The Cat That Hated People

The Cat That Hated People
Directed by Tex Avery
Produced by Fred Quimby
Story by Heck Allen
Voices by Harry Lang (cat, uncredited)
Pinto Colvig (archive footage, uncredited)
Clarence Nash (archive footage, uncredited)
Music by Scott Bradley
Animation by Walter Clinton
Richard Bickenbach
Cal Dalton
Grant Simmons
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) November 20, 1948
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 minutes
Language English

The Cat That Hated People is a 1948 cartoon directed by Tex Avery and produced by Fred Quimby. The cat's voice was supplied by radio actor Harry Lang in the style of Jimmy Durante;[1] incidental music was directed by Scott Bradley. The film borrows elements from Warner Bros. cartoons Porky in Wackyland, Tin Pan Alley Cats, and Dough for the Do-Do.

Plot

An antisocial alley cat complains about his hatred of people and how they complicate his life in the city. Because of human interference, he is unable to find easy food (a broom to the head stops his drinking freshly delivered milk) or deliver a proper serenade (which is ended by a thrown boot). He doesn't get along with children (who tie paper bags onto his feet), babies (one grabs him by the tail and flails him around a playpen), housewives (one hits him with a broomstick when he scratches their furniture), or dogs (one uses him as a punching bag, then plays dead after giving the cat a ketchup-covered axe as the owner arrives). He complains about not being let out of the house (to drink from a water cooler), or allowed to elope with female cats (he is about to kiss one, but instead a human fires a shotgun through his mouth and out his tail).

The cat continues to complain about people as he walks along a busy sidewalk, with people stepping on him. One person kicks him down the street as he declares he wants to go to the moon, before he notices he is at the front of the "Moonbeam Rocket Company" (a sign in the window says "Any place in space - 5 minutes"). He notices rockets to Mars, Venus, a miniature rocket to Palm Springs, and a "Moon Special," which he enters.

The cat pushes the ignition (below it on the wall is a sign reading "P.S. Hold on to your hats"), and takes off immediately. Buildings and stars duck out of the way and signs reading "NO VACANCY" appear on planets as he passes them. The rocket skywrites "Eat at Joe's" and punches a hole in the Big Dipper before the Little Dipper moves to catch the leakage. The rocket then bounces pinball-style from star to star (with points being displayed for each "bounce") until it registers "TILT" upon lunar impact.

After the crash, the cat revels in his newfound solitude, but the silence is quickly cut short as he meets his noisy new neighbors:

  • A bicycle horn tooting itself
  • A steam whistle blowing
  • A disembodied mouth and hands repeatedly saying "Mammy, Mammy, Mammy" in the style of Al Jolson
  • A self-playing accordion
  • A yo-yo going up and down with the sound of a slide whistle
  • A manual fire engine siren operating itself
  • A tire repeatedly having blowouts by running over nails
  • A claw hammer chasing a nail (the hammer pounds the cat into the ground before pulling him out)
  • A tube of lipstick chasing a pair of giggling lips (the tube applies the lipstick to the cat's mouth; then the lips kiss the cat's mouth)
  • A hand and scissors chasing a piece of paper (the scissors quickly cut the cat into a paper doll chain; two hands then stretch them out)
  • An invisible dog chasing a fire hydrant
  • A diaper, a safety pin, and a bottle of baby powder (which overtake and diaper the cat and shove a baby bottle in his mouth; when he has a temper tantrum his head is diapered as well)
  • A flower running away from a shovel (when the plant passes the cat, the shovel digs a hole and plants him; after watering, the cat "sprouts" and quickly blossoms with a rose in one ear and a carnation in the other; a hand pulls him out of the ground and puts him in a vase)
  • A pencil chased by a pencil sharpener (the sharpener turns the cat's tail into a pencil point; he writes "Chump!" on a nearby rock and draws an arrow indicating himself)

The cat realizes that his original home was much more preferable to his new surroundings; he pulls down a golf course backdrop, places himself on a tee and sends himself back to Earth with one swing of a golf club. He returns to the same sidewalk he left in "the good ol' U.S.A." and expresses his newfound appreciation of his home and people, who continue to walk over him.

References

  1. The Animated Film Encyclopedia, Graham Webb, McFarlane, published 2000.
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