Tweety and the Beanstalk
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Tweety and the Beanstalk is a Merrie Melodies animated short starring Tweety and Sylvester. Released in 1957, the cartooon is directed by Friz Freleng. The voices were performed by Mel Blanc.
The short is the second in a series of Warner Bros. cartoons based on "Jack and the Beanstalk."
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[edit] Plot
The story begins with a farm mother scolding Jack for trading his cow for three seemingly worthless beans. The beans are thrown out a window and land under Sylvester's cat bed. Instantly, the beans sprout into a giant beanstalk that reaches into the heavens, taking the still sleeping Sylvester with it. The puddy tat awakens and is startled at how everything seemingly grew overnight. Eventually, he walks inside a castle and instantly spots a giant birdcage (with a giant Tweety singing inside).
Sylvester opens the cage and chases what he says are "acres and acres of Tweety Bird." However, Tweety's master comes into the room; after Sylvester hides, the master puts Tweety back in his cage and hangs it on a high ceiling; that way, he won't get into any mischief while he's gone.
Sylvester makes several attempts to get at Tweety, having to overcome both the cage being on the ceiling and dodging a giant bulldog whom is trying to chase the cat away. Each of Sylvester's attempts to get the bird ends unsuccessfully; several times, he is barely able to get away from the bulldog.
Eventually, the Giant returns and, sensing an intruder in his home, remarks, "Fe, fi, fo, fat. I tawt I taw a puddy tat!" He immediatey chases after Sylvester, who scurries down the beanstalk, the Giant chasing after him. Sylvester manages to reach the ground and chops down the beanstalk. The Giant falls to the ground, the impact crushing Sylvester and causing him to be hurled through the earth to China, where he meets with a stereotypical Chinese Tweety, who remarks (in a Chinese accent) his English counterpart's signature lines.
[edit] Music
- Although this cartoon is a Merrie Melodies short, it uses the Looney Tunes opening and closing themes.
[edit] Censorship
- The original ending — featuring Sylvester landing himself in China and meeting a stereotypical Chinese Tweety — has been censored when shown on ABC. The censored version ends when Sylvester arrives in China, removing the Chinese Tweety saying "Oh, I tawt I taw dishonorable putty tat." A similar gag in the Roadrunner/Wile E. Coyote cartoon, "War and Pieces", where Wile E. ends up in China and meets a stereotypically Chinese Roadrunner (whose "Meep, meep!"s were translated into Chinese characters), isn't edited when shown on ABC.