Tom designs a better mousetrap that would have made Rube Goldberg jealous. While he sleeps, the mouse that Tom drew wakes Jerry and they get chased by the cat Tom drew. As Tom awakes, they m... Read allTom designs a better mousetrap that would have made Rube Goldberg jealous. While he sleeps, the mouse that Tom drew wakes Jerry and they get chased by the cat Tom drew. As Tom awakes, they make a strategic alteration to the design.Tom designs a better mousetrap that would have made Rube Goldberg jealous. While he sleeps, the mouse that Tom drew wakes Jerry and they get chased by the cat Tom drew. As Tom awakes, they make a strategic alteration to the design.
- Directors
- Star
June Foray
- Designed Jerry
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This was extremely clever, a real treat. I love something that is off the wall, even for a cartoon. This qualifies for OTW status, as blueprint stick figures come to life, right off a big chalkboard.
Tom is building the world's greatest mousetrap and has an elaborate blueprint of it. He goes to bed dreaming of fame and fortune. Then the fun kicks in as the mouse pictured in the blueprint comes alive, climbs out the drawing and goes to warn Jerry of his impending doom. Later, the cat in the picture comes to life (not Tom) and it's he and two Jerry's - the drawn one and the real Jerry - battling it out from that point with very unique sight gags. That is because the stick figures react differently than the real Tom and Jerry. Suffice to say, this is different.
Watch this if you ever have the opportunity because it mixes brains and slapstick and humor just beautifully.
This was part of disc two on the Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection, Volume One
Tom is building the world's greatest mousetrap and has an elaborate blueprint of it. He goes to bed dreaming of fame and fortune. Then the fun kicks in as the mouse pictured in the blueprint comes alive, climbs out the drawing and goes to warn Jerry of his impending doom. Later, the cat in the picture comes to life (not Tom) and it's he and two Jerry's - the drawn one and the real Jerry - battling it out from that point with very unique sight gags. That is because the stick figures react differently than the real Tom and Jerry. Suffice to say, this is different.
Watch this if you ever have the opportunity because it mixes brains and slapstick and humor just beautifully.
This was part of disc two on the Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection, Volume One
I may sound like a broken record, but I just love Tom and Jerry. They were part of my childhood, and I still adore them. Designs on Jerry is so clever in visuals and constructions it ranks among my favourite of their cartoons. I also love it for its originality and fun. The animation is excellent, the backgrounds are colourful and the characters well drawn but the real delight comes from anything to do with the drawings on the black board. The music has a lot of energy and the gags and chases are clever and fresh. The pacing is fast, the story is original, the ending is hilarious and both Tom and Jerry are their usual likable selves. Overall, just delightful. 10/10 Bethany Cox
This cartoon appears to have been the pioneer of future cartoons (and then some!) to come!
1. PEANUTS TEACHER SOUNDBITE: Snoopy's master Charlie Brown's teachers' soundwave can be distinctly heard here at the end. When the cat (Tom?) comes out of the safe and moves his mouth. His voice is replaced by the same exact "MWAK-MWAK" sound that will later be reused for the unseen Peanuts' teachers. (All the Snoopy copyrights bear "1958", and this was 1955, so this came first! Did they credit this??)
2. Very reminiscent of the excellent Italian cartoon La Linea: the adventures of the outline of a guy doing stuff on a blackboard, while he asks for stuff to be drawn for him (like waves to swim etc.) This T&J also came first!
3. BACK TO THE FUTURE (1980s) movie! Remember the very first scene, 1st film? The bunch of contraptions to wake Marty McFly up is taken smack from a scene! And again: this cartoon came first.
Lifting other people's original and creative work has always been prevalent in Hollywood. Next time, don't go: "Oh that reminds me of..." NO! Look up the dates and realize this: if it came later, it's no coincidence, it's thievery! Plain & simple.
Fun cartoon, enjoyed the white lines on electric blue color and why I watched it. That said, I never could stand the very repetitive and very violent Tom & Jerry (T&J) cartoons: as a kid, I remember them as super-boring (beat on each other, add dogs, rinse, repeat) and thus, very disturbing! They still are. You've seen 1, you've pretty much seen them all!
7/10 for enjoyable and recognizing all the above patterns. And for being The First! Minus 3 stars for inane cartoon violence. (And where are the million moms when you need them?? Anybody know? Are they still protesting or dey too old???) Rhetorical! I'll look it up myself! 😉
1. PEANUTS TEACHER SOUNDBITE: Snoopy's master Charlie Brown's teachers' soundwave can be distinctly heard here at the end. When the cat (Tom?) comes out of the safe and moves his mouth. His voice is replaced by the same exact "MWAK-MWAK" sound that will later be reused for the unseen Peanuts' teachers. (All the Snoopy copyrights bear "1958", and this was 1955, so this came first! Did they credit this??)
2. Very reminiscent of the excellent Italian cartoon La Linea: the adventures of the outline of a guy doing stuff on a blackboard, while he asks for stuff to be drawn for him (like waves to swim etc.) This T&J also came first!
3. BACK TO THE FUTURE (1980s) movie! Remember the very first scene, 1st film? The bunch of contraptions to wake Marty McFly up is taken smack from a scene! And again: this cartoon came first.
Lifting other people's original and creative work has always been prevalent in Hollywood. Next time, don't go: "Oh that reminds me of..." NO! Look up the dates and realize this: if it came later, it's no coincidence, it's thievery! Plain & simple.
Fun cartoon, enjoyed the white lines on electric blue color and why I watched it. That said, I never could stand the very repetitive and very violent Tom & Jerry (T&J) cartoons: as a kid, I remember them as super-boring (beat on each other, add dogs, rinse, repeat) and thus, very disturbing! They still are. You've seen 1, you've pretty much seen them all!
7/10 for enjoyable and recognizing all the above patterns. And for being The First! Minus 3 stars for inane cartoon violence. (And where are the million moms when you need them?? Anybody know? Are they still protesting or dey too old???) Rhetorical! I'll look it up myself! 😉
Tom the cat takes great pride in the new mouse trap he deigned and dreams of how he will get rich by patenting it. But while he's sleeping the drawling of the mouse comes off the piece of paper and wakes Jerry the Mouse up to sabotage Tom's plans. They must first contend with a dawning of a cat who has also come to life first. This short was rather amusing but it was a tad experimental (not nearly as much as the later "Blue Cat Blues) I just like it more when Tom and Jerry can actually be Tom and Jerry. This animated short can be found on disc 2 of Warner Brother's 2-DVD Spotlight Collection set.
My Grade: B-
My Grade: B-
Did you know
- TriviaThe concept of the Rube Goldberg type machine Tom is constructing would morph into the hugely popular "Mousetrap" game, released by Ideal in 1963.
- GoofsThe blueprint of Tom's mouse trap appears to be registered with the U.S. Patent Office - except Tom is still working on the design. The design can't be registered until it's complete.
- ConnectionsEdited into Shutter Bugged Cat (1967)
Details
- Runtime6 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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