Looney Tunes Platinum Collection - Volume 2 (Review), Looney Tunes Platinum Collection - Volume 3 (Review), The History of Termite Terrace.
Key shorts include: Baseball Bugs (1946), Rabbit of Seville (1950), Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century (1953), Bully for Bugs (1953), and the rarely seen Bartholomew Versus the Wheel (1932, a pre-Tex Avery oddity). Looney Tunes Platinum Collection - Volume 1 -19...
Exclusive to the Blu-ray, this disc offers extensive documentaries on Chuck Jones, rare animated shorts (like The Dot and the Line ), and 9 bonus cartoons. Technical Quality Looney Tunes Platinum Collection - Volume 2 (Review),
The standout feature of Volume 1 is the high-definition restoration. For decades, many Looney Tunes shorts were viewed through grainy television broadcasts or degraded VHS tapes. The Platinum Collection utilized the original 35mm negatives to provide a 1080p transfer that reveals details previously hidden: the texture of the hand-painted watercolor backgrounds, the subtle brushstrokes on the characters, and a vibrant color palette that finally matches the artists' original intent. 2. A "Who’s Who" of Animation Giants Technical Quality The standout feature of Volume 1
The Looney Tunes are often dismissed as "kids' cartoons," but watching Platinum Collection Volume 1 on a large 4K screen is a visceral experience. The shrill panic of Daffy’s voice, the splat of a falling anvil, the silent dignity of the Coyote holding up a tiny "Help" sign—these are not relics. They are the rhythmic, violent, hilarious heartbeat of cinema.
Looney Tunes Platinum Collection: Volume 1 is a high-definition Blu-ray and DVD box set released by Warner Home Video on November 15, 2011 . It serves as a successor to the Looney Tunes Golden Collection