The Great De Gaulle Stone Operation

The Great De Gaulle Stone Operation is the first short in the Inspector series of theatrical cartoons. A total of 34 entries were produced between 1965 and 1969.[1]

The Great De Gaulle Stone Operation
Directed byFriz Freleng
Co-director:
Gerry Chiniquy
Produced byDavid DePatie
Friz Freleng
Story byJohn W. Dunn
StarringPat Harrington, Jr.
Larry Storch
Paul Frees
Music byWilliam Lava
Henry Mancini
Animation byManny Perez
Don Williams
Bob Matz
Warren Batchelder
Norm McCabe
George Grandpré
Layouts byT.M. Yakutis
Backgrounds byT.M. Yakutis
Color processDeLuxe
Production
company
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
December 21, 1965
Running time
7' 14"
LanguageEnglish

Plot

The Inspector has been tasked by the Commissioner to guard the De Gaulle Stone, an enormous diamond worth 10 billion francs. The Commissioner warns the Inspector of the dire consequences should he lose the diamond, but the Inspector manages to lose it in seconds, handing it to what he thinks is his assistant, Sgt. Deux Deux, but is in fact a three-headed thief, collectively referred to as the Maxi-o-Reilys. The left (the Soviet Russian-accented "Weft") and right (the American-accented "Wight") heads argue about what to do next, and the apparently dim third head (the Chinese "Wong") tries to break up the fight, only to be clobbered by his brothers. The Inspector uses this chance to try to catch up with them, at which point they get into their car and drive away, accidentally flattening the Inspector in the process. Deux-Deux tries to pursue them himself, but he flattens the Inspector some more instead.

The Maxi-o-Reilys are heading home when they see the Inspector chasing them. They shoot bullets at him, breaking his car and stripping him until he's only wearing his Pink Panther underwear. They also drop a bomb on him from up in the air.

The Maxi-o-Reilys have their car convert itself into a plane, forcing the Inspector to man a plane of his own in order to pursue them. The crooks easily dispose of him with a giant fly-swatter however, and his plane crashes into the Sûreté building, destroying the Commissioner's office and earning the Inspector another ear-bashing. The trio manages to escape, but once back at their mansion, Wong discovers that their coat pocket has a hole in it, and they have managed to lose the diamond.

The Commissioner returns the diamond to the Inspector, who puts it in a safe. Unfortunately, the safe turns out to be the evil three in disguise. The Inspector and Deux-Deux pursue the thieves to a hotel, where the Inspector's attempts at catching them meet with a predictable lack of success. The Inspector is shot in the eye by a random bullet, but when he shows Deux-Deux what is coming through the keyhole, Deux-Deux begins whooping excitedly at what he sees. The Inspector takes a second look and is shot again. When the Inspector announces he will shoot at the count of three, the Maxi-o-Reilys escape in their car, knocking down the door and flattening the Inspector, who fires a bullet that only drops to the ground.

The three are finally surrounded in their hideout by the Inspector and a number of backup units. Realizing that they are finished, Wong places the diamond in a glass of water, within which it is inconspicuous. The Inspector and the other officers break in, and apprehend the thieves. While the others search for the missing diamond, the Inspector decides to help himself to the nearby glass of water, and swallows the diamond in the process. He is then rushed to the hospital where the De Gaulle diamond is surgically removed and given to the assisting nurse, which is actually the Maxi-o-Reilys in disguise. The Inspector touches the area of the cut in his surgery, where the diamond was removed, and winces in pain, when he describes how he feels about the diamond escapade.

Production notes

The Great De Gaulle Stone Operation was released with the James Bond film Thunderball during its original theatrical run. The title is a parody of the medical condition gallstones as well as a reference to then-French President, Charles de Gaulle.[2]

The Matzoreilys first appeared in the credits of A Shot in the Dark and were seen again in Depatie-Freleng's first feature film, Mitzi in 1965, as well as the sequels and in The Super 6, another cartoon series produced in 1966 by the same company. They were referred to in the series as "The Brothers Matzoriley."[3]

The Pink Panther Show contained a laugh track when the Pink Panther cartoons were broadcast on NBC-TV.[2] Currently, the laugh-tracked version airs on the Spanish language Boomerang TV channel.

See also

References

  1. Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 95. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  2. Beck, Jerry (2005). Pink Panther: The Ultimate Guide to the Coolest Cat in Town!. DK Publishing, Inc. pp. 44–45. ISBN 0-7566-1033-8.
  3. Gary Lewis (I)
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