The Stupid Cupid
The Stupid Cupid
| 25 November 1944 (USA)
The Stupid Cupid Trailers

Cupid (Elmer Fudd) is on the prowl around the farm. With his ever-accurate arrows, he spreads love to sometimes unwilling recipients. But when he sets his sights on Daffy, the duck wants no part of it. When Elm...erm...Cupid fires the largest arrow at his disposal at the hapless duck, Daffy falls for the nearest hen...who happens to be the main squeeze of the cock of the walk...

Reviews
Phonearl Good start, but then it gets ruined
Gurlyndrobb While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
Yash Wade Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Janis One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.
TheLittleSongbird I really enjoyed The Stupid Cupid. Admittedly it is a little on the bizarre side, but it is quite funny as well. The cartoon does start off a little slow, but there is a lot that more than makes up for it. The story is simple but fairly effective. The animation is very nice, with lovely colours and good character features. The music is my favourite asset though, it was put to perfect use and quite pleasant and quirky to listen to. The dialogue particularly that of Daffy's is funny, while there are some interesting sight gags such as the cat shooting herself and we see her shooting each of her nine lives and Daffy falling in love with a chicken. Elmer's facial expressions were pretty funny too. Elmer is still dim-witted and clueless, and while he looks and sounds different(being voiced by Mel Blanc rather than Arthur Q. Bryan) he is a good foil, while Daffy is lots of fun as always.Overall, an enjoyable cartoon, not perfect but worth watching. 9/10 Bethany Cox
Mightyzebra I really enjoyed this Daffy Duck and Elmer cartoon (with Elmer as Cupid in a nappy). It has cheerful animation, good music, interesting themes and entertaining storyline and I love the references to "The Henpecked Duck", a cartoon which had been made 3 years before this and is one of my personal favourites. This cartoon is also one of my favourites, but I would like it much more if it did not have its mainly boring, silly, slapsticky beginning which is only worth watching for people who do not know about Cupid and need to understand what Cupid does (but not why, that is never explained...).Anyhow, in this cartoon, Elmer, as Cupid, is just about to randomly shoot Daffy Duck when the little black duck spots him and complains about the last time he was shot, how he fell in love with a horrible wife (like in "The Henpecked Duck") and had too many children for him to cope with. However, later, Cupid re-shoots him anyway. Daffy falls in love with a chicken, of all people, who is already in love... Crazy capers commence...I recommend this cartoon to people who like fun, old Looney Tunes and who like a romantic, maniac and crazy Daffy Duck. Enjoy "Stupid Cupid"! :-)
slymusic "The Stupid Cupid" is an excellent Daffy Duck/Elmer Fudd cartoon directed by Frank Tashlin. Elmer plays the Stupid Cupid, complete with diapers and a tiny derby, shooting love arrows at various animals while having a devilish smile on his face! Daffy becomes one of his helpless victims.Highlights from this cartoon include the following (but don't read any further until after you have actually seen it for yourself). Elmer opens the cartoon by running & skipping all over the countryside and interrupting the "Voices of Spring" musical accompaniment with a few laughs. When he shoots a horse in the rear with an arrow, the horse goes absolutely bonkers after smooching a mare! Daffy goes through some of the strangest bodily contortions when he warns the mischievous Elmer to back off. Elmer shoots a gigantic arrow at Daffy, causing him to crash through numerous barns, a fence, a silo, and a tree; Daffy then amorously rushes over to a hen while his heart pounds to a Latin percussion rhythm. In order to make peace with the hen's jealous husband (a muscular rooster), Daffy proves he's a family man himself by rushing out of a barn, driving by the barn with his wife & assorted kiddies stuffed in the car, and rushing back into the barn, all within the limited space of a few seconds! And finally, we have a terrific visual AND audio effect when Daffy gets shot in the rear by Elmer after making peace with the rooster."The Stupid Cupid" is a brilliant cartoon! Director Frank Tashlin stops at NOTHING in order to induce loud laughter from the wildest sight gags. Never mind any crude animation or the rather abrupt ending; "The Stupid Cupid" is quite a gem in the Warner Bros. library of cartoons.
Robert Reynolds This is a very funny cartoon, pitting two of the Looney Tunes stars against each other in a somewhat unusual battle of wills. Because I want to discuss some of the details of this short, this is a spoiler warning: The opening shows a very cherubic-looking Elmer Fudd, flitting around and shooting animals with arrows to make them fall in love. All goes well (at least from "Cupid's" perspective) until he comes face to face with Daffy Duck, who launches into a particularly inspired rant about his life before and after his last encounter with the arrow-aiming menace to an orderly society, which he feels ruined a carefree single life. He closes by punctuating his point, using Elmer himself to do so. Obviously, at this point, the gauntlet has been flung down.Elmer shoots Daffy and Daffy starts chasing after a very unsettled hen. Said hen is married, to a large and very disturbed rooster, who pointedly wants to know why Daffy is after HIS wife. Daffy explains to the rooster and his "charming Mrs." that his behavior is the fault of that "stupid Cupid", explains that he's also a family man-complete with a carload of his brood as evidence and generally grovels shamelessly (which is infinitely better than picking up your beak from the floor after a jealous rooster punches you into next Thursday) until the rooster allows that it might just all be an innocent misunderstanding. The rooster lets Daffy go and Daffy goes out gratefully-only to be shot by Elmer again and interpose himself between rooster and hen in the midst of their reconciliation. The visual scene here is marvelous and Daffy is in trouble again! This short is available on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume 4 and is well worth seeing-and so are all four of the Looney Tunes Golden Collections which have been released thus far. I truly hope that all of the remaining Warner Brothers shorts eventually find a home on future Golden Collections. Recommended.