Release date | |
Running time | 8:08 |
Language | English |
What's Cookin' Doc? is a 1944 Warner Bros.cartoon in the Merrie Melodies series, directed by Bob Clampett and starring Bugs Bunny.[1] The title is a variant on Bugs' catch-phrase 'What's up Doc?'. It also hints at one of the scenes in the picture.
Plot[edit]
The plot centers on the Academy Awards presentation. The action begins with live action color film footage of various Hollywood scenes (edited from A Star Is Born), narrated by Robert C. Bruce. It leads up to the Big Question of the evening: Who will win 'the' Oscar? The film shows the stereotypical red carpet arrivals of stars, as well as a human emcee starting to introduce the Oscar show.
At this point the film switches to animation, with the shadow of a now-animated emcee (and now voiced by Mel Blanc) continuing to introduce the Oscar, and Bugs (also Mel Blanc's voice, as usual) assuring the viewer that 'it's in da bag; I'm a cinch to win'. Bugs is stunned when the award goes instead to James Cagney (who had actually won in the previous year's ceremony, for Warner's Yankee Doodle Dandy). Shock turns to anger as Bugs declares the results to be 'sa-bo-TAH-gee' and demands a recount.
Bugs then tries to make his case by showing clips from Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt (which includes a clip of Hiawatha attempting to 'cook' the rabbit) as proof of his allegedly superior acting (an inside joke, as the cartoon had actually been nominated for an Oscar and lost). He hurls a set of film cans off-screen and tells someone named 'Smokey' to 'roll 'em!'[2] Bugs tells the audience that these are some of his 'best scenes'. Immediately a 'stag reel' (with the title card depicting a grinning stag) starts to roll, and the startled Bugs quickly stops it and switches to the right film. The clip starts with a title card of 'BUGS BUNNY' in very large letters, as a brassy orchestral fanfare plays, and ends with an end title card of Bugs bending over to show his cotton tail and giving his toothy grin as a comically sped up version of the Merrie Melodies end theme (Merrily We Roll Along) is heard. There is then a parody of aggressive salesmanship. Bugs beats a big bass drum and parades across the stage with signs like “ Let Bugs Have It” and “Give It To Bugs”. Cigars are then quickly passed out en masse to the audience.
Finally, Bugs pleads with the audience, 'What do you say, folks? Do I get it? Or do I get it?' (echoing Fredric March's drunken appeal to the Academy Award banquet audience in A Star Is Born). The emcee asks the audience (in an affected nasal voice), 'Shall we give it to him, folks?' and they yell, 'Yeah, let's give it to him!' whereupon they pelt Bugs with fruits and vegetables (enabling him to briefly do a Carmen Miranda impression).. and an ersatz Oscar labeled 'booby prize', which is actually a gold-plated rabbit statue. Bugs is so pleased at winning it, he remarks, 'I'll even take youse to bed wit' me every night!' The statue suddenly comes alive, asks in a voice like that of radio character, Bert Gordon, 'Do you mean it?', smooches the startled bunny, and takes on an effeminate, hip-swiveling pose. The screen fades out, Clampett's famous vocalized 'Bay-woop!' is heard, and the 'That's all, Folks!' card appears.
Analysis[edit]
The subtext of the short is the self-consciousness of Warner Bros. Cartoons about their then-lack of success at the Academy Awards. The studio had yet to win an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[3] The clips from Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt (1941) allude to this subtext. It was a former nominee for the award and had lost to Lend a Paw (1941).[3]
The live-action film footage derive from the film A Star Is Born (1937).[3] Footage depict the footprints of the stars at the Chinese Theatre, and nightlife at the Trocadero and the Cocoanut Grove.[3]
The premise of the film is that Bugs Bunny is competing for the Academy Award for Best Actor. He demonstrates his acting ability by transforming into Jerry Colonna, Bing Crosby, Cecil B. DeMille, Katharine Hepburn, and Edward G. Robinson.[3] As the announcer lists the winner's traits, Bugs transforms to illustrate that they all apply to him: dramatic acting, refined comedy, skill at character roles, and prowess as a screen lover. He demonstrates his character acting by becoming Frankenstein's monster and his romantic acting by changing into Charles Boyer and romancing a carrot.[3]
/vst-fl-studio-12-download.html. Bugs campaigns for the award by addressing the people in the movie audience. His methods of campaigning include dispensing cigars, drum beating, and glad-handing. He thus earns a booby prize, a second-class award reminiscent of the miniature Oscars awarded to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937).[3] The implication is that awards are not won by the most talented and deserving, but those capable of lobbying.[3]
The short includes a subtle reference to World War II. There is a newspaper headline announcing the Academy Awards. A sub-headline on the same page reads 'Jap [Japanese] Cruiser Blown Up'. This is a reference to the contemporary Imperial Japanese Navy.[4] Another sub-headline notes, 'Adolph Hitler commits suicide'.
Availability[edit]
- The short occurs in its entirety in the documentary Bugs Bunny: Superstar Part 1, which is available as a special feature on Discs 1 and 2 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 4, although it has not been remastered or released independently in that series.
- It also appears as a bonus short on two DVD releases; Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Academy Awards Animation Collection (Disc 3), and on Captains of the Clouds, both in their 1995 dubbed versions.
Sources[edit]
- Crafton, Donald (1998), 'The View from Termite Terrace: Caricature and Parody in Warner Bros. Animation', in Sandler, Kevin S. (ed.), Reading the Rabbit: Explorations in Warner Bros. Animation, Rutgers University Press, ISBN978-0813525389
- Shull, Michael S.; Wilt, David E. (2004), 'Filmography 1944', Doing Their Bit: Wartime American Animated Short Films, 1939-1945, McFarland & Company, ISBN978-0786481699
References[edit]
- ^Beck, Jerry; Friedwald, Will (1989). Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros. Cartoons. Henry Holt and Co. p. 147. ISBN0-8050-0894-2.
- ^According to IMDB, this is a reference to Schlesinger cameraman/projectionist Henry 'Smokey' Garner. Director Bob Clampett later confirmed this in a 1969 Funnyworldmagazineinterview. That small clip is now used frequently in the special features for the first volume of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection.
- ^ abcdefghCrafton (1998), p. 116
- ^Shull, Wilt (2004), p. 177
See also[edit]
External links[edit]
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- What's Cookin' Doc? on IMDb
Preceded by Little Red Riding Rabbit | Bugs Bunny Cartoons 1944 | Succeeded by Bugs Bunny and the Three Bears |