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Overview


Mouse in Manhattan is a 1945 American one-reel animated cartoon and is the 19th Tom and Jerry short.

Characters[]

Plot[]

Jerry has enough of the country life and decides to leave for the city. Before departing, he writes a farewell letter to Tom that reads:

"Dear Tom,

The country life is getting me down...

I'm off for Broadway and the bright lights.

Goodbye forever,

- Jerry"

then gives a final raspberry to the sleeping cat, assuring that the mouse will not miss him. In a series of antics in Manhattan, he gets stuck in gum on the floor of Grand Central, ends up as a makeshift shoe-polisher, admires the towering skyscrapers, and even attempts to literally climb the Empire State Building, but to no avail, and gets scared when he sees the statue and runs into a woman's green heeled shoes. He looks straight up at her dress and walks under her shoes. As Jerry makes it there, he sees a woman's large toe and polished toenail at the bottom of her shoe and he uses it as a mirror to make him look nice. After he's done grooming: he walks away and accidentally falls into a stream beside the sidewalk and floats away on a bottle cap. He admires beautiful girls wearing pretty shoes and also Times Square before falling down the sewer, has a close shave with oncoming traffic, gets nauseated in an elevator, moves under the carpet to the Starlite Room and moves again where he bumps into a doorway, crawls into a room and comes out blushing. He looks up at the sign which says Powder Room and runs to the Check Room near the Powder Room that he passed.

As he tries to fix the top hat he was on, it pops up fast squishing him down and down again before he bounced out of the room. After he fixes his hat, he sees the woman from the powder room and he jumps on the back of the train dress behind her legs and takes a ride. He almost falls down the drain and gets knocked off by the plant handle in the way, gets back up and follows the direction where she went so he can have fun with her shoes and go home with her but instead heads toward the table and dangles precariously over the city on an ever-breaking candle. Later, he dances with several place cards (in the form of attractive women).

While dancing, Jerry loses his balance and gets stuck in a champagne bottle which pops him out of the building and he falls all the way to the ground with the help of a sock on a clothesline which becomes his parachute. He lands in a dark alley in a puddle; sneezes and is heard and scared off by an alley full of vicious cats. He then hurtles across the city on trash cans, one of which hits a fire hydrant and sends him flying through a jewelry shop window, after which he is shot at by the police. As Jerry escapes the city (nearly being run over by an uptown express train on one of the Interborough Rapid Transit lines in the process): he quickly races over the George Washington Bridge, empty highway, and railroad tracks back to the countryside, deciding that city life is not for him.

Upon returning home, it would seem that Tom had been asleep the entire time that Jerry was gone (and thus didn't read the note that Jerry left, ultimately unaware of the mouse's antics in the big city). Jerry tears up the (unread) note and kisses Tom, waking him up in the process. The short ends with Jerry nailing a sign reading "Home Sweet Home" above his mousehole, bumping into it and entering afterwards, choosing to remain in the countryside.

Goofs[]

  • During the scene featuring Jerry dancing with the dolls, after the dance with the black-haired and blond-haired ones, he looks at an orange-haired doll and begins to dance with it. A few seconds later, when Jerry and the doll dance on the plate, the orange-haired doll's hair becomes blond by for rest of the scene.

Censorship[]

  • On Cartoon Network and Boomerang USA, the scene of Jerry's head being used to polish a black shoe abruptly cuts off before the viewers can see Jerry in blackface, even though the scene is left uncut on international Cartoon Network and Boomerang feeds outside America.

Production[]

This is the second Tom and Jerry cartoon to have animation by Ed Barge, although this is the first time he was credited. The first Tom and Jerry cartoon with animation by Ed Barge was Quiet Please!, which was released some months later.

Notes[]

  • Tom plays a rather insignificant role in this cartoon. He shows little to no action throughout the entire short, only being shown sleeping in the beginning and at the end of the cartoon. This is thus the first cartoon to focus only one of the two characters.
  • This was the first cartoon to be released after V-E Day.
  • The music used throughout the cartoon is called "Manhattan Serenade", which was originally composed by Louis Alter, but arranged by Scott Bradley in this cartoon.
  • This cartoon is possibly a nod to Aesop's fable, "The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse", where two mice visit the countryside and the city, only to end up with inactivity in the former and dangers in the latter. In the end, the country mouse prefers safety in the countryside, while the town mouse prefers the lively atmosphere in the city.
    • Jerry seems to fulfill the roles of both mice throughout the cartoon. In the beginning, he behaves like the town mouse, preferring to see the Broadway and bright lights of the city. But by the near end, his role switches to the country mouse, choosing to return home after experiencing several life-threatening mishaps from the city.
  • The realistic cat screeches made by one of the vicious alley cats that scared off Jerry in the streets of Manhattan (the one resembling Butch Cat) were provided by Harry E. Lang, who previously provided the vocal effects of Tom and other MGM cats in general in the early-1940s.
  • While floating in a teacup through the gutter in Times Square, Jerry passes by a movie theater. The marquee on the theater reads, "Now Playing! A Tom & Jerry Cartoon!"
  • The RFD lettering stamped on the mailbox outside Tom and Jerry's home stands for Rural Free Delivery, emphasizing the isolation of their country abode.

Gallery[]

Tom and Jerry Cartoons
1940 Puss Gets the Boot
1941 The Midnight SnackThe Night Before Christmas
1942 Fraidy CatDog TroublePuss n' TootsThe Bowling Alley-CatFine Feathered Friend
1943 Sufferin' Cats!The Lonesome MouseThe Yankee Doodle MouseBaby Puss
1944 The Zoot CatThe Million Dollar CatThe BodyguardPuttin' on the DogMouse Trouble
1945 The Mouse Comes to DinnerMouse in ManhattanTee for TwoFlirty BirdyQuiet Please!
1946 Springtime for ThomasThe Milky WaifTrap HappySolid Serenade
1947 Cat Fishin'Part Time PalThe Cat ConcertoDr. Jekyll and Mr. MouseSalt Water TabbyA Mouse in the HouseThe Invisible Mouse
1948 Kitty FoiledThe Truce HurtsOld Rockin' Chair TomProfessor TomMouse Cleaning
1949 Polka-Dot PussThe Little OrphanHatch Up Your TroublesHeavenly PussThe Cat and the MermouseLove That PupJerry's DiaryTennis Chumps
1950 Little QuackerSaturday Evening Puss • Texas TomJerry and the LionSafety SecondThe Hollywood BowlThe Framed CatCue Ball Cat
1951 Casanova CatJerry and the GoldfishJerry's CousinSleepy-Time TomHis Mouse FridaySlicked-up PupNit-Witty KittyCat Napping
1952 The Flying CatThe Duck DoctorThe Two MouseketeersSmitten KittenTriplet TroubleLittle RunawayFit To Be TiedPush-Button KittyCruise CatThe Dog House
1953 The Missing Mouse • Jerry and JumboJohann MouseThat's My Pup!Just DuckyTwo Little IndiansLife with Tom
1954 Puppy TalePosse CatHic-cup PupLittle School MouseBaby ButchMice FolliesNeapolitan MouseDownhearted DucklingPet PeeveTouché, Pussy Cat!
1955 Southbound DucklingPup on a PicnicMouse for SaleDesigns on JerryTom and ChérieSmarty CatPecos PestThat's My Mommy
1956 The Flying SorceressThe Egg and JerryBusy BuddiesMuscle Beach TomDown Beat BearBlue Cat BluesBarbecue Brawl
1957 Tops with PopsTimid TabbyFeedin' the KiddieMucho MouseTom's Photo Finish
1958 Happy Go DuckyRoyal Cat NapThe Vanishing DuckRobin HoodwinkedTot Watchers
1961 Switchin' KittenDown and OutingIt's Greek to Me-ow!
1962 High SteaksMouse into SpaceLanding StriplingCalypso CatDicky MoeThe Tom and Jerry Cartoon KitTall in the TrapSorry SafariBuddies Thicker Than WaterCarmen Get It!
1963 Pent-House Mouse
1964 The Cat Above and The Mouse BelowIs There a Doctor in the Mouse?Much Ado About MousingSnowbody Loves MeThe Unshrinkable Jerry Mouse
1965 Ah, Sweet Mouse-Story of LifeTom-ic EnergyBad Day at Cat RockThe Brothers Carry-Mouse-OffHaunted MouseI'm Just Wild About JerryOf Feline BondageThe Year of the MouseThe Cat's Me-Ouch
1966 Duel PersonalityJerry, Jerry, Quite ContraryJerry-Go-RoundLove Me, Love My MousePuss 'n' BoatsFilet MeowMatinee MouseThe A-Tom-Inable SnowmanCatty-Cornered
1967 Cat and Dupli-catO-Solar-MeowGuided Mouse-illeRock 'n' RodentCannery RodentThe Mouse from H.U.N.G.E.R.Surf-Bored CatShutter Bugged CatAdvance and Be MechanizedPurr-Chance to Dream
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