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Banty Raids is a 1963 Merrie Melodies short directed by Robert McKimson.

Title[]

The title is a play on "panty raids."

Plot[]

An old rooster expels a young, pint-sized bantam rooster, who fancies himself as a hip beatnik and ladies' man, from the barnyard, after repeatedly disturbing the peace with rock music. The beatnik, after regaining his senses and shooting his guitar, sees the neighboring barnyard is full of female hens and is immediately overcome with lust.

But to gain access to the barnyard, he needs to get past its superintendent, Foghorn Leghorn. The young rooster disguises himself as a baby, and Foggy takes the bait. Adopting him as his "son," Foggy immediately shows the beatnik how to keep Barnyard Dawg in his place, using a rubber band contraption to punch the dog square in the head before tossing him in a garbage can.

The beatnik rooster constantly sneaks away to dance with the hens and kiss them. Foghorn eventually catches on that his young visitor is attracted to the "fairer sex", and decides to run a test on him. He shows the beatnik pictures of the Dawg, himself and a lady hen in an evening dress, the latter of which gets a wild reaction out of the banty ("Yahoo! Wildsville!") and confirms Foggy's suspicions ("Hah, just like I thought! He's wacky over females!"). The Barnyard Dawg also learns of this and, seeing an opportunity to get even with Foghorn, offers to aid the hip rooster. After the hen-obsessed rooster agrees, the dog has him stand in a nearby circle and sends a toy tank to seek out Foggy ("Uh oh. Looks like one of that silly dawg's booby traps!"). After dodging a shot from the tank, he is then kicked violently by a bull (the real target of the tank), launching and trapping him in a converted thresher retooled for the sole purpose of transforming Foghorn into a hen. After Foggy lands in the thresher and is subjected to a makeover, the beatnik rooster goes wild at Foggy's new appearance and demands an impromptu marriage ceremony and Barnyard Dawg readily obliges, donning a preachers hat and declaring them husband and wife, "or somethin...". Foggy tries to protest by saying "But I'm a rooster!" (which the beatnik rooster doesn't understand because Foggy's speech is obscured by his beak being tied shut); the banty rooster however, is willing to accept "her" shortcomings, telling Foggy as he carries him away, "Don't let it bug ya ma'mm. Like, we can't all be perfect!"

Availability[]

Streaming[]

Notes[]

Gallery[]

TV Title Cards[]

References[]

  • Friedwald, Will and Jerry Beck. "The Warner Brothers Cartoons." Scarecrow Press Inc., Metuchen, N.J., 1981. ISBN 0-8108-1396-3.
Preceded by
Mother Was a Rooster
Foghorn Leghorn cartoons
1963
Succeeded by
The Yolks on You
Foghorn Leghorn Cartoons
1946 Walky Talky Hawky
1947 Crowing Pains
1948 The Foghorn Leghorn
1949 Henhouse Henery
1950 The Leghorn Blows at MidnightA Fractured Leghorn
1951 Leghorn SwoggledLovelorn Leghorn
1952 Sock a Doodle DoThe EGGcited Rooster
1953 Plop Goes the Weasel!Of Rice and Hen
1954 Little Boy Boo
1955 Feather DustedAll Fowled Up
1956 Weasel StopThe High and the FlightyRaw! Raw! Rooster!
1957 Fox-Terror
1958 Feather BlusterWeasel While You Work
1959 A Broken Leghorn
1960 Crockett-Doodle-DoThe Dixie Fryer
1961 Strangled Eggs
1962 The Slick ChickMother Was a Rooster
1963 Banty Raids
1964 False Hare
1980 The Yolks on You
1996 Superior Duck
1997 Pullet Surprise
2004 Cock-a-Doodle Duel



  1. (3 October 2022) Cartoon Voices of the Golden Age, Vol. 2 (in en). BearManor Media, page 206. 
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