
Quick Brown Fox wants to make rabbit stew, with the elusive Rapid Rabbit as the main ingredient.
#Doodle monster with horn series
It was intended to be the first of a series of Rapid Rabbit cartoons which had been planned, but no more were produced as the animation department folded soon after its release. Coyote and Road Runner cartoons a predator tries and fails to catch his intended prey, despite using a number of ingenious or comically absurd traps. It was a "chase" cartoon along the same lines as the Wile E. Rabbit Stew and Rabbits Too! is a 1969 theatrically-released cartoon, one of the last few cartoons of the Looney Tunes series (which, at that time, was owned by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts). Coyote's co-star also created by Chuck Jones, and in part by Bugs Bunny's occasional appearances as Wile E. He is inspired by the Road Runner, another Looney Tunes character who is the aforementioned Wile E. Rabbit), is every bit as fast as his name implies another pantomime character, he never says a word, but uses a bicycle horn to express himself. Rapid Rabbit, a small brown rabbit (who's not to be confused with the much later Rapid T.Coyote, a famed Looney Tunes character created by Chuck Jones.

The fox's name is derived from the popular pangram, " The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." He is inspired by Wile E. Quick Brown Fox, a pantomime character, is a fox who wants to eat the fast-running rabbit, but consistently fails to catch him despite using a variety of traps and devices.cartoon characters, created by Robert McKimson, who appeared in only one cartoon, Rabbit Stew and Rabbits Too! Future cartoons featuring the characters were planned, but were cancelled following the shutdown of Warner Bros.-Seven Arts Animation on October 10, 1969. Quick Brown Fox and Rapid Rabbit were a pair of Warner Bros.
