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A peckish Sylvester spots Tweety and tries to get him, but only one thing stands between Sylvester and his prey: Granny's pet shark, Sharkey. Sylvester's attempts with an inflatable raft, a zip-line, an air pumping diving suit and a pair of stilts, all fail. Just then, Granny and Tweety leave on a cruise boat bound for the continental U.S. as ...
Tweety's S.O.S. (1951): The entire boat sequence where Tweety tricked Sylvester into getting seasick and the piece of pork, further inducing the malady. Tree Cornered Tweety (1956): the following two: - In the Alps, the sequence where Sylvester tries to catch Tweety (wearing spoons for snowshoes) on skis, but then crashed into a tree.
The short was released on March 21, 1959, and stars Tweety and Sylvester. [4] Tweety and Sylvester are voiced by Mel Blanc, and Sam, the orange-red cat acting as Sylvester's rival, is performed by an uncredited Daws Butler, doing a voice reminiscent of Frank Fontaine's "John" from The Jack Benny Program and "Crazy Guggenheim" from The Jackie ...
Granny, Sylvester, Tweety and Hector have ancestors in a documentary back in prehistoric times from 5 Billion BC to 5 Million BC. In Amsterdam, Granny is there to bid on a windmill figurine which has Rembrandt's famous night watch and loses her glasses and two thieves try to take the figurine for the night watch.
The short was released on April 1, 1948, and stars Tweety and Sylvester. [4] Both Tweety and Sylvester are voiced by Mel Blanc. The uncredited voice of the lady of the house (seen only from the neck down, as she talks on the phone) is Bea Benaderet. [5] This is the first film whose title included Tweety's speech-impaired term for a cat.
The godfather of all shark movies, Jaws was a film marvel at the time of its release in 1975. And if you really feel like diving (hehe) into the world of Jaws' Amity Island, you can also check out ...
Getting up, the doorman dizzily says Tweety's catch phrase: "I tawt I taw a putty tat!" Tweety, popping out of hiding, delivers the final punchline by replying, "You did! You did! You taw a putty tat, a moo-moo tow, a big dowiwwa, a diddy-up hortey, and a wittle monkey!" (A busker's monkey was the last animal to run over the doorman).
The short was released on July 23, 1949, and stars Tweety and Sylvester. [3] Tweety must evade the titular "puddy tat," Sylvester, who is once again in hot pursuit of Tweety, just so that he can eat him for his own personal snack. It provides an anomaly in the Sylvester & Tweety pairings: In this one, Tweety provides almost all the dialogue ...