Story: | Homer Brightman |
Layout Artist: | Richard Bickenbach |
Background Artist: | Robert Gentle |
Music: | Scott Bradley |
Studio: | MGM Cartoons |
Distributor: | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Runtime: | 6:39 |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Tot Watchers is a 1958 American one-reel animated Tom and Jerry short produced and directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera with music by Scott Bradley. The short was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on August 1, 1958. It is the 114th and last Tom and Jerry theatrical cartoon produced or directed by both Hanna and Barbera, and the last cartoon short of the series until Gene Deitch's Switchin' Kitten in 1961. Barbera would return to direct one final Tom and Jerry theatrical short, The Karate Guard, in 2005.
Tom and Jerry, engaged in their typical conflict, notice the baby crawling out of its pram. Their attempts to return the infant are unsuccessful, as it repeatedly escapes. During one such incident, the baby enters Spike's doghouse. Tom mistakenly grabs Spike instead of the baby, resulting in a violent confrontation.
Frustrated, Tom brings the baby back to Jeannie, who misinterprets the situation and strikes Tom with a broom. Subsequently, Tom disregards the baby's wanderings. However, when the infant crawls into a 100-story construction site, Tom and Jerry are compelled to intervene.
The baby navigates precariously across steel beams while Tom and Jerry pursue. On the 50th floor, Jerry attempts to save the baby by grasping its diaper, but the garment detaches. Tom manages to catch the falling infant. In the ensuing confusion, Tom inadvertently dons the diaper himself while the baby crawls away.
Believing the baby has entered a cement mixer on the 30th floor, Tom and Jerry dive in, only to discover the infant playing with a hammer nearby. Later, a panicked Jeannie informs a police officer about the missing baby. Tom and Jerry return with the infant, exhausted.
As Jeannie retrieves the baby, the police officer, voiced by Bill Thompson, arrests Tom and Jerry under the presumption of kidnapping. In the police car, their explanations are dismissed until the baby is seen crawling past, having apparently been neglected by Jeannie once again. This revelation causes the officer to realize Tom and Jerry's innocence.
Tot Watchers was produced by MGM Cartoons. After the departure of producer Fred Quimby from the Tom and Jerry series in 1955, directors William Hanna and Joseph Barbera took the added responsibility of producing the series themselves.[1] According to animation historian Michael Barrier, it was during the post-Quimby period that the effects of the series' lower budget on its animation quality became more obvious, stating that "there was no hiding corner cutting behind a curtain of stylization". Scott Bradley's score for Tot Watchers was recorded on June 6, 1957.
Writer and historian Michael Samerdyke stated that Tot Watchers, though it will "never be considered one of the best of the series, ... is an entertaining cartoon and points the way to how the series would develop in the Sixties."[2]