Fit to Be Tied (film)
Fit to Be Tied | |
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File:Fit To Be Tied Titles.JPG | |
Directed by | William Hanna Joseph Barbera |
Produced by | Fred Quimby |
Animation by | Kenneth Muse Irven Spence Ray Patterson Ed Barge |
Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Running time | 6:49 |
"Fit to Be Tied" is a 1952 American one-reel animated cartoon and is the 69th Tom and Jerry short directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera and produced by Fred Quimby. This cartoon was a sequel to the 1944 short film The Bodyguard and released to theatres on July 26, 1952 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was animated by Kenneth Muse, Irven Spence, Ray Patterson, and Ed Barge and the music was scored by Scott Bradley.
Plot
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (February 2010) |
Spike is happily prancing along the backyard. He steps on a nail and yells for help. Jerry removes the nail on Spike's foot with a hammer after hearing the dog's cries in pain, and as a reward, Spike becomes Jerry's protector, providing him with a bell to ring whenever he is in trouble. Jerry walks away, carefree and pleased with his good deed.
Tom sees a good opportunity to catch his unaware rival and hides until Jerry walks around the corner, catching the mouse by surprise. After snatching up Jerry, Tom becomes curious as to what the bell could be for and rings it. Spike drops right on top of him and throws him onto the concrete twice, then picks him up onto his back and prepares one last move which he apparently learned on television, spins around and slams the cat to the concrete, who breaks apart and reforms in the space of a second.
Spike returns the bell to Jerry and skips away, but not without being seen by Tom. Making the connection, the cat tries an alternative by covering the mouse with a flowerpot such that he cannot ring the bell; unfortunately, there is a hole in the bottom, which the mouse sticks the ringing bell out of. Spike's fist extends itself from clear across the block and knocks Tom into a gumball machine, which then falls back onto the cat such that gumballs roll out of his head.
Eventually, Tom is forced to become Jerry's "slave" around the house. Tom sets out five trays of cheese for Jerry, and while the mouse sniffs one, Tom attempts to filch the bell. Jerry thwarts him and eats a big wedge of cheese, causing himself to expand to the size of the wedge. Meanwhile, Tom reads the daily paper and is delighted to notice this headline: LEASH LAW PASSED: Public safety puts dogs on leash.
Pleased with his freedom from both mouse and dog, Tom jaunts outside with the paper and 'tsk's at the dog while pulling at his leash. Tom measures the leash's length, draws a line in the grass, and slaps the dog with the newspaper. Spike attempts to bite at Tom repeatedly, but the leash barely restrains the dog. Tom throws a cherry pie at Spike, smashes his head between cymbals, punches him with a boxing glove, and then lets the dog's chomping teeth turn a log into a baseball bat. At his leisure, Tom knocks the dog out with it and then uses it as a pool cue to shoot Spike back into his doghouse.
Tom returns, ecstatic, to Jerry and bops him on the head, and when the mouse rings his bell, no response is heard. Tom slaps him again and offers the mouse a coaster of four different bells as further embarrassment. When these fail to work, Jerry realizes the truth and flees with his small bell. Tom corners him and beats him silly to the point that he swallows the bell. Jerry runs to Spike's doghouse and rings himself, pleading for help. Spike, with sad eyes, presents his leash.
Tom takes a break from chasing Jerry to torment Spike again, and holds out a lead pipe as Spike angrily tries to bite the cat again. All the dog's teeth fall out, and Tom nonchalantly sweeps them back up and returns them. Picking up on the pattern, Spike angrily rubs out the line, draws a new one in a spot he can reach and plops back down innocently. Tom chases Jerry both ways and stops to torment Spike again, but Spike lands directly on the cat this time. Realizing he's been tricked, The feline leaped out of his fur!
Before Spike can process this information, Tom steals his fur back and escapes into a croquet field. Jerry runs through the field until he sees Tom, but cannot avoid being pelted by Tom's mallet. As Jerry hits the starting post, the bell is expelled from his stomach; Tom catches both the mouse and the bell and continuously rings the bell while the cartoon fades to a new scene.
Tom has now pressed Jerry into servitude, using the bell as his signal. Jerry brings Tom's tray of food to him and falls under its weight. While Tom gobbles a turkey leg, Jerry reads the paper which shows the leash law's reversal: LEASH LAW LIFTED: Happy hounds hail freedom. Ecstatic, Jerry hits Tom with the newspaper, causing Tom's turkey to be lodged in his throat. Before Tom can capture him, Jerry rings his bell, and nothing happens for the moment. Tom, still believing the dog to be tied up based on Spike's non-appearance, rings the bell and conks Jerry alternately. Spike, carrying a newspaper himself, sneaks behind Tom and whacks him. Clueless, Tom rings the bell and gets smacked again. Tom then rings the bell one more time and ducks the newspaper's swing, then peeks behind him and briefly sees Spike; When Spike hits the cat a third time, he ends up driving him out of the screen, then cordially returns the bell to Jerry and engages Tom in a brutal fight. After the brawl, Spike and Jerry are strolling down a street, with Tom inside a dog's leash and collar. Spike kicks Tom whenever Jerry rings the bell.
Voice Cast
- Daws Butler as Spike the bulldog (uncredited).
Production
- Directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
- Animation: Kenneth Muse, Irven Spence, Ray Patterson, Ed Barge
- Music: Scott Bradley
- Produced by Fred Quimby
Availability
- Tom and Jerry's Greatest Chases, Vol. 5
- Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection Vol. 3, Disc One
External links
- Articles lacking sources from May 2008
- 1952 films
- 1952 animated films
- Films directed by Joseph Barbera
- Films directed by William Hanna
- 1950s comedy films
- American sequel films
- Films scored by Scott Bradley
- 1952 Tom and Jerry short films
- American short films
- American animated short films
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer short films
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated short films
- Films about animals
- Animated films about animals
- Films about cats
- Animated films about cats
- Films featuring anthropomorphic mice
- English-language films
- Films about dogs
- Animated films about dogs