Odor of the Day

Odor of the Day
Looney Tunes (Pepé Le Pew) series
Directed by Arthur Davis
Produced by Edward Selzer (uncredited)
Story by Lloyd Turner
Voices by Mel Blanc
Music by Carl Stalling
Animation by Don Williams
Emery Hawkins
Basil Davidovich
J.C. Melendez
Layouts by Don Smith
Backgrounds by Philip De Guard
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release date(s) October 2, 1948
Color process Cinecolor but reissued in Technicolor, with late 50s Technicolor blue ring endings.
Running time 7 min (one reel)
Language English

Odor of the Day is a 1948 animated short in the Looney Tunes series starring Pepé Le Pew. It is the only short in which he appears not as a lover; it is also the only short in which he does not speak, save for one line at the end. It is one of only three Pepé Le Pew shorts not to be directed by Chuck Jones, the others being Dog Pounded (a Tweety and Sylvester short directed by Friz Freleng, in which Pepé makes a cameo appearance) and Really Scent (a Pepé short directed by Abe Levitow). The title is a play on the phrase "order of the day".

Plot

On a cold winter day, a dog (identical in appearance to Wellington from Doggone Cats) desperately seeks shelter in a dog house, a hawk's nest and a turtle shell, but is rejected every time. He finally stumbles upon the home of Pepé Le Pew, who is currently out. When he returns, the dog unsuccessfully tries to get rid of the skunk. Pepé grabs his own tail, aims, and focuses his odorous spray his tail's tip: blasting it at the dog in repetitive rounds as if firing a machine gun. The overpowering stench forces the dog out into the snow again, and he returns with a cold.

Pepé, meanwhile, wants his home back, and tries equally in vain to make him go away with his stench. However, thanks to his cold, the dog can't smell a thing. After being forced out, Pepé throws the dog a note which reads: WARNING! A COLD CAN BE FATAL! SEE YOUR DOCTOR NOW! The dog hurriedly phones a Dr. Gesundheit, and Pepé promptly appears in disguise as the doctor. He tries putting a mustard plaster on the dog's nose and ripping it off, which doesn't work. Pepé next tries a steam machine, which after several tries, works, ridding the dog of his cold. Pepé now successfully gets rid of his unwanted guest with his stench.

The dog returns thawing himself out and again with a cold. Pepé tries get rid of him again with his smell, but fails. The dog then goes over to get a bottle of perfume and sprays it over himself and Pepé. Unable to stand the smell of perfume, Pepé runs off outside and returns with a cold himself. The pair finally agree to live with the colds and each other since neither can get rid of the other, and as they sneeze, they both say "Gesundheit!".


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