Looney Tunes All Episodes
Tracking down every single short can be overwhelming. This guide breaks down the massive library of by eras, highlighting essential characters, historic milestones, and where you can stream them today. Looney Tunes by the Numbers: The Scale of the Library
The final years of the original theatrical shorts, often featuring the Road Runner or Speedy Gonzales. Notable Shorts and Masterpieces
A CGI show for toddlers (part of the Cartoonito block). Bugs and the gang work construction. Not for classic fans, but technically part of the "all episodes" canon.
A dialogue-free fable about greed, featuring Michigan J. Frog—a frog who sings ragtime classics beautifully for his discoverer but refuses to perform in front of anyone else. looney tunes all episodes
The first official Looney Tunes short, Sinkin' in the Bathtub , was released in 1930, introducing the character Bosko. Shortly after, the sister series Merrie Melodies was introduced.
This is considered the peak, featuring polished animation and the perfection of classic rivalries, such as Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner , and Sylvester and Tweety .
Produced by Steven Spielberg, featuring a younger generation of characters mentored by the classic cast at Acme Looniversity. 2011–2014 Tracking down every single short can be overwhelming
Initially, Warner Bros. maintained a strict division between its two flagship properties:
The Ultimate Guide to Every Looney Tunes Episode: A Century of Animation History
More recent restorations have been bundled into the Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Collection and various Looney Tunes Collector's Choice Blu-ray volumes, which dig deeper into rare, unreleased shorts from the vault. Notable Shorts and Masterpieces A CGI show for
Looney Tunes consists of 1,600 episodes, spanning over 40 years. Here's a breakdown of the episodes by decade:
The evolution of these episodes can be tracked through the creative visions of its directors:
Any serious historical look at the complete Looney Tunes catalog must address historical context. Because these shorts were made for general movie theater audiences from the 1930s to the 1950s, they reflect the societal prejudices of their time.
(1940): The official debut of Bugs Bunny and his iconic catchphrase, "What's up, Doc?". Duck Amuck