Mice Follies (1954 film)

This article is about the cartoon. For the Looney Tunes cartoon, see Mice Follies (1960 film). For other uses, see Mice Follies.
Mice Follies
Tom and Jerry series

Mice Follies title card.
Directed by William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Produced by Fred Quimby
Story by William Hanna (unc.)
Joseph Barbera (unc.)
Music by Scott Bradley
Animation by Kenneth Muse
Ed Barge
Irven Spence
Ray Patterson
Backgrounds by Robert Gentle
Studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s)
  • September 4, 1954 (1954-09-04)
Color process Technicolor
Running time 6' 49"
Language English
Preceded by Baby Butch
Followed by Neapolitan Mouse

Mice Follies is the 85th one-reel animated Tom and Jerry short, created in 1953, directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera and produced by Fred Quimby with music by Scott Bradley (mainly incorporating Tchaikovsky's Sleeping Beauty Waltz). The cartoon was animated by Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Irven Spence and Ray Patterson with backgrounds by Robert Gentle. Mice Follies was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on September 4, 1954. For The Looney Tunes short see released in 1960 of the same name.

Plot

Jerry and Nibbles flood the kitchen and freeze the water, turning the room into an skating rink. The two mice go about their own business, skating and sliding across the frozen floor - until Tom is woken up and peeps through the wall. and while nibbles slips through the ice, he accidentally he pulls off half of Tom's whiskers. nibbles fixes it but the whiskers fall off and nibbles brushes them under the mat. Tom pursues the two mice, but is not as mobile on ice as he thought. As he skids across the "rink", he crashes into a closet and comes across a pair of ice skates. Equally matching the skating prowess of the mice, the chase resumes as Tom crashes, bangs and stumbles across many kitchen obstacles, including an ironing board, a door and some stools, before sliding up a table-come-ramp and falling down into the cellar.

Tom emerges from the cellar and just as he is about to catch Jerry, Nibbles wisely defrosts the ice, causing Tom to slip over on the watery floor. Jerry climbs to higher ground as the soaking wet cat searches for him. Ready to squirt Jerry, who Tom has spotted hiding on a shelf, Nibbles sets the freezer to 'Quick Freeze', re-freezing the floor, with Tom frozen and just standing on the floor. Jerry and Nibbles resume their ice dancing, skating around the frozen cat who can do nothing but move his eyes around as the mice skate across the floor.

Availability

Laserdisc

DVD

References

  1. Ben Simon (July 14, 2003). "The Art Of Tom And Jerry: Volume Two - Animated Reviews". Retrieved October 17, 2016.
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