Jump to content

Flirty Birdy: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Reverted to revision 812310275 by Cydebot (talk): Unsourced changes. (TW)
 
(38 intermediate revisions by 20 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT [[Tom and Jerry filmography#1940–58: Hanna-Barbera/MGM Cartoons]]
{{Unreferenced|date=May 2008}}
{{Infobox Hollywood cartoon
|cartoon_name=Flirty Birdy
|series=[[Tom and Jerry]]
|image=flirtybirdytitle.JPG
|caption=Reissue 1952 title card
|director=[[William Hanna]]<br>[[Joseph Barbera]]
|story_artist=William Hanna<br>Joseph Barbera
|animator=[[Irven Spence]]<br>[[Kenneth Muse]]<br>[[Ray Patterson (animator)|Ray Patterson]]<br>'''Assistant animation:'''<br>[[Barney Posner]] (uncredited)
|voice_actor=
|musician=[[Scott Bradley (composer)|Scott Bradley]]
|producer=[[Fred Quimby]] (unc. on original issue)
|distributor=[[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]]
|release_date={{Film date|1945|09|22|U.S.|1953|7|4|U.S. |(re-release)}}
|color_process=[[Technicolor]]
|runtime=7:17
|movie_language= [[English language|English]]
|preceded_by=[[Tee for Two]]
|followed_by=[[Quiet Please!]]
}}
'''''Flirty Birdy ''''' is a 1945 American one-reel [[animated cartoon]] and is the 21st ''[[Tom and Jerry]]'' [[short subject|short]]. It was released on September 22, 1945 by [[Metro-Goldwyn Mayer]]. The cartoon was directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]], and produced by [[Fred Quimby]]. The animation was provided by [[Irven Spence]], [[Kenneth Muse]], and [[Ray Patterson (animator)|Ray Patterson]], the music by [[Scott Bradley (composer)|Scott Bradley]], and [[background artist|backgrounds]] by [[Robert Gentle]].
The cartoon revolves around [[Tom Cat|Tom]]'s effort to regain [[jerry Mouse|Jerry]] from an [[eagle]] by dressing up as a [[female]] [[bird]].


{{R with history}}
==Plot==
{{Plot|date=February 2010}}
Tom is laying down a trail of cheese for Jerry. Tom traps Jerry in two slices of bread into a sandwich. Before Tom can eat his sandwich, an eagle swoops down and steals the sandwich from Tom's hands. Tom breaks his teeth. The eagle tries to eat the sandwich for himself but Tom steals the sandwich back, replacing it with the plate he used for his sandwich. The eagle breaks the plate. They fight over the sandwich and almost tear Jerry in half. The eagle then hits Tom with his beak and knocks him off the tree. Tom then throws a brick at the eagle but it gets thrown back, hitting Tom. Tom then makes a face and yodels at the eagle. The eagle grabs Tom and asks him, ''"Going down?"'' and throws him back down to the ground. Tom lands near a [[clothesline]] with a skirt, some feathers, and some [[clothespin|clothespins]]. This gives Tom an idea.


[[Category:1945 animated short films]]
The eagle goes back to eat his Jerry sandwich. But before he can do so, Jerry slips away, puts mustard on himself, and gets back in between the slices of bread. As the eagle attempts to eat the sandwich again, Jerry opens the eagle's mouth and kicks away the bread. The eagle then closes its mouth on Jerry, who proceeds to escape through eagle's nostril and kick him in the eye. The eagle grabs Jerry and a whistle is heard from Tom, who is wearing lipstick and a party horn on his face (accompanied by [[Scott Bradley (composer)|Scott Bradley]]'s "hot" rendition of ''[[St. Louis Blues (song)|St. Louis Blues]]''), beckoning the eagle from behind the house's chimney. In addition to the lipstick and party horn, Tom has taken a skirt and stuck feathers onto himself, giving himself the rather unconvincing appearance of a female bird. The eagle, unaware of Tom's disguise, becomes lovestruck and tries to kiss him. Jerry, not fooled by Tom's persona, uses the distraction to untie Tom’s dress, but Tom fastens it. The eagle tries to kiss Tom, again, and Jerry grabs the elastic band of the horn and it brings them together for a kiss. The eagle goes wild and he ends up dropping Jerry. Tom then puts Jerry down his dress. Jerry grabs a pin and sticks it in Tom's rear causing Tom to yowl and jump into the eagle's arms. Tom then runs away with the lovestruck eagle behind him. The eagle tries to kiss Tom but he ends up denting a stovepipe and pecking the bricks out of the chimney. Tom then gives a flirtatious smile and struts away. This really makes the eagle wild and with Tom hiding around the chimney with a brick in his hand, Tom hits the eagle with the eagle responding ''"She loves me!"''. But the eagle is still head over heels in love. Tom makes another quick escape by jumping off the roof of the house. The eagle saves him from hitting the ground and continues to try to kiss him. Tom tries to hide and escape in various means, but the lovesick eagle somehow keeps finding him, and Tom keeps losing Jerry in the process.
[[Category:1945 films]]

[[Category:Short films directed by Joseph Barbera]]
Tom is later standing behind a makeshift kissing booth that advertises, "Kisses - One Mouse Each!". The eagle goes to the kissing booth, hands over Jerry and puckers up. Tom grabs Jerry and then "smooches" the eagle with a plunger, simulating a giant kiss. But Jerry escapes again. Tom then runs into the eagle who holds out his hands. Tom picks one and the eagle produces a ring box with Jerry sitting in it. Jerry’s tail has been tied in a loop and the eagle places Jerry on Tom’s finger as a marriage proposal. Tom "accepts", then slams the window shutter into the eagle’s face and runs away, but he crashes into the other window shutter. Jerry then grabs a rope and ties it around Tom’s foot. Tom gets up and runs away. Jerry hands the other end of the rope to the eagle and the eagle drags Tom back to him, preventing Tom's escape. As Tom is being dragged to the eagle, Jerry hands Tom a bouquet of flowers and waves goodbye to the happy couple. Soon the eagle is sitting in a tree while Tom is sitting on a nest of eggs and knitting a tiny sweater, preparing for motherhood with no choice but to endure a relationship with the eagle.
[[Category:Short films directed by William Hanna]]

==Production==
*Directed by: William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
*Story by: William Hanna, Joseph Barbera, Bill Turner, Jack Ward
*Director of Animation: Orestes Calpini
*Animation: Irven Spence, Kenneth Muse, Ray Patterson, Orestes Calpini, Otto Feuer
*Assistant Animation: Barney Posner
*Sequence Director: Seymour Kneitel
*Music: Scott Bradley
*Co-Producer: William Hanna
*Produced by: Fred Quimby

==Availability==
DVD
*Tom and Jerry's Greatest Chases, Vol. 2
*[[Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection]] Vol. 1, Disc One
*[[Tom and Jerry Golden Collection]] Volume One, Disc Two

==External links==
*{{bcdb title|3143}}
*{{IMDb title|37709}}

{{The Hanna–Barbera Tom and Jerry shorts}}

[[Category:1945 animated films]]
[[Category:Tom and Jerry short films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Joseph Barbera]]
[[Category:Films directed by William Hanna]]
[[Category:1940s American animated films]]
[[Category:1940s American animated films]]
[[Category:American films]]
[[Category:Animated films about birds]]
[[Category:Animated films about birds]]
[[Category:1940s romantic comedy films]]
[[Category:1945 romantic comedy films]]
[[Category:American romantic comedy films]]
[[Category:American romantic comedy films]]
[[Category:Films scored by Scott Bradley]]
[[Category:Films scored by Scott Bradley]]
[[Category:Tom and Jerry short films]]
[[Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated short films]]

Latest revision as of 02:10, 3 December 2024

  • With history: This is a redirect from a page containing substantive page history. This page is kept as a redirect to preserve its former content and attributions. Please do not remove the tag that generates this text (unless the need to recreate content on this page has been demonstrated), nor delete this page.
    • This template should not be used for redirects having some edit history but no meaningful content in their previous versions, nor for redirects created as a result of a page merge (use {{R from merge}} instead), nor for redirects from a title that forms a historic part of Wikipedia (use {{R with old history}} instead).