Everything about Tom And Jerry totally explained
Tom and Jerry is a successful and long-running series for over six decades of theatrical
short subjects created by
William Hanna and
Joseph Barbera for
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The cartoons centered around a never-ending rivalry between a housecat (Tom) and a brown
mouse (Jerry), whose chases and battles often involved comic violence. Hanna and Barbera ultimately
wrote and
directed one hundred and fourteen
Tom and Jerry cartoons at
the MGM cartoon studio in
Hollywood, California between
1940 and
1957, when the animation unit was closed down. The original series is notable for having won the
Academy Awards for Best Short Subject (Cartoons) seven times, tying it with
Walt Disney's
Silly Symphonies as the most-awarded theatrical animated series.
In 1960, MGM had new shorts produced by
Rembrandt Films, led by
Gene Deitch in Eastern Europe. Production of Tom and Jerry shorts returned to Hollywood with
Chuck Jones'
Sib-Tower 12 Productions in 1963, this series lasted until 1967. The cat and mouse stars later resurfaced in television cartoons produced by
Hanna-Barbera and
Filmation Studios during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. Today,
Warner Bros. owns the rights to Tom and Jerry, and produces the series,
Tom and Jerry Tales for
The CW's
Saturday morning "
Kids WB" lineup, as well as a string of Tom and Jerry direct-to-video films.
Plot and format
The plots of each short usually center on Tom's frustrated attempts to catch Jerry, and the mayhem and destruction that ensues. Since Tom rarely attempts to eat Jerry and because the pair actually seem to get along in some cartoon shorts (at least in the first minute or so), it's unclear why Tom chases Jerry so much. But some reasons given may include normal feline/murine enmity, duty according to his owner, Jerry's attempt at ruining a task that Tom is entrusted with, revenge, Jerry saving other potential
prey (such as
ducks,
canaries, or
goldfish) from being eaten by Tom, or competition with another cat, among other reasons.
Tom rarely succeeds in catching Jerry, mainly because of Jerry's cleverness and cunning abilities, but sometimes because of Tom's own stupidity. Tom sometimes beats Jerry, usually when Jerry becomes the instigator or when he crosses some sort of line.
Many of the title cards show Tom and Jerry smiling at each other, contrasting with the apparent antipathy displayed towards each other in each cartoon.
The shorts are famous for some of the most violent gags ever devised in theatrical animation: Jerry slicing Tom in half, shutting his head in a window or a door, Tom using everything from
axes,
pistols,
explosives,
traps and
poison to try to
murder Jerry, Jerry stuffing Tom's tail in a
waffle iron, kicking him into a
refrigerator, plugging his
tail into an
electric socket, pounding him with a
mace,
club or
mallet, causing a
tree to drive him into the ground and so on. Despite the frequent violence, there's no blood or gore in any scenes. A recurring gag involves Jerry hitting Tom when he's preoccupied, with Tom initially oblivious to the pain - and only feeling the effects moments later, and vice versa; and another involves Jerry stopping Tom in midchase (as if calling for a time-out), before he does something, usually putting the hurt on Tom.
The cartoon is also noteworthy for its reliance on
stereotypes, such as the blackening of characters following explosions and the use of heavy and enlarged shadows (for example,
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse). Resemblance to everyday objects and occurrences is arguably the main appeal of visual
humor in the series. The characters themselves regularly transform into ridiculous but strongly associative shapes, most of the time involuntarily, in masked but gruesome ways (see also
Cartoon physics).
Music plays a very important part in the shorts, emphasizing the action, filling in for traditional sound effects, and lending emotion to the scenes. Musical director
Scott Bradley created complex scores that combined elements of
jazz, classical, and pop music; Bradley often reprised contemporary pop songs, as well as songs from MGM films, including
The Wizard of Oz and
Meet Me In St. Louis. Generally, there's no dialogue in Tom or Jerry, apart from the occasional few lines in certain moments. The character,
Mammy Two Shoes, has lines in every episode. Most of the dialogue from Tom and Jerry are the high-pitched laughs and gasping screams, which may be provided by a horn or other musical instrument.
Before 1954, all
Tom and Jerry cartoons were produced in the standard
Academy ratio and format; from late 1954 to 1955, some of the output was dually produced in both Academy format and the
widescreen CinemaScope process. From 1956 until the close of the MGM cartoon studio a year later, all
Tom and Jerry cartoons were produced in CinemaScope, some even had their soundtracks recorded in
Perspecta Stereo. The 1960s Gene Deitch and Chuck Jones shorts were all produced in Academy format, but with compositions that made them compatible to be matted to Academy widescreen format as well. All of the Hanna and Barbera cartoons were produced in three-strip
Technicolor, the 1960s entries were done in
Metrocolor.
Background
The idea of the cat-and-mouse rivalry in
Tom and Jerry originates from
George Herriman's comic strip
Krazy Kat, which featured a rivalry between Krazy Kat, Ignatz the mouse, and a dog, Officer Pupp. The strip was still running in U.S. newspapers at the time when the first
Tom and Jerry cartoon was released, and had already been adapted into cartoons of its own.
The title names in the cartoon, Tom and Jerry, were based on a
colloquial term
, originally derived from the 1821 century novel
Life in London by
Pierce Egan in which the main characters were a pair of friends named Jerry Hawthorne and Corinthian Tom. The novel depicted the two men as common characters in the street life of London, so "Tom and Jerry" became a colloquialism for 'a pair of common men'.
Characters
Tom and Jerry
Tom, (actually called 'Jasper' in early shorts such as "Puss Gets the Boot" despite the Tom and Jerry marquee at the start of the feature) is a
Russian Blue cat, who lives a pampered life, while Jerry is a small
brown mouse who always lives in proximity to him. Tom is very quick-tempered and thin-skinned, while Jerry is independent and opportunistic. Despite being very energetic and determined, Tom is no match for Jerry's brains and wits. By the
iris-out of each cartoon, Jerry usually emerges triumphant, while Tom is shown as the loser. However, other results may be reached; on rare occasions, Tom triumphs. Sometimes, usually ironically, they both lose or they both end up being friends. Both characters display
sadistic tendencies, in that they're equally likely to take pleasure in tormenting each other. However, depending on the cartoon, whenever one character appears to be in mortal danger (in a dangerous situation or by an enemy), the other will develop a conscience and save him. Sometimes they bond over a mutual sentiment towards an unpleasant experience and their attacking each over is more play than serious attacks.
Although many supporting and minor characters speak, Tom and Jerry rarely do so. Tom, most famously, sings while wooing female cats; for example, Tom sings
Louis Jordan's
Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby in the 1946 short
Solid Serenade. In one short, Tom, when romancing a female cat, woos her in a French-accented voice similar to that of screen actor
Charles Boyer. Co-director William Hanna provided most of the squeaks, gasps, and other vocal effects for the pair, including the most famous sound effect from the series, Tom's leather-lunged scream (created by recording Hanna's scream and eliminating the beginning and ending of the recording, leaving only the strongest part of the scream on the soundtrack). The only other reasonably common vocalization is made by Tom when some external reference claims a certain scenario or eventuality to be impossible, which inevitably, ironically happens to thwart Tom's plans - at which point, a bedraggled and battered Tom appears and says in a haunting, echoing voice "Don't you believe it!", a reference to some famous World War II
propaganda shorts of the 1940's. One short, 1956's
Blue Cat Blues, is narrated by Jerry (Saju sasikumar) in
voiceover (voiced by
Paul Frees). Both Tom and Jerry speak more than once, in the 1943 short
The Lonesome Mouse.
Recurring characters
In his attempts to catch Jerry, Tom often has to deal with the intrusions of
Butch, a scruffy black alley cat who also wants to catch and eat Jerry,
Spike (sometimes billed as "Killer" or "Butch"), an angry, vicious guard bulldog who tries to attack Tom for bothering his son Tyke while trying to get Jerry, in earlier episodes Spike is extremely sadistic chasing and trying to maul both Tom and Jerry forcing the two to work together to defeat him. Spike spoke often, using a voice and expressions (performed by
Daws Butler) modeled after comedian
Jimmy Durante. The addition of Spike's son Tyke in the late 1940s led to both a slight softening of Spike's character and a short-lived spin-off theatrical series (
Spike and Tyke).
Tom changes his love interest many times. The first love interest speaks in a haughty tone in
The Zoot Cat, and calls him "Tommy" in
The Mouse Comes to Dinner. The second and frequent love interest of Tom's is Toodles Galore, who never has any dialogue in
Tom and Jerry cartoons.
From the beginning (the first episode), Tom also has to deal with Miss Mammy Two Shoes (voiced by
Lillian Randolph), a stereotyped
African-American domestic
housemaid. In the earliest shorts, Mammy is depicted as the maid taking care of the often opulent home in which Tom and Jerry reside. Later
Tom and Jerry shorts are set in what appears to be Mammy's own house. Her
face is
never seen (with the exception of 1950's
Saturday Evening Puss, in which her face is very briefly seen as she runs towards the camera), and she usually wallops the cat with a broom when he misbehaves. When Mammy wasn't present, other humans would sometimes be seen, usually from the neck down as well. Mammy would appear in many cartoons until 1952's
Push-Button Kitty. Later cartoons would instead show
Tom and Jerry living with a 1950s
Yuppie-style couple. Soon after, virtually all humans in the series had visible faces.
Jerry adopted a little gray mouse foundling named Nibbles (also later known as
Tuffy), coming from a certain "Mrs. Bide-a-Wee Mouse Home." In Nibbles' earliest appearances, he's depicted as constantly hungry. In later years, Nibbles lost the gluttonous element of his personality and often spoke, usually in a foreign accent or language keeping with the theme and setting of the short (for example,
French in
Touché, Pussy Cat!,
British English in
Robin Hoodwinked). Another recurring character in the series was
Quacker the duckling, who was later adapted into the Hanna-Barbera character
Yakky Doodle.
History and evolution
Hanna-Barbera era (1940 – 1958)
William Hanna and Joseph Barbera were both part of the
Rudolf Ising unit at the MGM cartoon studio in the late 1930s. Barbera, a storyman and character designer, was paired with Hanna, an experienced director, to start directing films for the Ising unit; the first of these was a cat-and-mouse cartoon called
Puss Gets the Boot. Completed in late 1939, and released to theatres on
February 10,
1940,
Puss Gets The Boot centers on Jasper, a grey tabby cat trying to catch an unnamed rodent, but after accidentally breaking a houseplant and its stand, the African-American housemaid Mammy (Later Tom's owner) has threatened to throw Jasper out ("O-U-W-T, out!") if he breaks one more thing in the house. Naturally, the mouse uses this to his advantage, and begins tossing
wine glasses,
ceramic plates,
teapots, and any and everything fragile, so that Jasper will be thrown outside.
Puss Gets The Boot was previewed and released without fanfare, and Hanna and Barbera went on to direct other (non-cat-and-mouse related) shorts. "After all," remarked many of the MGM staffers, "haven't there been enough cat-and-mouse cartoons already?"
The pessimistic attitude towards the cat and mouse duo changed when the cartoon became a favorite with theatre owners and with the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which nominated the film for the
Academy Award for Best Short Subject: Cartoons of 1941. It lost to another MGM cartoon, Rudolph Ising's
The Milky Way.
Producer
Fred Quimby, who ran the MGM animation studio, quickly pulled Hanna and Barbera off the other one-shot cartoons they were working on, and commissioned a series featuring the cat and mouse. Hanna and Barbera held an intra-studio contest to give the pair a new name; animator
John Carr won with his suggestion of
Tom and Jerry. The
Tom and Jerry series went into production with
The Midnight Snack in 1941, and Hanna and Barbera rarely directed anything but the cat-and-mouse cartoons for the rest of their tenure at MGM.
Tom's physical appearance evolved significantly over the years. During the early 1940s, Tom had an excess of detail--shaggy fur, numerous facial
wrinkles, and multiple eyebrow markings--all of which were streamlined into a more workable form by the end of the 1940s- and looked like a realistic cat; in addition from his quadrupedal beginnings Tom became increasingly, and eventually almost exclusively, bipedal. By contrast, Jerry's design remained essentially the same for the duration of the series. By the mid-1940s, the series had developed a quicker, more energetic (and violent) tone, due to the inspiration from the work of the colleague in the MGM cartoon studio,
Tex Avery, who joined the studio in 1942.
Even though the theme of each short is virtually the same - cat chases mouse - Hanna and Barbera found endless variations on that theme. Barbera's storyboards and rough layouts and designs, combined with Hanna's timing, resulted in MGM's most popular and successful cartoon series. Thirteen entries in the
Tom and Jerry series (including
Puss Gets The Boot) were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Short Subject: Cartoons; seven of them went on to win the Academy Award, breaking the
Disney studio's winning streak in that category.
Tom and Jerry won more Academy Awards than any other character-based theatrical animated series.
Tom and Jerry remained popular throughout their original theatrical run, even when the budgets began to tighten somewhat in the 1950s and the pace of the shorts slowed slightly. However, after
television became popular in the 1950s,
box office revenues decreased for theatrical films, and short subjects. At first, MGM combated this by going to all-CinemaScope production on the series. After MGM realized that their re-releases of the older shorts brought in just as much revenue as the new films, the studio executives decided, much to the surprise of the staff, to close the animation studio. The MGM cartoon studio was shut down in 1957, and the final of the 114 Hanna and Barbera
Tom and Jerry shorts,
Tot Watchers, was released on August 1, 1958. Hanna and Barbera established their own television animation studio,
Hanna-Barbera Productions, in 1957, which went on to produce such popular shows as
The Flintstones,
Top Cat,
The Jetsons,
Yogi Bear, and
Scooby-Doo.
Gene Deitch era (1960 – 1962)
In 1960, MGM decided to produce new
Tom and Jerry shorts, and had producer
William L. Snyder arrange with Czech-based animation director
Gene Deitch and his studio,
Rembrandt Films, to make the films overseas in
Prague,
Czechoslovakia. The Deitch/Snyder team turned out 13 shorts, many of which have a surrealistic quality.
Since the Deitch/Snyder team had seen only a handful of the original
Tom and Jerry shorts, the resulting films were considered unusual, and, in many ways, bizarre. The characters' gestures were often performed at high speed, frequently causing heavy motion blur. As a result, the animation of the characters looked choppy and sickly. The soundtracks featured sparse music, spacey
sound effects, dialogue that was mumbled rather than spoken, and heavy use of
reverb. Fans that typically rooted for Tom criticized Deitch's cartoons for having Tom never become a threat to Jerry, and the only time when Tom ever attempts to hurt Jerry is when he gets in his way. Surprisingly, the Gene Deitch
Tom and Jerry cartoons are still rerun today on a semi-regular basis.
These shorts are among the few
Tom and Jerry cartoons not to carry the "Made In Hollywood, U.S.A." phrase at the end. Due to Deitch's studio being behind the
Iron Curtain, the production studio's location is omitted entirely.
Chuck Jones era (1963 – 1967)
After the last of the Deitch cartoons were released, MGM turned to American director Chuck Jones, famous for his work on
Looney Tunes and
Merrie Melodies shorts starring
Bugs Bunny,
Daffy Duck, and
Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, among others. Jones had just ended his thirty-plus year tenure at
Warner Bros. Cartoons and started his own animation studio,
Sib Tower 12 Productions, with partner, Les Goldman. Beginning in 1963, Jones and Goldman went on to produce 34 more
Tom and Jerry shorts, all of which carried Jones' distinctive style (and a slight psychedelic influence). However, despite being animated by essentially the same artists who worked with Jones at Warners, these new shorts had varying degrees of critical success.
Jones had trouble adapting his style to
Tom and Jerry's brand of humor, and a number of the cartoons favored poses, personality, and style over storyline. The characters underwent a slight change of appearance: Tom was given thicker,
Boris Karloff-like
eyebrows, a less complex look, and furrier cheeks, while Jerry was given larger eyes and ears, and a sweeter,
Porky Pig-like expression.
Some of Jones's
Tom and Jerry cartoons are reminiscent of his work with
Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, included the uses of blackout gags and gags involving characters falling from high precipices. Jones co-directed the majority of the shorts with layout artist
Maurice Noble. The remaining shorts were directed by
Abe Levitow and
Ben Washam, with
Tom Ray directing two shorts built around footage from earlier
Tom and Jerry cartoons directed by Hanna and Barbera. Various vocal characterisations were made by
Mel Blanc, famous for his work as the voice of Bugs Bunny and Porky Pig, and
June Foray, famous for her work as the voice of
Granny. MGM ceased production of animated shorts in 1967, by which time Sib Tower 12 had become
MGM Animation/Visual Arts, and Jones had moved on television specials and the feature film
The Phantom Tollbooth.
Tom and Jerry hit television
Beginning in 1965, the Hanna and Barbera
Tom and Jerry shows began to appear on television in heavily edited form: the Jones team was required to take
Saturday Evening Puss, which featured Mammy,
rotoscope her out, and replace her with a thin white woman, with
Lillian Randolph's original voice tracks replaced by
June Foray performing in an Irish accent. However, in local telecasts of the cartoons, and in the ones shown on
Boomerang, Mammy, featured in the other shorts, could once again be seen, and more recently, with a new, less stereotypical black voice supplied. Much of the extreme violence in the cartoons were also edited out. Starting out on
CBS' Saturday Morning schedule on September 25, 1965,
Tom and Jerry moved to CBS Sundays two years later and remained there until September 17, 1972.
Tom and Jerry's new owners
In 1986, MGM was purchased by
Ted Turner. Turner sold the company a short while later, but retained MGM's pre-1986 film library, thus
Tom and Jerry became the property of
Turner Entertainment (where the rights stand today via Warner Bros.), and have in subsequent years appeared on Turner-run stations, such as
TBS,
TNT,
Cartoon Network,
Boomerang, and
Turner Classic Movies.
Tom and Jerry outside the United States
When shown on terrestrial television in the
United Kingdom (from 1967 to 2000, usually on the
BBC)
Tom and Jerry cartoons were not cut for violence and Mammy was retained. As well as having regular slots,
Tom and Jerry served the BBC in another way. When faced with disruption to the schedules (such as those occurring when live broadcasts overrun), the BBC would invariably turn to
Tom and Jerry to fill any gaps, confident that it would retain much of an audience that might otherwise channel hop. This proved particularly helpful in 1993, when
Noel's House Party had to be cancelled due to an
IRA bomb scare at
BBC Television Centre -
Tom and Jerry was shown instead, bridging the gap until the next programme. Recently, a mother has complained to
OFCOM of the smoking scenes shown in the cartoons since Tom often attempts to impress love interests with the habit. It has been said that these scenes will be edited out.
Due to its lack of dialog,
Tom and Jerry was easily translated into various foreign languages.
Tom and Jerry began broadcast in
Japan in 1964. A 2005 nationwide survey taken in Japan by
TV Asahi, sampling age groups from teenagers to adults in their sixties, ranked
Tom and Jerry #85 in a list of the top 100 "
anime" of all time; while their web poll taken after the airing of the list ranked it at #58 - the only non-Japanese animation on the list, and beating anime classics like,
A Little Princess Sara, and the ultra-classics
Macross,
Ghost in the Shell, and
Rurouni Kenshin (it should be noted that in Japan, the word "anime" refers to
all animation regardless of origin, not just Japanese animation).
Tom and Jerry is also well-known in
Saudi Arabia,
China,
Indonesia,
Iran,
Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Thailand,
Mongolia,
Middle East and
South Korea.
Tom and Jerry have long been popular in
Germany. However, the cartoons are overdubbed with rhyming
German language verse that describes what is happening onscreen and provides additional funny content. The different episodes are usually embedded in the episode
Jerry's Diary (1949), in which Tom reads about past adventures.
In
South East Asia,
India,
Pakistan,
Argentina,
Mexico,
Colombia,
Brazil,
Romania,
Venezuela, and other
Latin American countries Cartoon Network still airs
Tom and Jerry cartoons everyday. In
Russia, local channels also air the show in its daytime programming slot.
Tom and Jerry was one of the few cartoons of western origin broadcast in Czechoslovakia (1988) before the fall of
Communism in 1989.
Censorship
Like a number of other animated cartoons in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s,
Tom and Jerry wasn't considered
politically correct in later years. Some cartoons featured either Tom or Jerry in
blackface following an explosion, which are subsequently cut when shown on television today, although
The Yankee Doodle Mouse blackface gag is still shown in other countries. The black maid, Mammy Two Shoes, is often considered racist because she's depicted as a poor black woman who has a rodent problem. Other ethnic stereotypes are also omitted, particularly the black maid, Mammy Two-Shoes, whose voice was redubbed by Turner in the mid-1990s in hopes of making the character sound less stereotypical. One cartoon in particular,
His Mouse Friday, is often banned from television due to the cannibals being seen as racist stereotypes. If shown, the cannibals' dialogue is edited out, although their mouths can be seen moving.
In 2006, United Kingdom channel
Boomerang made plans to edit
Tom and Jerry cartoons being aired in the UK where the characters were seen to be smoking in a manner that was "condoned, acceptable or glamorised." This followed a complaint from a viewer that the cartoons were not appropriate for younger viewers, and a subsequent investigation by UK media watchdog
OFCOM..
Tales is the first
Tom and Jerry TV series that utilizes the original style of the classic shorts, along with the violence.
Feature films
In 1945, Jerry made an appearance in the live-action MGM musical feature film
Anchors Aweigh, in which, through the use of special effects, he performs a dance routine with
Gene Kelly. In this sequence, Gene Kelly is telling a class of school kids a fictional tale of how he earned his
Medal of Honor. Jerry is the king of a magical world populated with cartoon animals, whom he's forbidden to dance as he himself doesn't know how. Gene Kelly's character then comes along and guides Jerry through an elaborate dance routine, resulting in Jerry awarding him with a medal. Jerry speaks and sings in this film; his voice is performed by
Sara Berner. Tom has a cameo in the sequence as one of Jerry's servants.
Both Tom and Jerry appear with
Esther Williams in a dream sequence in another MGM musical,
Dangerous When Wet. In the film, Tom and Jerry are chasing each other underwater, when they run into Esther Williams, with whom they perform an extended synchronized swimming routine. Tom and Jerry have to save Williams from a lecherous octopus, who tries to lure and woo her into (many of) his arms.
The duo was planned to appear in the 1988
Touchstone/
Amblin film,
Who Framed Roger Rabbit, a homage to classic American animation, but their inclusion in the film was scrapped due to legal complications.
1992 saw the overseas release of, produced and directed by
Phil Roman. The film was released to theatres in the U.S. by
Miramax Films in 1993. Barbera, co-creator of the characters served as creative consultant for the picture. A
musical film with a structure similar to Disney's animated features, the flick was criticized by reviewers and audiences alike for being predictable and for giving the pair dialogue (and songs) through the entire movie. As a result, it failed at the box office.
In 2001, Warner Bros., which had by then merged with Turner and assumed its properties, released the duo's first direct-to-video movie,
, in which Tom covets a ring which grants mystical powers to the wearer, and has become accidentally stuck on Jerry's head also, Hanna and Barbera co-executive produced Tom and Jerry for the final time before Hanna's death on the 22nd day of March in 2001. Four years later, Bill Kopp scripted and directed two more cat and mouse flicks for Warner, (2004) and (2005), the latter one based on a story by Barbera. Both were released on DVD in 2005, starting the celebration of Tom and Jerry's sixty-fifth anniversary. The Fast and the Furry was released theatrically in select cities on the 3rd day of June in 2006 by
Kidtoon Films. In 2006, another direct-to-video film, tells a story about the pair having to work together to get the treasure. Barbera came up with the initial idea and storyline for the next feature,, which, due to his death on Dec. 18, 2006, became his final animated project. Produced and directed by Spike Brandt and Tony Cervone, the holiday-set animated film was released on DVD in late 2007. However, since Warner Bros. owns the characters and the franchise the studio is thinking about doing another cat and mouse direct-to-video feature titled,, the very first Tom and Jerry cartoon in sixty-eight years without creators, Joseph Barbera and William Hanna.
Other formats
Tom and Jerry began appearing in
comic books in 1942, as one of the features in
Our Gang Comics In 1949, with MGM's live-action
Our Gang shorts long out of production, the series was renamed
Tom and Jerry Comics. The pair continued to appear in various books for the rest of the 20th century.
The pair have also appeared in a number of
video games as well, spanning titles for systems from the
Nintendo Entertainment System and
Super NES to more recent entries for
Playstation 2,
Xbox, and
Nintendo Gamecube.
Cultural influences
Throughout the years, the term and title
Tom and Jerry became practically synonymous with never-ending rivalry, as much as the related "cat and mouse fight" metaphor has.
The Simpsons characters
Itchy & Scratchy, of the eponymous cartoon on the
Krusty the Clown Show, are spoofs of
Tom and Jerry--a "cartoon within a cartoon." The extreme cartoon violence of the
Tom and Jerry is parodied and intensified, as Itchy (the mouse) dispatches Scratchy in various gratuitous, gory fashions. In one episode, Itchy & Scratchy is replaced by a cartoon called
Worker and Parasite, a parody of the Gene Deitch
Tom and Jerry cartoons. In
The Simpsons episode
Itchy and Scratchy and Marge Marge gets violence banned from TV and Itchy and Scratchy became friends (that whacking intro of theirs is replaced by gift-exchanging), causing the downfall of the series.
Tom and Jerry are also parodied in the original
Sally the Witch anime (1966), the
The Fairly Oddparents TV movie
Channel Chasers (2004), and an episode of
Garfield and Friends entitled
Good Mousekeeping.
Tom and Jerry on DVD
There have been several
Tom and Jerry DVDs released in
Region 1 (the United States and Canada), including a series of two-disc sets known as the
Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection. There have been negative responses to these sets, due to some of the cartoons included on each having cuts and/or redubbed Mammy Two-Shoes dialogue. A replacement program offering uncut versions of the shorts on DVD was later announced.
In the United Kingdom, most of the
Tom and Jerry shorts have been released (only two, namely
The Million Dollar Cat and
Busy Buddies, were not included, for unknown reasons). Almost all of the shorts contain re-dubbed Mammy Two-Shoes tracks. Despite these cuts,
His Mouse Friday, the only
Tom and Jerry cartoon to be completely taken off the airwaves in some countries due to racism, is included, unedited with the exception of extreme zooming-in towards the end to avoid showing a particularly racist caricature. One must note, though, that these are regular TV prints sent from the U.S. in the 1990s.
Filmography
Notable shorts
For a full list of theatrical Tom & Jerry cartoon shorts, see List of Tom and Jerry cartoons.
The following cartoons won the
Academy Award (Oscar) for Best Short Subject: Cartoons:
These cartoons were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Short Subject: Cartoons, but didn't win:
1940: Puss Gets the Boot
1941: The Night Before Christmas
1947: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse
1949: Hatch Up Your Troubles
1950: Jerry's Cousin
1954: Touché, Pussy Cat!
These cartoons were nominated for the Annie Award in the Individual Achievements Category: Character Animation, but didn't win:
1946: Springtime for Thomas
1955: That's My Mommy
1956: Muscle Beach Tom
2005: The KarateGuard
Television shows
The Tom and Jerry Show (ABC, 1975–1977)
The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show (CBS, 1980–1982)
Tom and Jerry Kids (FOX, 1990–1993)
Tom and Jerry Tales (Kids' WB!/The CW, 2006–2008)
Television specials
Tom and Jerry: The Mansion Cat (Cartoon Network, 2000)
Theatrical films
(Miramax/Live Entertainment/Turner Pictures Worldwide/Film Roman/Turner Entertainment/WMG, 1993)
Direct-to-video films
(Warner Home Video, 2001)
(Warner Home Video, 2004)
(Warner Home Video, 2005)
(Warner Home Video, 2006)
(Warner Home Video, 2007)
(Warner Home Video, 2008)
Video games
The pair starred in a string of video games in their later years of
animation entertainment.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Tom And Jerry'.
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