Sylvester Cat is a basket case, convinced that baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper is everywhere, around every corner, waiting to damage his pride yet again in front of his son. Junior takes his fe... Read allSylvester Cat is a basket case, convinced that baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper is everywhere, around every corner, waiting to damage his pride yet again in front of his son. Junior takes his fearful father to a cat psychiatrist to whom Sylvester confides his constant frustration at ... Read allSylvester Cat is a basket case, convinced that baby kangaroo Hippety Hopper is everywhere, around every corner, waiting to damage his pride yet again in front of his son. Junior takes his fearful father to a cat psychiatrist to whom Sylvester confides his constant frustration at being unable to defeat the "giant mouse".
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Freudy Cat is basically just a clip show with a potentially interesting story linking them together. The three clips used from Who's Kitten Who, Slap-Hoppy Mouse and Cats A-weigh fare much better than the cartoon itself. The animation in all three clips are very nicely done, especially in Who's Kitten Who, and the Slap-Hoppy Mouse and Cats A-weigh clips are positively hilarious, with the former showing the two best gags in that cartoon and the latter containing classic physical interplay between two characters (Who's Kitten Who is just introduction really and is too short but is nice too).
Sylvester is very funny and ruthless in the clips and one really does feel sorry for him in the links, the expressions showing his exhaustion, unbalanced fright and frustrations being beautifully drawn and done, by far the standout of the animation in the non-clip parts. Hippety is very cute and amusing in the clips, especially in the Cats A-weigh one. Mel Blanc does a really good job with the voices, particularly strong as Sylvester even in deeper voice as usual. Sylvester Jnr. however while like Hippety sweet and fun in the clips is a little irritating in the rest of the cartoon with his rambling if well-intentioned dialogue bordering on repetitive, and the psychiatrist is wasted due to the concept being so as well.
While the animation looks good in the clips, it looks somewhat limited in the rest of the cartoon, looking rather flat and rough, apart from Sylvester's expressions, and one does miss the big expressions and visuals displayed so well in the early outings in the series. Bill Lava's music score is very discordant, sounds rather cheaply recorded and lacks energy (it may have been an intentional thing but it just didn't sound right to me), inexplicably some of his scoring replaces the original music in the clips and it just doesn't fit, Carl Stalling and Milt Franklyn both did far better jobs matching Hippety's characteristics and hopping through the music while Lava seemed to have forgotten what cartoon he was writing for. The stock pieces from Phillip Green is much more appealing aurally and fits better when they appear but is stylistically at odds with Lava's scoring.
Oddly enough, the story of the cartoon was a good one, but is spoilt by lacklustre pacing and it doesn't do very much with the idea it had, missing the opportunity of providing an explanation as to why Sylvester had mistaken Hippety for a giant mouse for so long. The ending felt abrupt and was more weird than funny. All in all, an overall decent series of cartoons ends on the weakest of the lot, and not because it's a 'cheater' but because it felt cheap and that there seemed little point to it. 4/10 Bethany Cox
Did you know
- TriviaThe final short featuring Sylvester Jr. and Hippety Hopper.
- Alternate versionsTwo versions of this cartoon exist, with the sole difference being that one version overlays Philip Green stock music over many scenes in the cartoon without removing the soundtrack underneath first. This results in two pieces of music playing at the same time, creating a sloppy soundtrack.
- ConnectionsEdited from Who's Kitten Who? (1952)
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- Gato freudiano
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- Runtime6 minutes
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1