IMDb RATING
7.8/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Spike the bulldog, grateful to Jerry for getting him out of the dogcatcher's van, offers to help the little mouse any time he whistles. Tom, Jerry's feline tormentor, seeks to overcome this ... Read allSpike the bulldog, grateful to Jerry for getting him out of the dogcatcher's van, offers to help the little mouse any time he whistles. Tom, Jerry's feline tormentor, seeks to overcome this new disadvantage.Spike the bulldog, grateful to Jerry for getting him out of the dogcatcher's van, offers to help the little mouse any time he whistles. Tom, Jerry's feline tormentor, seeks to overcome this new disadvantage.
- Directors
- Writer
- Stars
Billy Bletcher
- Spike
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- …
William Hanna
- Jerry
- (uncredited)
- …
Harry Lang
- Jerry's Whistling
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Tom and Jerry are involved in a chase, as per damn usual. Jerry, when hiding, springs Spike loose from the Pound Van. As a reward, Spike says he will help-out Jerry whenever he is in trouble. All he has to do is whistle and Spike will be there to save him.
So the chase continues and just when Tom has him in his clutches, Jerry whistles for Spike and Tom gets a clobbering. Not so imaginative and the chase is kinda generic. There are a couple of sneaky tricks when Tom tries to stop Jerry from whistling but it's nothing special at all and the final gag isn't that great.
A thoroughly generic cartoon.
So the chase continues and just when Tom has him in his clutches, Jerry whistles for Spike and Tom gets a clobbering. Not so imaginative and the chase is kinda generic. There are a couple of sneaky tricks when Tom tries to stop Jerry from whistling but it's nothing special at all and the final gag isn't that great.
A thoroughly generic cartoon.
"Thanks, chum. I'm your pal for life!"
So says big Spike, the bulldog, after Jerry unhitches the rear of the Dog Catcher truck and lets him out. Jerry had been in the area when he heard Spike's plea for help. Now he has a handy friend "Anytime you ever needs me," says the tough and grammatically-incorrect dog, "just whistle."
Well, it doesn't long for Jerry take the dog up on the offer. Later, while he's in the middle of two slices of bread and a couple of olives, Jerry gives his first whistle!
This is a very funny cartoon. Yes, Jerry blows the whistle a few times, but in each case what happens to Tom is different with the sight gags and they're good. In this case, Tom deserves his punishment. He just doesn't seem to learn. Spike, with a bit of an Irish brogue, is hilarious.
The jokes were so good they didn't need the usual long chase scenes. What's also different in this one is that Tom actually comes up with a plan that works! The artwork was good, too, with some great expressions and reactions on Tom's face. Finally, this animated short also has an unusual, and very good, finish.
Overall, one of the top-echelon Tom and Jerry cartoons.
So says big Spike, the bulldog, after Jerry unhitches the rear of the Dog Catcher truck and lets him out. Jerry had been in the area when he heard Spike's plea for help. Now he has a handy friend "Anytime you ever needs me," says the tough and grammatically-incorrect dog, "just whistle."
Well, it doesn't long for Jerry take the dog up on the offer. Later, while he's in the middle of two slices of bread and a couple of olives, Jerry gives his first whistle!
This is a very funny cartoon. Yes, Jerry blows the whistle a few times, but in each case what happens to Tom is different with the sight gags and they're good. In this case, Tom deserves his punishment. He just doesn't seem to learn. Spike, with a bit of an Irish brogue, is hilarious.
The jokes were so good they didn't need the usual long chase scenes. What's also different in this one is that Tom actually comes up with a plan that works! The artwork was good, too, with some great expressions and reactions on Tom's face. Finally, this animated short also has an unusual, and very good, finish.
Overall, one of the top-echelon Tom and Jerry cartoons.
"The Bodyguard" a "Tom and Jerry" short involves Spike trying to stay away from the local dog catcher as he does not want to go to the pound! Upon seeing a chase a plan forms he decides to protect Jerry from Tom's chases as he tells the little mouse whenever you need help just whistle! This one for sure has Tom taking many cat poundings at the hand of the mighty bulldog! However the sounds of whistling doesn't last forever! Overall well done early tale from the cartoon classic series!
The Bodyguard (1944) **** (out of 4) Without question one of the best films in the long-running series, this one has Jerry helping a bulldog out of a dogcatcher's van and the dog offers to help him whenever he needs it. All Jerry has to do is whistle and the dog will be there to protect him, which of course means Tom gets beat up countless ways. THE BODYGUARD was the first truly great film in the series and it really doesn't matter how many times I've seen it, I laugh as hard each and every time. What makes this one so much fun is just how brutal it is in regards to the cartoon violence. Tom is constantly getting punched and thrown around, which leads to fast action and a lot of fun. The animation, music score and sound effects are all wonderful as well. Certainly one of the best Tom and Jerry ever did.
Have always loved Tom and Jerry. Have vivid and fond memories of seeing all of their cartoons, with the classic ones (the Hanna Barbera years, the best of which among the best cartoons ever made, Chuck Jones' output was a mixed bag and most of Gene Deitch's were abominations and disgraces to cartoondom) being watched over and over, at my sister's late godfather's house at the age of six and have been a huge fan since.
'The Bodyguard' is up there as one my favourites, along with 'The Cat Concerto', 'The Little Orphan', 'Johann Mouse', 'The Two Mouseketeers', 'Tom and Jerry at the Hollywood Bowl', 'Down Beat Bear', 'Heavenly Puss', 'Solid Serenade', 'Mice Follies', 'The Invisible Mouse' and 'Quiet Please'. The premise may sound very familiar and formulaic but it has incredibly clever and imaginative execution and actually does do things differently, with less focus on the chases, Tom's plan for once not backfiring and a very atypical ending for a Tom and Jerry cartoon.
As ever with classic Tom and Jerry, the animation is beautiful to watch. Love the colours which are all smooth and vibrant, the gorgeously detailed backgrounds and all the characters are very well drawn (even early-design Tom). The music, courtesy of Scott Bradley, is lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms, not only fitting perfectly but enhancing the action.
When it comes to the writing, 'The Bodyguard' may be one of the more violent classic Hanna/Barbera-era cartoons but it is also one of the funniest. The gags are never distastefully sadistic like the ones in the Gene Deitch cartoons and they are not only imaginatively timed they are never less than very funny. The story is set up beautifully and never loses the entertainment and intrigue value.
Spike steals the show of the three characters. Brilliantly voiced by Billy Bletcher, he has great comic timing, is very clever and it is hard not to like him. Jerry amuses too and is suitably anarchic, proving to be more than just a cute-looking mouse. The funnier and more interesting of the duo has always been Tom, he not only takes the butt of the laughs wonderfully to great comic effect one also feels sorry for him, the cartoon does a great job with his expressions as is often the case with Tom and Jerry.
Overall, up there with the Hanna/Barbera Tom and Jerry classics. 10/10 Bethany Cox
'The Bodyguard' is up there as one my favourites, along with 'The Cat Concerto', 'The Little Orphan', 'Johann Mouse', 'The Two Mouseketeers', 'Tom and Jerry at the Hollywood Bowl', 'Down Beat Bear', 'Heavenly Puss', 'Solid Serenade', 'Mice Follies', 'The Invisible Mouse' and 'Quiet Please'. The premise may sound very familiar and formulaic but it has incredibly clever and imaginative execution and actually does do things differently, with less focus on the chases, Tom's plan for once not backfiring and a very atypical ending for a Tom and Jerry cartoon.
As ever with classic Tom and Jerry, the animation is beautiful to watch. Love the colours which are all smooth and vibrant, the gorgeously detailed backgrounds and all the characters are very well drawn (even early-design Tom). The music, courtesy of Scott Bradley, is lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms, not only fitting perfectly but enhancing the action.
When it comes to the writing, 'The Bodyguard' may be one of the more violent classic Hanna/Barbera-era cartoons but it is also one of the funniest. The gags are never distastefully sadistic like the ones in the Gene Deitch cartoons and they are not only imaginatively timed they are never less than very funny. The story is set up beautifully and never loses the entertainment and intrigue value.
Spike steals the show of the three characters. Brilliantly voiced by Billy Bletcher, he has great comic timing, is very clever and it is hard not to like him. Jerry amuses too and is suitably anarchic, proving to be more than just a cute-looking mouse. The funnier and more interesting of the duo has always been Tom, he not only takes the butt of the laughs wonderfully to great comic effect one also feels sorry for him, the cartoon does a great job with his expressions as is often the case with Tom and Jerry.
Overall, up there with the Hanna/Barbera Tom and Jerry classics. 10/10 Bethany Cox
Did you know
- TriviaThis episode marks the first time Spike speaks
- GoofsStray dogs usually do not wear collars so Spike the dog should not have been picked up by the dog catcher since he is wearing a collar.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Så er der tegnefilm: Episode #7.6 (1985)
Details
- Runtime7 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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