Looney Tunes Platinum Collection Volume One 720...
The audio also received a significant upgrade. While keeping the original mono tracks for purists, the high-definition formats offer uncompressed audio that allows Carl Stalling’s legendary orchestral scores to pop with a clarity never heard in original broadcast television. Why It Remains a "Gold Standard"
Released by Warner Home Video in 2011 (Blu-ray) and 2012 (DVD), Volume One is not merely a greatest-hits compilation. It is a curatorial statement. Where earlier public domain VHS tapes treated Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck as disposable children’s filler, the Platinum Collection restores their artistic pedigree. Disc one alone offers seminal shorts: What’s Opera, Doc? (1957), Duck Amuck (1953), One Froggy Evening (1955)—works that film scholars compare to jazz improvisation or modernist painting. The “720” resolution, far from excessive, allows viewers to appreciate the watercolor backgrounds, cel dust, and Chuck Jones’s exacting character expressions that standard definition obscured. Looney Tunes Platinum Collection Volume One 720...
The Blu-ray set featured 50 restored shorts on two discs, with a third disc of special features. The selection is undeniable. It opens with the three pillars of the Looney Tunes pantheon: and "Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century." The audio also received a significant upgrade
The collection is organized to give fans a mix of "greatest hits" and rare character deep-dives. It is a curatorial statement

