Claws for Alarm

Claws for Alarm
Claws for Alarm
Merrie Melodies (Porky Pig and Sylvester) series
Directed by Charles M. Jones
Produced by Eddie Selzer
Story by Michael Maltese
Voices by Mel Blanc
Music by Carl Stalling
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date(s) May 22, 1954(USA)
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 minutes

Claws for Alarm is a 1954 Merrie Melodies cartoon, directed by Chuck Jones and produced and released by Warner Bros. Pictures. It was the second of three cartoons teaming Porky Pig and Sylvester the cat (continuing his non-speaking role as Porky's cat) in a spooky setting where only Sylvester is aware of the danger the pair are in. The other two films in the series are Scaredy Cat (1948) and Jumpin' Jupiter (1955).

Contents

Synopsis

Porky and Sylvester are driving to Albuquerque, New Mexico (home of Bugs Bunny's famous "left turn" and also their destination in Jumpin' Jupiter (1955)) when Porky decides to stop for the night at the hotel in Dry Gulch; actually a ghost town, a fact which sends Sylvester to trembling, but which Porky seems oblivious to. As in "Scaredy Cat," Sylvester alone is alert to the danger from murderous mice that have taken up residence in the hotel. Unlike the previous cartoon, however, the mice are (mostly) unseen, except for tiny, malevolent pairs of eyes in dark corners (and the moose heads over the main desk and Porky's bed). No matter; Porky declares it to be "a perfectly splendid place to spend the night" and checks in.

In the beginning, Sylvester spots a pair of malignant eyes and goes in Porky's hat. When Porky turns around, he sees nothing; prompting him to say "I ought to clobber you." Sylvester is now terrified of a giant shadow of a spider. He races in the suitcase but Porky points out "The thing I have to put up with. It's just a little teeny, harmless spider. Shameless craven, you."

The mice, meanwhile, do everything they can to kill and/or scare Porky and Sylvester. (In one scene, the mice are seen in silhouette beneath a sheet, standing on each others' shoulders as they appear to the frightened cat to be a ghost.) As always, Porky does not see the danger until Sylvester has chased the mice away, leaving him holding the bag -- or, in one case, the noose the mice have dropped around Porky's neck, which the cat has just pushed Porky out of the way of. Porky demands to know why Sylvester shoved him, leading to one of the film's funnier sequences as Sylvester pantomimes the moose head and the noose dropping from it. Porky responds "Don't be such an idiot. What are you, a schizo.. a mani.. a mani.. a manic depressive or something?" The moose head begins to follow Porky up the stairs. A shotgun comes out of its mouth and tries to shoot Porky. Sylvester fights with the moose and Porky said "What are you trying to do, wake everybody in the house? Of all the screwball ideas, fighting with stuffed animals!"

Porky found an unoccupied room 13 where Sylvester is still watching for any imminent danger. Suddenly, a noose came from the ceiling and tried to strangle Porky. Sylvester grabs a razor and cuts the noose. Porky felt he was suffocating but when he sees Sylvester with the noose and the razor, he asked "Sylvester, what are you doing with that, uh, rope and that razor?" Sylvester sees a mouse that resembles a miniature Wile E. Coyote with a large kitchen knife. The mouse swoops down and cut a line of hair on Sylvester's back. Porky, humiliated and furious with the shenanigans forces Sylvester to go out ("That settles it! Out you go! Out! Out! Out! Out! Out! OUT!!). Sylvester sees the aforementioned ghost and runs back inside. Porky asks "What the..?! Get off of me! Get out of here! What's the big id-ear?! What are you up to now, Sylvester?!" The sheet was on a chair but Sylvester pantomimes that he saw a ghost but Porky says "Oh, cut it out! Of all the, uh, nonsense!" Porky then declares the cat to be a "c-cow-eh-c-cow-eh- you great yellow cat, you!" and suggests that Sylvester sleep with him. Sylvester then soldiers on all night, guarding his master with a shotgun he earlier wrestled away from the mice (Porky asking beforehand, "is th-there any, uh, in-eh-insanity in your family?").

Dawn finally breaks, with good riddance to those ghost mice, ending the bleary-eyed cat's vigil as Porky awakes: "Eh, this r-really is a r-restful place. I think we should stay here a w-week to t-ten days and get really rested up!" This is the last straw for Sylvester, who (off-screen) clubs Porky over the head with the shotgun butt while he is freshening up and singing "Home on the Range," leaving him stuck on the first verse like a needle skipping on a record ("Oh, give me a home, where the buffalo roam and the deer and the antelope (WHAM!!), and the deer and the antelope, and the deer and the antelope pl-pl, and the deer and the antelope pl-pl, and the deer..."). Sylvester, meanwhile loads the car with the luggage and Porky and speeds away from the hotel. After a last look back, Sylvester breathes a sigh of relief -- not seeing the pairs of eyes blinking from the speedometer as the film closes.

Commentary

Some cartoon buffs view Claws for Alarm as the creepiest and darkest of the trio of cartoons centered on Porky and Sylvester's weird vacations, noting the simpler drawings and the almost never-seen mice. Emru Townsend, writing for the online animation magazine Frames Per Second, lists Claws as one of his favorites for Halloween, and comments: "Claws for Alarm makes the cut for Halloween because, unlike in the other two cartoons, the sense of fear and dread comes in from the very first frame." Townsend also cites the "true horror-movie fashion" of the ending, where the "monsters" are not completely vanquished. [1]

Censorship

Much like Scaredy Cat and (to a lesser extent) Jumpin' Jupiter, Claws for Alarm has been shown edited on television (http://looney.goldenagecartoons.com/ltcuts/c/):

  • On CBS, the scene where Sylvester plugs a gun with his finger and the gun fires, causing the bullet to go through his finger and out via his tail (to Porky commenting "Mice") was cut.
  • On Cartoon Network's pre-2002 airings (CN now airs this cartoon uncut), Nickelodeon and the syndicated "Merrie Melodies Show", the following parts were cut:
    • The scene where Sylvester uses a noose to demonstrate to Porky what could have happened to him had Sylvester not saved him was cut on "The Merrie Melodies Show" and pre-2002 Cartoon Network, but was left uncut on Nickelodeon and post-2002 Cartoon Network.
    • The scene where a noose lowers on Porky while Porky is sleeping, Sylvester cuts the noose with a razor and Porky accuses Sylvester of attempted murder was cut on "The Merrie Melodies Show", pre-2002 Cartoon Network, and Nickelodeon.
    • The scene where a moosehead has a rifle emerging from its mouth to try and kill Porky and Sylvester beating it up was cut on Nickelodeon, but left intact on Cartoon Network (both pre- and post-2002) and the syndicated "Merrie Melodies Show").

Availability

This short was edited into Daffy Duck's Quackbusters (1988), and is featured in its entirety in the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 3.

References

  1. ^ Frames Per Second, Oct. 27 2007

External links


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