Agrega una trama en tu idiomaSylvester Cat slips when making a grab for Tweety Bird in Granny's flat, and falls dazed to the floor as one of Tweety's feathers lands in his mouth. Tweety runs off. Sylvester comes to and ... Leer todoSylvester Cat slips when making a grab for Tweety Bird in Granny's flat, and falls dazed to the floor as one of Tweety's feathers lands in his mouth. Tweety runs off. Sylvester comes to and finds the feather lodged between his lips. He thinks he has swallowed and killed Tweety an... Leer todoSylvester Cat slips when making a grab for Tweety Bird in Granny's flat, and falls dazed to the floor as one of Tweety's feathers lands in his mouth. Tweety runs off. Sylvester comes to and finds the feather lodged between his lips. He thinks he has swallowed and killed Tweety and suffers terrible remorse as an Alfred Hitchcock-like voice-over chides him for his "crim... Leer todo
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Granny
- (voz)
- (sin créditos)
- Hitchcock-type Narrator
- (voz)
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Back in his dump of a home where everything is run down and askew. (I love the triangular chair), the voice of Hitch keeps reminding Sly of his horrible crime. Newspaper headlines involving a criminal nicknamed the cat' and ominous radio announcements only add to the confusion. The guilty conscience forced upon Sylvester by the bear ensures a greater reliance on verbal gags than usual, but this allows the viewer a deeper insight into the felines tormented soul.
It becomes a bit of a guilty pleasure to see poor Sly being manipulated like this. After all he is only a pussycat. He takes up smoking, drinks pots full of coffee and swallows buckets of sleeping pills. Where he gets all this from no one knows (but I suspect the narrator). He even rubs the little green pills all over himself before giving us his patented 'I'm weak, I'm weak' routine from "Bird Anonymous" (1957). Tweety Pie is hardly in it, but is never missed. When the pussycat finally does decide to give himself up, both he and the silhouetted bear end up with a headache.
8 out of 10
I am fine with the Hitchcock narrator. It could have taken the horror path. Instead, it is going with existential dread which doesn't really fit a cartoon. I would have Sylvester surrendering himself to animal control and he could then be surprised by a visit from Tweety. That would work better.
Hitchcock comes back as Sylvester's conscience, accusing him of killing the poor little bird (which he did not do) and story is kind of weak in the second half. This started off very promising but got a little stupid with not much humor. However, that artwork was so good I gave the story a pass.
Some of the second half gets slightly silly and a touch slack pace-wise(compared to the rest of the cartoon) and there are a couple of rough-looking backgrounds, but that's pretty much it for the (minor) flaws. The animation on the whole is absolutely great with a very hauntingly atmospheric noir-ish look to it, it's crisply drawn and some of it even very inventive. One of the better and more interesting looking Sylvester and Tweety cartoons from personal opinion. The music score is lively and vibrantly orchestrated with an appropriate eeriness that pulsates with suspense, in perfect keeping with the Hitchcockian vibe the cartoon has.
The Last Hungry Cat is very funny, with razor-sharp and witty dialogue and inventive gags, and some parts are creepy and suspenseful too without being overly so, considering that it parodies Hitchcock and his famous show Alfred Hitchcock Presents and noir-ish approach this worked absolutely brilliantly. It's also story-wise one of the most inventive and clever of the Sylvester and Tweety series and one of the most tightly paced as well. The characters do a great job carrying the cartoon, Tweety is barely in it but this is a case where it didn't harm The Last Hungry Cat at all because the premise gave him a reason to not be, in some of his later cartoons he had a tendency to be a plot-device with very little to do or funny but not here. The bear parodying Hitchcock is a lot of fun and the interaction between him and Sylvester is a joy but Sylvester makes the biggest impression. He was always a hugely entertaining and interesting character and here is no exception and I felt genuinely sorry for him here as well, more so than many of his other cartoons. Mel Blanc is as always fantastic, and Ben Frommer does a more than serviceable Hitchcock impression.
All in all, not quite a Sylvester and Tweety classic but one of their better later ones and the strongest of the post-Hyde and Go Tweet cartoons. 8/10 Bethany Cox
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe only theatrical Warner Brothers cartoon that made a reference to Alfred Hitchcock.
- ErroresA newspaper headline, when shown in long shots, reads, "POLICE HUNT THE CAT", and the accompanying picture depicts a (human) suspect with dark hair and sideburns and wearing a dark shirt. However, when shown in closeup, the headline says, "POLICE HUNT 'THE CAT'" (with the suspect's nickname in quotation marks), and the accompanying picture shows the suspect with a mostly bald head and wearing a striped shirt.
- Citas
Hitchcock-type Narrator: Well, you got away from the law, didn't you?
[Sylvester nods]
Hitchcock-type Narrator: I bet you wish you could get away from your conscience that easily.
Sylvester: Ah, conscience, shmonshience! That bird doesn't even enter my mind.
[turns on the radio]
Radio Announcer: And now your local company will present gas chamber music for - I, I, I, I mean your local gas company will present chamber music for your enjoyment.
[Sylvester perks up and switches off the radio]
- Créditos curiososAfter being hit in the head, by Sylvester, throwing something and hitting Hitchcock, his shadow leaves, but with a bump on his head.
- Versiones alternativasDuring The Bugs Bunny and Tweety Show broadcast version of the short, the part where Sylvester rushes to the bathroom's medicine cabinet to consume and shower with numerous sleeping pills to help his guilt-induced insomnia was removed, instead cutting to him sobbing on the bathroom floor.
- ConexionesEdited from Lighthouse Mouse (1955)
- Bandas sonorasRock-a-Bye Baby
(uncredited)
Music by Effie I. Canning
Played briefly when Sylvester finds Tweety sleeping in his cage
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución7 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1