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词条 The Flying Cat
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Production

  3. Availability

  4. External links

{{Unreferenced|date=May 2008}}{{Infobox Hollywood cartoon
|name=The Flying Cat
|image=The Flying Cat poster.jpg
|caption=The poster of The Flying Cat
|director=William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
|story=William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
|animator=Kenneth Muse
Irven Spence
Ed Barge
Ray Patterson
|starring=
|music=Scott Bradley
|producer=Fred Quimby
|studio=MGM Cartoons
|distributor=Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|released={{Film date|1952|01|12}}
|color_process=Technicolor
|runtime=6:44
|language=
}}

The Flying Cat is a 1952 one-reel animated cartoon and is the 63rd Tom and Jerry cartoon directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera and produced by Fred Quimby. The cartoon's music was composed by Scott Bradley (with use of Grande valse brillante by Chopin), and the animation was by Kenneth Muse, Irven Spence, Ed Barge and Ray Patterson and released on January 12, 1952

Plot

Tom tries to capture a sleeping Cuckoo, but Jerry trips him up and the cage rolls into a tree, waking Cuckoo up. As Tom pursues Jerry, Cuckoo saves Jerry by tugging a drying line, which tangles Tom. Tom then chases Cuckoo with an axe, but misses and cuts through a tree, which frequently bounces off Tom's head, squashing him down. Cuckoo motions for Jerry to join him in his birdhouse; Tom climbs up behind him, but Cuckoo gives him with a 2,000 lb sending him back down with a crash. As Jerry and Cuckoo shake hands, Tom uses a ladder to climb up again, but Cuckoo sets the ladder on fire to send Tom falling again. Tom uses a swing, but Jerry and Cuckoo leap onto his hands. Tom then tries to pole vault to the birdhouse, but Cuckoo uses a roller skate to project Tom smash into a nearby house, where he is hung up by a girdle. However, Tom then realizes he can use the girdle to fly, much to his delight, and decides to use it to get on an equal playing field against Jerry and Cuckoo.

After crashing into a mailbox, Tom learns to travel through the air, jumping off a house roof and flying around the birdhouse, much to Jerry's shock. Jerry wakes up Cuckoo, who declines to believe Jerry, but is also shocked to see Tom flying. Tom flies after Cuckoo, but they both hit a church bell. Cuckoo and Jerry then turn the roof of the birdhouse upside down, causing Tom to fly into nails and fall into a pond. Jerry goes to leave the birdhouse, but Tom catches him. Seeing this, Cuckoo unties Tom's wings and grabs Jerry, sending Tom falling through a tree. Cuckoo carries Jerry away as Tom chases them in hot pursuit, but a train suddenly comes out of a train tunnel and slams Tom onto a grade crossing signal. Tom becomes a wigwag for the train to allow it to pass through, where, on board, Jerry and Cuckoo shake hands again.

Production

  • Directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
  • Animation: Kenneth Muse, Irven Spence, Ed Barge and Ray Patterson
  • Story: William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
  • Layout: Dick Bickenbach
  • Music: Scott Bradley
  • Produced by Fred Quimby

Availability

  • Tom and Jerry's Greatest Chases, Vol. 3
  • Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection Vol. 1, Disc Two

External links

  • {{bcdb title|2947}}
  • {{IMDb title|44625}}
{{The Hanna–Barbera Tom and Jerry shorts}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Flying Cat, The}}

14 : 1952 animated films|Tom and Jerry short films|Films directed by Joseph Barbera|Films directed by William Hanna|1950s American animated films|American films|1950s comedy films|Animated films about birds|Films scored by Scott Bradley|1952 Tom and Jerry short films|Films without speech|American animated short films|Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer short films|Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated short films

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