Droopy Dog (Picture 4) cartoon images gallery | CARTOON VAGANZA

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Droopy Dog (Picture 4)

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Droopy Dog Cartoon Picture 4
Droopy Dog Cartoon Picture 4
image dimensions : 663 x 765
Droopy Dog (Picture 4). Droopy Dog cartoon images gallery 4. Droopy Dog cartoon pictures collection 4. One of Droopy's most famous and surprising traits is his incredible strength, given his diminutive stature and unassuming looks and personality, but it would usually be reserved for when he was upset (with a few rare exceptions, where he would very easily move his adversary beforehand, but without harming him), and then he would monotone, "You know what? That makes me mad," prior to tossing the hapless villain of the piece over his head many times. One such occasion was in SeƱor Droopy, where he did this to a bull. It happened again in One Droopy Knight, where a dragon was Droopy's victim. In the second case, he also breaks the dragon's tail off and knocks him very far away with it like a baseball bat (apparently, it regenerated like a lizard's tail, given the unharmed dragon later became Droopy's servant/pet). This was also once done by a baby version of Droopy, in the Western-themed short, Homesteader Droopy. Another example was in The Chump Champin which Droopy punched a bag with an anvil in it several times and another person shattered when he hit it. Droopy Dog (Picture 4). Droopy Dog cartoon images gallery 4. Droopy Dog cartoon pictures collection 4. In most of his cartoons, Droopy matches wits with either a slick anthropomorphic Wolf (the Wolf character "portrays" the crooks in both Dumb-hounded and its semi-remake, Northwest Hounded Police (1946) or a bulldog named "Spike", sometimes silent, sometimes sporting a Gaelic accent. Two Droopy cartoons - The Shooting of Dan McGoo and Wild and Woolfy - also feature appearances from the curvy heroine of Avery's Red Hot Riding Hood (1943) as a damsel in distress being pursued by the Wolf. Three later Droopy cartoons - Three Little Pups (1953), Blackboard Jumble (1957), and Sheep Wrecked (1958) - feature a slow-moving southern wolf character. Voiced by Daws Butler in a dialect he later used for Hanna-Barbera's Huckleberry Hound, this wolf was a more deadpan character with a tendency to whistle "Kingdom Coming" (aka "Jubalio") to himself (much like Huckleberry would sing "Oh My Darling Clementine" to himself). Droopy Dog (Picture 4). Droopy Dog cartoon images gallery 4. Droopy Dog cartoon pictures collection 4.

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