Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAfter Tom gets pulverized by a downtown train, he ends up chasing Jerry throughout the toy section of a large department store.After Tom gets pulverized by a downtown train, he ends up chasing Jerry throughout the toy section of a large department store.After Tom gets pulverized by a downtown train, he ends up chasing Jerry throughout the toy section of a large department store.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Toy Mice
- (non crédité)
- Fire Truck
- (non crédité)
- Tom's 'A-ha!'
- (non crédité)
- Jerry
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
A toy shop: in the old days of T&J, this scenario would have offered lots of potential for hilarity, but this being a '60s Chuck Jones effort, the result is disappointing to say the least. Charmless animation, unimaginative gags, and an overall feeling of a wasted opportunity.
The repetitive joke where Tom is run over by a train is a recycled Wile.E.Coyote moment, and what kind of toy shop keeps a mallet display? Jones also seems to have no ability (here at least) to add a feeling of momentum to either his characters or the falling objects that inevitably land on Tom's head.
The artwork is scratchier, less fluid, and there's a notable lack of kinetic flow to the violence. The best Tom and Jerry cartoons had them using objects around them to inflict greater and more surreal pain on one another... here the cartoon focuses on the objects themselves, such as a toy train, at the expense of some cat on mouse ultraviolence. Even when we do see the physical assaults the two lay on each other, it's tempered with a more realistic coding... Tom's extended tail lasting for several frames, for example, rather than being immediately shook off.
Most of it is just inexplicably mediocre, a substandard calibre of which you can't quite put your finger on. But a lot of it is to do with charm, and whereas the original series could sometimes get too self-consciously cute, this one tries to be post-modern, with Tom's gazes to the viewer a distraction.
Ultimately, there's no pace, flow or even soul to this one. It's just a series of uninvolving set-pieces, with an inexplicable ending that neither resolves the story adequately or amuses. Stick to stuff like Cue Ball Cat (1950)... you'll be glad you did.
In the middle 1960s, Chuck Jones did several Tom-and-Jerry cartoons and in this one, they play Wile E. Coyote (Tom) and the roadrunner (Jerry). The distinction here is that the setting is urban, rather than the southwestern desert that the roadrunner lives in -- a Krazy Kat sort of environment.
Most of this takes place in a department store, where the usual Acme products are available. The net result is mediocre.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe title is based on the 1921 song "I'm Just Wild About Harry" with lyrics by Noble Sissle and music by Eubie Blake. Written for the Broadway show "Shuffle Along", it was also used in the 1948 presidential race for President Harry S. Truman.
- Citations
Toy Mice: [Tom comes across a shelf full of toy mice who all look like Jerry. After looking them over, decides to pick one up and pull its tail] Yaa-yaa.
[He drops that one and then picks up another and pulls its tail]
Toy Mice: Yaa-yaa.
[Drops it, picks up another, pulls its tail]
Toy Mice: Yaa-yaa.
[Does it again for a fourth]
Toy Mice: Yaa-yaa.
[Picks up a fifth one and pulls its tail]
Jerry: YOW!
Tom: Ah-ha!
- ConnexionsEdited into Tom and Jerry: Paws for a Holiday (2003)
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Détails
- Durée6 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1