Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaMaster Tom is lured away from his job of protecting the house from mice by the charms of "Miss Kitty". While he's gone, the mice trash the house. Complications ensue.Master Tom is lured away from his job of protecting the house from mice by the charms of "Miss Kitty". While he's gone, the mice trash the house. Complications ensue.Master Tom is lured away from his job of protecting the house from mice by the charms of "Miss Kitty". While he's gone, the mice trash the house. Complications ensue.
- Direção
- Artista
- Master Tom
- (narração)
Avaliações em destaque
Basically, the story is Master Tom wooing a female. Their "trysting place," as the card puts it, is a garbage can. We also see what happens when "the cat's away," as five mice trash the house. They're funny to watch.
Without saying more, the ending of this cartoon is really unexpected. It literally made my jaw drop.
Overall, this is extremely primitive and dated but so bizarre that you can't take your eyes off it. It was part of the Popeye The Sailor 1933-1938 DVD set. Look for it under the bonus feature, "From The Vault."
The film begins with Tom going out for a walk and meeting a cute white female cat. They spend time together--much to the annoyance of everyone but the mice! And, in the end, the ending (which I won't divulge) is very, very dark--and the sort of cartoon parents probably would NOT let their kids see! So dark that I was actually pretty shocked.
While this cartoon is much too normal for my tastes (except for the ending), it is historically important and worth a look if you are an aficionado of the history of cartoons.
In first two cartoons, the cat was called Master Tom. It was in the third short, Dec. 1919's "The Adventures of Felix," the cat was given its lasting name. Debate rages on who the cat's creator was, studio owner Pat Sullivan or his lead animator Otto Messmer. Even open for discussion was who gave the cat its Felix name. Messmer claims a John King of Paramount Magazine labeled the cat while the third cartoon was being composed. But Sullivan, from Australia, said he did, using a Down Under term for a part of western Victoria. What is undebatable is Felix became the first popular character in cartoonland to draw in viewers into movie theaters.
The 1920's was the highpoint of Felix's unmitigated celebrity status. Animator Bill Nolan gave the cat the appearance today's public is familiar with. He rounded the edges of Felix in 1924 to give his face a cuter, more huggable features. The cartoon became a bimonthly anticipated cartoon, with critics loving its surrealism while others appreciated Felix's paralleling a child sense of wonder to the world's incongruities.
Aptly, in one of the first images ever broadcasted on its newly-invented television, RCA selected a Felix doll for the honor of its NBC debut experiment in 1928. Even today, Felix The Cat images can be found as school mascots, marching as a Macy Day Parade balloon and in comic strips.
There's apparently a debate about who the cat's creator was. Whoever it was, this cartoon is pretty routine. I understand that Felix's popularity began to wane with the advent of sound cartoons. There was a Felix the Cat movie in the late '80s, but it sounds like it was one of those demented kinds movies. I'd say that the 1950s-'60s cartoon was the best incarnation of the wily cat. This short is just for historical reference.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesFelix the Cat makes his first appearance in this film. He has not acquired his familiar name yet. In this cartoon, he is referred to as "Master Tom".
- Citações
[first title card]
Title Card: Pussyville has its "Follies" as well as Broadway. Its fads, foibles, and frivolities are as brilliant and as mischievous as the Great White Way brand. And the feline version has a plot, categorically speaking.
- ConexõesEdited into Strange Journey
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração6 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.33 : 1