Originally released as a Paramount "Noveltoon" in March 1955. Directed by Dave Tendlar; story by Larz Bourne; animation by Thomas Moore and Marty Taras; "scenics" by Robert Connavale; music by Winston Sharples. Sid Raymond and Jackson Beck provide the main voices...
No matter how hard the fox tries, Baby Huey always outsmarts him. One of my favorite episodes is the one where a big pot of boiling water that the fox tries to cook Huey in lands on the fox’s head, and he blows hot steam out of his mouth. Another good episode is the one where Huey brings his school teacher a great big pumpkin instead of an apple, and he throws it on her desk. All of the Baby Huey episodes are so funny !! 😂😅
I rarely saw Baby Huey on TV. Mostly it was Bugs Bunny, Popeye, Casper, Rocky Squirrel, Quick Drag McGraw, and certain others. This is one weird episode even though the Popeye cartoons were violent and creepy.
Yeah, Baby Huey has been always tossed to the side compared to those other mentioned IPs. Worth mentioning as well that the Baby Huey and Popeye cartoons were made at the same studio (Famous Studios), so indeed you'll likely notice some sort of pattern between both cartoon series.
You know, the studio should've made a crossover with Casper and Baby Huey. I bet Casper would've accidentally scared off that fox and those three ducklings.
@@evancredeur7498 As far as Golden Age shorts go, there was 1957's Ghost of Honor where Baby Huey's drawing came to life. Otherwise yeah nothing from the original era, though understandable considering they come from polar opposites of each other as far as their cartoons go: Casper being Disney-like and overly cute to Baby Huey's being stupidly violent, not that this stops me from enjoying the latter.
@@evancredeur7498 Thinking further, Disney-like may not be the best description, but for me, it's hard to deny how soft the Casper cartoons were (particularly after the first 3 shorts), especially when you consider everything else Famous Studios did at the time from Baby Huey to Herman and Katnip to Popeye. Of course though, there were exceptions, like 1956's Fright From Wrong.
@@TheToonkeeper How about all the times characters on Casper cartoons got hit in the head, that dogcatcher shooting at the small dog, the greyhound being stung by bees, the kitten that kept taking advantage of Casper to torture that poor dog, etc, etc, etc.
@@TheToonkeeper Not to mention the many times those cute little animals were threatened by bigger animals. Black kitten chased by grizzly, wolf trying to eat pigs, second wolf going after lambs. Get what I'm saying?
Huey's cartoons are kind of redundant. He goes off to play with other kids, the fox comes along pretending to be his friend and tries to kill him, but his plans backfire, then at the end Huey catches on and beats up on the fox. It's the same in every cartoon.
Exactly, it wasn't until the 1990s with The Baby Huey Show when they finally mixed up the formula (ruclips.net/channel/UCuig1DDkNr3tXWv67suyqZw). Famous Studios was sitting on a comedic goldmine, but did little to build on it back then.
@@TheToonkeeper Famous Studios had big issues with very formulaic writing (Baby Huey being among the worst offenders), pander more to kids, unnecessary violence, subpar direction timing, and lack of artistic innovation. The 1990s Baby Huey, especially in season 1 by Carbunkle Cartoons (which did animation segments for some early Ren and Stimpy episodes) is so much better by not being formulaic.
That's what makes it funny. Huey isn't the smartest but he finally catches on and outwits the fox. Not unlike Bugs Bunny outwitting Elmer Fudd and Yosemite Sam with their weapons. Though of course Bugs is lots smarter than Baby Huey. 😆
It became a standard formula in Huey's cartoons: the other ducks won't have anything to do with him; the fox sees Huey, and thinks he's got "meat on the table", and tries to roast, fry or otherwise kill him off. The "big explosion" he plans for Huey ALWAYS backfired on the fox at the end- and the ducks accept Huey as their friend and humiliate the fox at the same time.
About the ending where the fox found himself branded and the words "The End" were burned into his rump... wasn't that same ending used in one of Popeye's cartoons?
John 3:16-18 [16]For God so greatly loved and dearly prized the world that He [even] gave up His only begotten (unique) Son, so that whoever believes in (trusts in, clings to, relies on) Him shall not perish (come to destruction, be lost) but have eternal (everlasting) life. [17]For God did not send the Son into the world in order to judge (to reject, to condemn, to pass sentence on) the world, but that the world might find salvation and be made safe and sound through Him. [18]He who believes in Him [who clings to, trusts in, relies on Him] is not judged [he who trusts in Him never comes up for judgment; for him there is no rejection, no condemnation-he incurs no damnation]; but he who does not believe (cleave to, rely on, trust in Him) is judged already [he has already been convicted and has already received his sentence] because he has not believed in and trusted in the name of the only begotten Son of God. [He is condemned for refusing to let his trust rest in Christ's name.]Romans 10:8-10 [8]But what does it say? The Word (God's message in Christ) is near you, on your lips and in your heart; that is, the Word (the message, the basis and object) of faith which we preach, [Deut. 30:14.] [9]Because if you acknowledge and confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and in your heart believe (adhere to, trust in, and rely on the truth) that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. [10]For with the heart a person believes (adheres to, trusts in, and relies on Christ) and so is justified (declared righteous, acceptable to God), and with the mouth he confesses (declares openly and speaks out freely his faith) and confirms [his] salvation.John 14:6-7 [6]Jesus said to him, I am the Way and the Truth and the Life; no one comes to the Father except by (through) Me. [7]If you had known Me [had learned to recognize Me], you would also have known My Father. From now on, you know Him and have seen Him.
Originally released as a Paramount "Noveltoon" in March 1955. Directed by Dave Tendlar; story by Larz Bourne; animation by Thomas Moore and Marty Taras; "scenics" by Robert Connavale; music by Winston Sharples. Sid Raymond and Jackson Beck provide the main voices...
5:25 When Huey gets angry, he's downright terrifying.
No matter how hard the fox tries, Baby Huey always outsmarts him. One of my favorite episodes is the one where a big pot of boiling water that the fox tries to cook Huey in lands on the fox’s head, and he blows hot steam out of his mouth. Another good episode is the one where Huey brings his school teacher a great big pumpkin instead of an apple, and he throws it on her desk. All of the Baby Huey episodes are so funny !! 😂😅
your talking about the episode "Quack-A-Doodle-Do" the episode of Baby Huey's birth yeah that's the episode that introduced me to Baby Huey.
Huey was a good actor. He was actually very intelligent off the Screen. Very convincing.
One of the best child actors out there. I think his son did a good job continuing the legacy in the 90s.
I always found it interesting how the other ducks resented Huey yet when his life was in danger suddenly they cared.
Take a look at how Huey is built and remember how his mind works.
They don't want to play with him because he ruins all their games. However, they aren't heartless monsters. They will care if he is in trouble.
It happens every time!
Huey: Hey, You! Your The Fox And I Think Your Trying To Kill Me! 5:25
Baby Huey was stronger than Popeye.
I loveee this so much back then
I rarely saw Baby Huey on TV. Mostly it was Bugs Bunny, Popeye, Casper, Rocky Squirrel, Quick Drag McGraw, and certain others.
This is one weird episode even though the Popeye cartoons were violent and creepy.
Yeah, Baby Huey has been always tossed to the side compared to those other mentioned IPs. Worth mentioning as well that the Baby Huey and Popeye cartoons were made at the same studio (Famous Studios), so indeed you'll likely notice some sort of pattern between both cartoon series.
The fox dresses sexily in some of the cartoons. :)
05:25 Hey you! You're the fox! And I think you're trying to kill me! Lol
Don't make Huey angry. You won't like him when he's angry.
Baby Huey reminds me of Ed from Ed Edd n Eddy. a little slow but gutsy, when necessary.
😆5:50 Hear how he screams
Also how he’s now scared of what he was previously going to eat 😂
5:30
You know, the studio should've made a crossover with Casper and Baby Huey. I bet Casper would've accidentally scared off that fox and those three ducklings.
@@evancredeur7498 As far as Golden Age shorts go, there was 1957's Ghost of Honor where Baby Huey's drawing came to life.
Otherwise yeah nothing from the original era, though understandable considering they come from polar opposites of each other as far as their cartoons go: Casper being Disney-like and overly cute to Baby Huey's being stupidly violent, not that this stops me from enjoying the latter.
@@TheToonkeeper
Casper's had moments of cartoon violence. I don't see anything Disneylike about him.
@@evancredeur7498 Thinking further, Disney-like may not be the best description, but for me, it's hard to deny how soft the Casper cartoons were (particularly after the first 3 shorts), especially when you consider everything else Famous Studios did at the time from Baby Huey to Herman and Katnip to Popeye.
Of course though, there were exceptions, like 1956's Fright From Wrong.
@@TheToonkeeper
How about all the times characters on Casper cartoons got hit in the head, that dogcatcher shooting at the small dog, the greyhound being stung by bees, the kitten that kept taking advantage of Casper to torture that poor dog, etc, etc, etc.
@@TheToonkeeper
Not to mention the many times those cute little animals were threatened by bigger animals. Black kitten chased by grizzly, wolf trying to eat pigs, second wolf going after lambs. Get what I'm saying?
Am I the only one who thinks Huey almost sounds like Katnip?
Imagine if there was a live movie with Huey like with Casper?
Yeah, about that: ruclips.net/video/Jr2_tikxNbc/видео.html
@@TheToonkeeper well that's news to me,
Thanks.
You would know if there are any hot stuff always like this would you?
@@theamericanshepherd5378 Yep, it's knowledge that's a blessing and a curse.
@@TheToonkeeper ?
Baby Huey wasn't really smart but he was strong as a horse. 😆
I love the southen accent
Those three ducklings remind me of Donald's nephews. I wonder if that was intentional.
Considering this same studio gave us the shamelessly violent Herman and Katnip as a clear means to cash in on Tom and Jerry's success, probably.
@@TheToonkeeperharveytoons is a combination of all these characters
Huey's cartoons are kind of redundant. He goes off to play with other kids, the fox comes along pretending to be his friend and tries to kill him, but his plans backfire, then at the end Huey catches on and beats up on the fox.
It's the same in every cartoon.
Exactly, it wasn't until the 1990s with The Baby Huey Show when they finally mixed up the formula (ruclips.net/channel/UCuig1DDkNr3tXWv67suyqZw). Famous Studios was sitting on a comedic goldmine, but did little to build on it back then.
@@TheToonkeeper Famous Studios had big issues with very formulaic writing (Baby Huey being among the worst offenders), pander more to kids, unnecessary violence, subpar direction timing, and lack of artistic innovation.
The 1990s Baby Huey, especially in season 1 by Carbunkle Cartoons (which did animation segments for some early Ren and Stimpy episodes) is so much better by not being formulaic.
That's what makes it funny. Huey isn't the smartest but he finally catches on and outwits the fox. Not unlike Bugs Bunny outwitting Elmer Fudd and Yosemite Sam with their weapons. Though of course Bugs is lots smarter than Baby Huey. 😆
But it's boring when all the episodes go the same way.
@@theorca5173 Indeed. Famous Studios is super formulaic.
big baby duck
He's super strong
I enjoyed the early Baby 🍼 Huey cartoons much better than I did the later ones.
This was great seeing Huey shoot, ride and lasso the Fox!
Fox took more shots than 50 cent😄
You would think that the fox would learn his lesson by now. At away Huey teach that fox a lesson or two.
It became a standard formula in Huey's cartoons: the other ducks won't have anything to do with him; the fox sees Huey, and thinks he's got "meat on the table", and tries to roast, fry or otherwise kill him off. The "big explosion" he plans for Huey ALWAYS backfired on the fox at the end- and the ducks accept Huey as their friend and humiliate the fox at the same time.
Who is the outlaw?
Me encanta ver estas fábulas, a pesar de mí edad...
ps que edad tienes ?
About the ending where the fox found himself branded and the words "The End" were burned into his rump... wasn't that same ending used in one of Popeye's cartoons?
YES- in "Rodeo Romeo" (1946) .
"Kevin Kess" These cartoons, as legendary as they have become, often had rehash episodes of each other.
Isnt that the same guy that voices the wolf in some other noveltoon shorts?
Well, Sid Raymond did a "Bert Lahr" impression {"GNONG-GNONG-GNONG!!!!"} as "Wolfie" in earlier Paramount Noveltoons. Jackson Beck is the fox here.
I was referring to Huey’s voice… though I could’ve specified. But thanks! All info is good info
Que cancion es la que canta el zorro, gracias.
Poor Huey.
But he's strong
His mom is just like my mom, i am still a 2 yr old for her.
very good
0:44 🤣🤣🤣
5:47
I love me some Huey
Huey was pissed against the hungry fox then he lasso him right back at him and braid his ass that says the end! LOL! LMAO! ROFL!
John 3:16-18
[16]For God so greatly loved and dearly prized the world that He [even] gave up His only begotten (unique) Son, so that whoever believes in (trusts in, clings to, relies on) Him shall not perish (come to destruction, be lost) but have eternal (everlasting) life.
[17]For God did not send the Son into the world in order to judge (to reject, to condemn, to pass sentence on) the world, but that the world might find salvation and be made safe and sound through Him.
[18]He who believes in Him [who clings to, trusts in, relies on Him] is not judged [he who trusts in Him never comes up for judgment; for him there is no rejection, no condemnation-he incurs no damnation]; but he who does not believe (cleave to, rely on, trust in Him) is judged already [he has already been convicted and has already received his sentence] because he has not believed in and trusted in the name of the only begotten Son of God. [He is condemned for refusing to let his trust rest in Christ's name.]Romans 10:8-10
[8]But what does it say? The Word (God's message in Christ) is near you, on your lips and in your heart; that is, the Word (the message, the basis and object) of faith which we preach, [Deut. 30:14.]
[9]Because if you acknowledge and confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and in your heart believe (adhere to, trust in, and rely on the truth) that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.
[10]For with the heart a person believes (adheres to, trusts in, and relies on Christ) and so is justified (declared righteous, acceptable to God), and with the mouth he confesses (declares openly and speaks out freely his faith) and confirms [his] salvation.John 14:6-7
[6]Jesus said to him, I am the Way and the Truth and the Life; no one comes to the Father except by (through) Me.
[7]If you had known Me [had learned to recognize Me], you would also have known My Father. From now on, you know Him and have seen Him.
I like duck cartoon 😍😍😍😍😍
Que, recuerdos, de, la, niñez, rodry,, m, z, o
Me old but i like cartoon bcz not fake😅😅🤣🤣🤣🤣
0:16 3:29
🤠
and foxes were suppose to be sly. not smart giving a toddler a loaded gun
هل بطة تشبهني مابتعرف الله وين حاطها
O raposa não tem vergonha só toma 😂😂😂😂😂😂 coitadinho do pato
😂😂😂😂
Bat I’m to young 😂😂😂😂😂poor 🦊
😂
Your big baby huey
يجنن
3vjalwb
I enjoyed the early Baby 🍼 Huey cartoons much better than I did the later ones.
5:59