The Two Mouseketeers

The Two Mouseketeers
Tom and Jerry series
Directed by William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Produced by Fred Quimby
Story by William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Voices by Francoise Brun-Cottan
Music by Scott Bradley
Animation by Ed Barge
Kenneth Muse
Irven Spence
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) March 15, 1952 (1952-03-15)
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7:21
Language English, French
Preceded by The Duck Doctor
Followed by Smitten Kitten

The Two Mouseketeers is a 1952 American one-reel animated cartoon and is the 65th Tom and Jerry short, produced in Technicolor and released to theatres on March 15, 1952 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was produced by Fred Quimby and directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera. The cartoon was animated by Ed Barge, Kenneth Muse and Irven Spence. Musical supervision was done by Scott Bradley, using a version of the theme music "Soldier of Fortune", from the movie The Girl of the Golden West (1938). The character of Nibbles was voiced by six-year-old Francoise Brun-Cottan.

The Two Mouseketeers won the 1951 Academy Award for Best Short Subject: Cartoons. Such was the cartoon's success, that Hanna and Barbera created a total of four adventures in the Mouseketeers series; the second of the tetralogy, 1954's Touché, Pussy Cat! received an Oscar nomination .

Plot

Jerry and Nibbles are two mouseketeers who decide to help themselves to a lavish banquet. Tom has been ordered to guard the spread from the King's Mouseketeers with his life, under threat of the guillotine. Jerry and Nibbles enter the castle hall through a stained-glass window. Jerry releases the rear-end cover on a suit of armor, making a small drawbridge to the windowsill; they sneak into the armor, emerge from the helmet's faceguard, and then parachute onto the table. They unwittingly catch Tom's attention by showering him with champagne.

After hiding from Tom by wearing white paper decorations from the standing rib roast to look like two ribs, the little mouseketeer begins making a ham sandwich while singing "Alouette" to himself. Tom emerges behind him and pokes him with his sword, and Nibbles yells in protest. But before he can get away, Tom captures him by putting his rapier through Nibbles' cape. Jerry manages to stab Tom in the rear-end to rescue Nibbles, and throws a custard in Tom's face for good measure. This launches a swashbuckling fencing display against Tom, ending in Tom catching Jerry. Nibbles tips an long-handled axe toward Tom and it shaves all the fur off Tom's back from head to hind end, (and revealing ruffled white underwear), while Nibbles hides in some fruit.

Nibbles runs away and falls into a wine glass – but Jerry saves him by hurling a tomato at Tom, followed by multiple vegetables. After impaling each of the vegetables on his rapier, Tom then heats and eats them like a shish kebab. Nibbles climbs out of the glass, now drunk. He pokes Tom in the rear-end, making him yowl and jump up, as Nibbles waves his sword, saying, "Touché, pussycat!" But as he runs away, Tom catches him. Jerry makes the save by hitting Tom on the head with a gada (mace) so hard that Tom falls through the table, which leads into Tom and Jerry resuming their sword fighting. While this goes on, Nibbles brings along a cannon and stuffs it with everything on the banquet table. He lights the cannon and it violently explodes.

As the smoke disappears, Jerry and Nibbles are walking triumphantly down the street with stolen banquet food. Suddenly, (in an ending that was unusually morbid by Tom and Jerry standards), they hear a loud drum roll, see the guillotine, and the blade comes down, strongly suggesting that Tom was executed (although off-screen in order to comply with the Hays Code). Both mice gulp, and then Nibbles sighs, "Pauvre, pauvre, pussycat!" ("Poor, poor pussycat!"). But then he shrugs, saying "C'est la guerre!" ("Such is war!"). The two mouseketeers together continue their victorious march off into the sunset.

Availability

DVD

External links

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