rdfs:comment
| - En 2376, B'Elanna Torres surprit son mari Tom Paris regardant la télévision, "Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur" était l'un des films qu'il regardait. (VOY: "Memorial") Ce film ne fut pas nommé à l'écran, mais un extrait fut visible à l'écran.
- The film is in the public domain and is available on several low-budget home video releases in an unrestored form (Associated Artists Productions and later United Artists acquired the rights to many of the pre-August 1948 WB cartoons, and the prints faded with age, as is common with 16 mm "dupes" of films and television series). A restored and remastered version is available on DVD as part of disc 4 of Volume 3 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection.
- The film is in the public domain and is available on several low-budget home video releases in an unrestored form. A restored and remastered version is available on DVD as part of disc 4 of Volume 3 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection.
- When B'Elanna Torres surprised her boyfriend Tom Paris with a television set in 2376, Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur was one of the movies he watched. The film featured a character named "Casper Caveman" and his pet dinosaur, Fido. (VOY: "Memorial")
- Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur is a 1939 Merrie Melodies animated cartoon short directed by Chuck Jones and produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions for Warner Bros. Pictures. The cartoon is notable as being the first Daffy Duck cartoon directed by Jones. Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur is set in the Stone Age and features Daffy Duck, a caveman named Casper (a caricature of Jack Benny), and his pet dinosaur Fido. As usual, Mel Blanc provides the voice of Daffy here, while Casper was performed by Jack Lescoulie.
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