Mouse in Manhattan

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Mouse In Manhattan

Tom and Jerry series


Title card of Mouse in Manhattan
Directed by William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Produced by Fred Quimby
Story by William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Music by Scott Bradley
Animation by Kenneth Muse
Ed Barge
Ray Patterson
Irven Spence
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) July 7, 1945
Color process Technicolor
Running time 8 min
Preceded by The Mouse Comes to Dinner
Followed by Tee for Two
IMDb profile

Mouse in Manhattan is a 1945 Tom and Jerry animated short released in American theaters on 7th July 1945.

[edit] Plot Outline

Jerry dances with an inanimate placecard mascot in Mouse in Manhattan. Animation by Kenneth Muse.
Jerry dances with an inanimate placecard mascot in Mouse in Manhattan. Animation by Kenneth Muse.

Jerry has had enough of the country life and decides to leave to the city. He writes a goodbye letter detailing this for a sleeping Tom before leaving to New York City to experience life in the city. Here he gets stuck in gum, ends up as a makeshift shoe-polisher, admires the towering skyscrapers, gets nauseated in an elevator, sees more sights before falling down the sewer, has a close shave with oncoming traffic, and dangles precariously over the city on an ever-breaking candle. He also dances with several placecards (in the form of attractive women). He ultimately loses his balance and gets stuck in a champagne bottle which pops him all the way to the ground, where he lands in a dark alley in a puddle, sneezes, and is heard and scared off by an alley full of vicious cats. He is then hurtled across the city on trash cans, one of which hits a fire hydrant, sending him flying through a jewelery shop window, after which he is shot at by the police. As Jerry escapes the city (and is nearly run over by a subway train), he quickly races over the empty freeway and railroad back to the countryside, where he finds Tom still asleep (unaware that Jerry had been gone). He destroys his unread note and kisses Tom before nailing a placard reading "Home Sweet Home" above his mousehole, entering afterwards. The story is loosely modeled on The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse, especially the notion of the city as a place of both riches and fear, except that no mouse takes Jerry's place in the country.

The cartoon is unusual in that Tom is barely in it (he sleeps through nearly the whole picture) and it has no cat-and-mouse chase scenes. Instead most of its energy comes from a fusion of music with scenery, specifically cityscapes. The music was composed by Scott Bradley, and the cartoon was directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, animated by Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Irven Spence and Ray Patterson and produced by Fred Quimby.

[edit] Trivia