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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTom (Jasper) gets told that if he breaks one more thing he is getting thrown out, so Jerry (Jinx) tries his best to make Jasper "Get the Boot".Tom (Jasper) gets told that if he breaks one more thing he is getting thrown out, so Jerry (Jinx) tries his best to make Jasper "Get the Boot".Tom (Jasper) gets told that if he breaks one more thing he is getting thrown out, so Jerry (Jinx) tries his best to make Jasper "Get the Boot".
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination au total
William Hanna
- Jinx
- (voix)
Harry Lang
- Jasper
- (voix)
Bob Laztny
- Jasper (speaking)
- (non crédité)
Lillian Randolph
- Mammy Two-Shoes
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Jack Sabel
- Jinx (speaking)
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
I always wondered what Tom and Jerry's first cartoon was, and now I know. It's only a few minutes long, but I thought it was a fine first appearance for the famous cat and mouse duo. In this short film, Jasper and Jinks, referred to as Tom and Jerry, are the featured characters.
Mammy Two-Shoes' "O-W-T-Out!" is amusing, and I adore Jerry/Jinks' squeaky prayers. If anyone wonders which version of Tom & Jerry I love the most, it is Tom & Jerry from Hanna-Barbera (1940-1958) and from Looney Tunes animator Chuck Jones (1963-1967). All in all, I believe Tom and Jerry are off to a great start in this cartoon.
Mammy Two-Shoes' "O-W-T-Out!" is amusing, and I adore Jerry/Jinks' squeaky prayers. If anyone wonders which version of Tom & Jerry I love the most, it is Tom & Jerry from Hanna-Barbera (1940-1958) and from Looney Tunes animator Chuck Jones (1963-1967). All in all, I believe Tom and Jerry are off to a great start in this cartoon.
This was Tom & Jerry's first ever televised outing, but here in the early days they were unofficially known as Jasper & Jinx.
Here we see Tom/Jasper threatened with being put out if he breaks one more thing so Jerry/Jinx see's this as a chance to put the cat threat away for good!
It's quaint, it looks great, the soundtrack is fitting and it already has that infamous Tom & Jerry charm.
Jerry looks the same as he does decades later whereas Tom looks quite a bit different, arguably a more realistic feline.
The trouble with Tom & Jerry has always been that I tend to find myself cheering Tom on. With so much at stake I was doing the same here, but you know the drill in these kinds of things the outcome was never in doubt.
Cute early Tom & Jerry action and essential viewing for fans.
The Good:
Charming
Very well made
The Bad:
I've never felt more sorry for Tom!
Here we see Tom/Jasper threatened with being put out if he breaks one more thing so Jerry/Jinx see's this as a chance to put the cat threat away for good!
It's quaint, it looks great, the soundtrack is fitting and it already has that infamous Tom & Jerry charm.
Jerry looks the same as he does decades later whereas Tom looks quite a bit different, arguably a more realistic feline.
The trouble with Tom & Jerry has always been that I tend to find myself cheering Tom on. With so much at stake I was doing the same here, but you know the drill in these kinds of things the outcome was never in doubt.
Cute early Tom & Jerry action and essential viewing for fans.
The Good:
Charming
Very well made
The Bad:
I've never felt more sorry for Tom!
Jasper the cat breaks a vase when chasing the brown mouse (who would later be called Jerry -- according to Patrick Brion's 'Tom & Jerry: The Definitive Guide To Their Animated Adventures' he had no name at this time -- Tom and Jerry were apparently the results of an inter-company competition). The noise attracts the black maid of the house, who tells Jasper that if anything else got broken he would be out of the house ('O-U-W-T! Out!'). Guess what the mouse subsequently tries to do? This was the first of the Tom & Jerry cartoons, despite the difference in names. Although it seems a little slow-paced and long now, it did set the standard, and got further recognition of its brilliance when it was nominated for an Academy Award. It still has its charm, and is worth seeing if only to see the cartoon that started it all. Didn't Jasper/Tom look different back in 1940, eh?
I prefer them to be called Tom and Jerry. This cartoon was made way back in 1940 and features the very first appearance of the troublesome twosome. Though they look rather different.
I guess Hannah-Barbera didn't know, at the time, what a massive franchise they had in their hands. Puss gets the Boot almost seems like a one-off short. Granted, Tom and Jerry never really did anything else than chase, and that's exactly what they do here.
It also features the Tom's owner (or owners slave), the highly racist and so un-PC black woman with the stripey socks. This would never be allowed today unless in satire. How glorious the early 20th century was.
I guess Hannah-Barbera didn't know, at the time, what a massive franchise they had in their hands. Puss gets the Boot almost seems like a one-off short. Granted, Tom and Jerry never really did anything else than chase, and that's exactly what they do here.
It also features the Tom's owner (or owners slave), the highly racist and so un-PC black woman with the stripey socks. This would never be allowed today unless in satire. How glorious the early 20th century was.
10llltdesq
This short, nominated for an Oscar it should have won in 1940, is the first Tom and Jerry, for all that the cat's name is "Jasper". The Tom and Jerry cartoons generally break down into one of four eras: the early ones, when Rudolf Ising was involved, then the ones that Hanna and Barbera did with Fred Quimby producing, then the ones Chuck Jones did and finally the Gene Deitch efforts. Each had a different look and feel to them that make them instantly recognizable and unmistakable as to who did them. But the most remarkable transformation in appearance and style was the change between the early ones and the ones in the later 1940s. In every way, it's quite a change. This is the best of the early ones. Most recommended.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first Tom & Jerry cartoon.
- GaffesAbout 5 minutes into the cartoon, after Jasper (Tom) gathers up the cushions, Jerry walks to the left, carrying a cocktail glass. Just before he reaches the left edge of the furniture, the animation cels showing him and the glass disappear for a single frame.
- Citations
Mammy Two-Shoes: [carrying the broken pottery with a dustpan] Any more breakings, and that cat's going out of here.
- Versions alternativesA version of this cartoon exists with Mammy Two-Shoes rotoscoped into a young white Irish woman (voiced by June Foray) that was done by the Sib Tower 12 Productions in the 1960s. Another version was made in the 1990s with the original footage, but with Mammy Two-Shoes' voice re-dubbed to sound less stereotypical and offensive.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Så er der tegnefilm: Épisode #4.6 (1981)
- Bandes originalesThree Blind Mice
(uncredited)
Traditional
Performed by studio orchestra
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Détails
- Durée9 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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