Sugar and Spies (1966) Poster

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8/10
Fun, one of the better late-60s Roadrunner vs.Coyote cartoons
TheLittleSongbird28 December 2012
Generally I don't consider the Roadrunner vs.Coyote series a consistent one, and I am not a fan of those from the late 60s. Sugar and Spies is one though I happen to like very much, definitely one of the better ones anyway. As you'd expect, the story is predictable and there is always going to be one person who is going to tired at Coyote falling down a cliff in what feels like every cartoon of his. For the late 60s period though, the animation is not bad at all. By all means not as good as that of the ones from the 50s, but much less sparse in the backgrounds and more colourful. The music has some character to it and does convey the moods and enhance the gags very well. While you do know the eventual outcome, the sight gags are still very funny and are among the more original ones of this point in this particular series of cartoons.

All in all, not one of my favourites but still has a lot of fun elements to it. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Coyote and a spy kit
rbverhoef23 April 2004
'Sugar and Spies' is another cartoon from the Road Runner vs. Wile E. Coyote series and again it is entertaining and enjoyable enough. Coyote finds a spy-kit and uses everything in it to catch the Road Runner, including some clothes, sleeping gas, a time bomb and a rocket that is able to track certain things, including Road Runner.

With some very nice moments, predictable as always, this is a nice cartoon. Of course the Coyote has to fall down a cliff at least once, of course he is able to get some stuff from Acme and of course it does not work as Coyote wants it to work. Although we have seen it many times, at least it will bring a smile to your face.
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6/10
By the mid-1960s, James Bond . . .
oscaralbert12 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . a.k.a., Secret Agent 007, was all the rage. Kids had Bond jigsaw puzzles, toy Aston Martin cars, 007 lunch boxes, MI6 PJ's, and Secret Agent spy kits. Wile E. Coyote acquires the latter when a passing bad guy tosses it out his car window during a police chase. This allows the makers of SUGAR AND SPIES to splice together gadgetry from the first trio of Sean Connery's Bonds, and anticipate a few of Roger Moore's (including MOONRAKER). The send up of the Aston Martin DB5 from GOLDFINGER best hits the mark, as Mr. Coyote has no luck with the front twin machine guns, rear cannon, or a misplaced DRIVER'S SIDE ejector seat. He apparently built this thing himself at the Desert Dump, on a Ford Model A frame. (Today's scrappers would have a field day there, with less danger than stripping Ford's abandoned factories that dot present-day Michigan). This refuse heap is shown to be chock full of classic cars, with goodly helpings of brass bed frames on the side.
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One of the best Road Runner/Coyote episodes
csweetleaf217 November 2003
Although it's been years since I've seen this episode but it was one of my alltime favorites and I'll do anything to see this episode again due to it becoming harder to get by, I always favored the RoadRunner/Wile E. Coyote of the 60's rather than the 50's due to better animation.
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7/10
Anyone familiar with those loony Behind the Tunes DVD extras . . .
tadpole-596-9182569 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . will be familiar with the.canard that Roadrunner NEVER directly injures Wile E. Coyote. The Truth is that this dirty bird launches about a dozen deadly assaults upon his lupine antagonist in a typical episode. SUGAR AND SPIES is no exception to this continual onslaught against our Mammalian Family Tree on the part of this cold-bloodied erstwhile reptilian dinosaur. To close out this edition of unmitigated carnage launched against the upstanding Mr. Coyote by the devious serial speeder, Roadrunner launches the beleaguered famished canine toward the moon with no protective suit or survival gear whatsoever. Such a wanton act certainly constitutes premeditated murder, but SUGAR AND SPIES concludes before the the rotten roadrunner can be roasted. Rats.
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10/10
My favorite post-64 Road-Runner cartoon!
wile_E200523 March 2006
Now, my favorite Road-Runner cartoon of all-time is "Adventures of the Road-Runner" and I also like a good amount of 1952-1964 entries in the series. However, the 1965-1966 Road-Runner cartoons (which were actually made at another studio rather than Warner Bros.) are sometimes lame, and occasionally good. This one is the best. It is a pretty funny parody of those old 60s spy movies and TV shows, down to the music (which is done by Walter Greene, rather than Carl Stalling, Milt Franklyn or even Bill Lava)! Here, Wile E. Coyote finds a spy kit, and then, wearing an old-fashioned spy costume (a trenchcoat and hat) tries to get the Road-Runner with sleeping gas, a timer bomb, and even an antique car rigged with James Bond-style equipment! Unlike the other ones I like, which were made at Warner Bros. Animation, this one was produced at DePatie-Freleng (the studio that did the "Pink Panther"), the company that animated Looney Tunes from 1964-1967 (and in 1981-1984, providing new animation for those Looney Tunes compilation films), and it uses the stylized but bizarre black-background WB titles with the swirling colored lines at the intro. Nonetheless, I love it and wholeheartedly recommend it to those who love cartoons that parody spy movies!
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5/10
End of an era
utgard142 September 2016
The last theatrical Road Runner & Coyote short of the classic era, although this one is far from a classic. It's directed by Robert McKimson (only his second Road Runner cartoon) and while it's not great, it's a step up from the dreadful Rudy Larriva shorts. Obviously it's still well below the great Chuck Jones work on the series. This one appears to be inspired by James Bond, with Wile E. Coyote finding a spy kit and trying to use the stuff inside to catch the Road Runner. I actually don't think that's a terrible set-up and the gags that follow (sleeping gas, bombs, spy car) are fairly well-done. Chuck Jones could have gotten a lot out of this I think. The animation is poor, of course, as WB animation was during this period. The music tries to match what "the kids" were into at the time, so of course it's dated and corny now. It's certainly not a great Road Runner cartoon but, considering how bad the series had been under Larriva, I'm happy the series ended on a middle-of-the-road cartoon instead of a terrible one.
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