Canned Feud

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Canned Feud
Looney Tunes (Sylvester) series
Directed by I. Freleng
Produced by Eddie Selzer (uncredited)
Story by Warren Foster
Cal Howard
Voices by Mel Blanc
Bea Benaderet
(uncredited)
Music by Carl Stalling
Animation by Virgil Ross
Ken Champin
Arthur Davis
Manuel Perez
John Carey
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date(s) February 3, 1951 (USA)
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 minutes
Language English

Canned Feud is a 1951 Looney Tunes (reissued in the opening as a Blue Ribbon Merrie Melodies cartoon from 1958) animated short featuring Sylvester.

Plot

Sylvester's family goes on vacation to California, but forgets to put him out. Sylvester abruptly notices this, finding that he is locked inside an empty house devoid of food with no milk being delivered for two weeks. Fortunately, he finds a cupboard full of canned tuna and cat food, but discovers that he also needs a can opener. He seemingly cannot find one, until he sees a mouse with it. He begs the mouse to give it, but the mouse throws it in his hole. Sylvester frantically tries and fails to retrieve it and the mouse casually walks away. Sylvester angrily gives chase and crashes into the mouse's hole while trying to catch him.

Sylvester tries vainly to open the tuna by beating it against the floor and jumping on it. When this doesn't work he tries to chop it with an axe, but when he's about to swing the blade flies off and goes out the mail slot. The mouse throws the can opener out into the open, giving Sylvester a chance to retrieve it but he fails when the mouse grabs it and runs back into his hole, causing Sylvester to crash into it again. Next, Sylvester tries using an unbent coat hanger to retrieve the can opener, however the mouse hooks it to a live wire and he receives an electric shock when the wire touches another. Sylvester then sets up a piano to drop on the can, just before the mouse offers the can opener, prompting Sylvester to release his hold on the rope attached to the piano, thereby crushing him. He then attempts to cut a larger hole in the wall to enter the mouse's home, but is foiled (in similar manner to a Bugs and Daffy shotgun routine) by the mouse cutting the floor beneath Sylvester's feet.

His next attempt involves dynamite, which predictably backfires after the mouse inflates and pops a paper bag making him think the dynamite had already blown. His following attempt, involving a vacuum, results in Sylvester being sucked in, along with hot coals, and clumsily tumbling down into the basement while trying to hit the mouse with a golf club. However, the angrily persistent cat (thinking that that's the last straw) returns with an armful of dynamite and fireworks, but they blow prematurely while he's lighting the fuse, resulting in a tremendous explosion and he does finally recover the can opener in the process. Going to the cupboard and yelling "I got it" along the way, he finds that it is now locked and the mouse has the key. Sylvester let out a cry of anguish and faints while the mouse merely shrugs and twirls the key on his finger.

Notes

  • The piano gag will be re-used with Daffy Duck in the following year 1952 in The Super Snooper.
  • The note left for the milkman is signed "Mrs. Champin", a nod to animator Ken Champin.
  • There is an error in the Blue Ribbon when the cartoon is released on Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 1. Instead of the 1946-55 version the Milt Franklyn composed 1955-64 version of The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down plays in the opening. The version of this cartoon on SYLVESTER AND TWEETY'S BAD OL' PUTTY TAT BLUES laserdisc had no error in the Blue Ribbon.
  • Original opening titles were found in 2012 and restored on Looney Tunes Platinum Collection: Volume 2 DVD and Blu-Ray.

In popular culture

External links