![]() ![]() However, Bugs diverts the saw (using a small detour sign) downwards into his fuse box, electrocuting the worker. The worker then manages to free his head through the butt, with a dazed look on his face.Ģ) While Bugs is reading The Raven in a comic book ("Poe's Kiddie Komics" at that), the worker uses a rock-cutting saw to cut through the pillar. This sends him falling into a pile of wet concrete, which he walks out of, drenched in concrete, before it sets. The construction worker tries to blow up Bugs' burrow, but only succeeds in creating a crater with a large narrow pillar in the center, with Bugs' home still intact ("I hear ya knockin', but ya can't come in!") Since then, the construction worker continues to try to get Bugs out.ġ) First, he climbs to the top of the pillar with various tools and threatens the rabbit, but Bugs emerges from a smaller hole at the bottom of the pillar, and cuts through the worker's ladder. Smith), and when he realizes that a freeway may be built going through his home, Bugs refuses to move. Bugs confronts a beefy construction worker (voiced by John T. The vibrations wake Bugs and cover him with dirt. Similar in plot to Homeless Hare, Bugs finds himself squaring off against a construction worker who wants to build over his hole in the ground.Ĭonstruction is underway for a new freeway. ![]() The short was released on May 1, 1954, and stars Bugs Bunny. Looney Tunes theatrical animated short, directed by Robert McKimson and written by Sid Marcus. ![]()
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