Tweet Tweet Tweety (1951) Poster

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8/10
Restoration On These 'Toons Is Terrific
ccthemovieman-117 April 2007
Here is another funny Looney Tunes effort but I really appreciated was the beautiful artwork. The browns, golds and blues in here of the national forest are spectacular. The restoration process on these Golden Collection DVDs really are apparent on cartoons like this one. This episode is on Vol. 2 of the set.

As for the story, we are in a beautiful national forest with huge redwood-type trees and Sylvester's family has the camper in the trailer park. Sylvester has his own compartment door which he swings open at the first sound of a bird. He rushes out, but a park ranger is there to quickly remind, "Don't get any ideas in that head of yours. Now, get going, cat!" Sylvester slinks away.

The cat spots a nest high up in a tree, investigates, finds an egg, decides to sit on it and hatch it....and out comes Tweety. From that point, it's a chase a la Tom and Jerry and some clever sight gags. One strange sight: Sylvester with all the fur blown off his face. An orange, stubble-faced cat was really a weird thing to see!
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8/10
Sylvester should have stayed home!
llltdesq29 September 2003
I have to say something in general here about the Sylvester and Tweety cartoons: while I can fully understand why they would try to prevent Sylvester from making Tweety a satisfying belch, I am puzzled when humans in the shorts seem shocked or angry that he wants to absorb bird calories into his system-he's a cat and cats try to do that as often as possible. It's like a Frenchman and wine or Garfield and picking on Odie-a natural law of the universe.

Poor Sylvester never has a chance. Tweety had a "no consumption" clause put in his contract. So the park ranger piling on is adding insult to injury. I have a better chance of dating Angelina Jolie than Sylvester has of eating Tweety! Lots of sight gags and fun to watch, but pity the poor cat. Well worth watching and recommended.
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8/10
Fun enough from Sylvester and Tweety
TheLittleSongbird28 October 2010
I personally like the Sylvester and Tweety cartoons, and while not their best Tweet Tweet Tweety is no exception to that. The pacing is a tad uneven though, starting off a little slower than I thought it would. However, the animation particularly of the forest itself is handsomely done, and the music especially Tweety's song and the glissando in the scoring is wonderful. The dialogue is good enough, but the sight gags are even better. While the story is admittedly slight it rarely ceases to be entertaining, and the ending works very well. Sylvester is suitably crafty, and I personally didn't mind Tweety that much though he is more active in other cartoons of his. Mel Blanc is superb again. Overall, this is a fun cartoon without being outstanding. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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"You know dat putty tat gonna hurt hisself if he not more careful?"
slymusic18 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
"Tweet Tweet Tweety" is a fine Tweety/Sylvester cartoon directed by the terrific Friz Freleng. This time around, Tweety and Sylvester have a battle of wits at a trailer park, where no hunting or fishing are allowed.

Most of my favorite moments in this cartoon are musical, thanks to our dear friend Carl W. Stalling. "Ain't She Sweet" accompanies the opening credits and the photography scene. Tweety sings an innocent little song while perched up in a nest on a tree branch, and he suddenly jazzes up the song for a finish. The strings perform a wonderful descending glissando "smear" as Sylvester grows tired and bored from trying to hatch Tweety's egg. Sylvester uses an air pump to try to get Tweety out of a tree branch hole, and Tweety eventually replaces himself with a lit stick of dynamite.

If you're a fan of Tweety and Sylvester, then you'll love "Tweet Tweet Tweety". You can find it on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 2 Disc 3.
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6/10
Sylvester, The Cat, Hatches An Egg
Can you believe it!? In 1951's "Tweet Tweet Tweety" - Sylvester (that sly, old putty-tat) actually goes to the bother of hatching Tweety out of his egg.

And, what does this conniving feline get for his "motherly" duty? Well - It sure isn't a "Thank you" from the quick-thinking little Tweety (who has no intentions of becoming Sylvester's next tasty tidbit).

With this "Looney Tune's" story being set in the National Park Camping Ground - It certainly doesn't take long for Sylvester and Tweety to take on their typical "signature" roles of chaser and the chased (which, once again, results in some very wild and wacky cartoon-ish situations).
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7/10
We now know where the Acme factory is located.
lee_eisenberg29 September 2007
While accompanying his owners to a certain national park, Sylvester finds a nest and decides to wait for the egg to hatch. Guess who comes out! While most of "Tweet Tweet Tweety" has the usual sorts of gags - albeit in a forest setting - there was one thing that I saw that should be of particular interest to Looney Tunes fans: the Acme factory. That fictional corporation from which Wile E. Coyote receives every catch-the-Road-Runner gadget ever conceived of turns out to be located in this national park (we find this out when Sylvester goes there and...well, I'll let you see what happens!).

But even ignoring that entirely, this is a really funny cartoon. True, we know what sorts of things are going to happen, but it's just a pleasure to watch them happen, and to see Tweety turn into a bad-ass (he actually did have kind of a mean streak when you think about it). Worth seeing.
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8/10
One of the best Sylvester & Tweety cartoons
utgard146 October 2015
Wonderful Sylvester and Tweety short, directed by Robert McKimson, that has the duo in a national park with Sylvester up to his usual tricks. Beautifully animated with well-drawn characters and backgrounds. Great colors, too. The waterfall scene alone is among the best animation from any Looney Tunes short I've seen. Some very funny gags and dialogue in this one. Tweety is adorable as ever but also delivers some of the best lines. I realize some fans don't like the "cute" characters, of which Tweety is probably the poster child, but I do as they long as they aren't cloying. One of the best parts of this cartoon is when Tweety sings an amusing variation on his theme song. Great voice work from Mel Blanc. Fun music from Carl Stalling. A really good short that is, for my money, one of Sylvester and Tweety's best.
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8/10
Which came first? The Granny or the Egg?
oscaralbert10 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
In this Tweety Bird origin story, feline hero Syvester climbs up to an eagle's nest in Yellowstone National Park and coins the phrase, "Suffering succotash, an egg!" as he discovers an abandoned green oval there. Since the penguin-colored Super Cat decides to (successfully) hatch this lone orb--which turns out to be a "Tweety Bird"--this chronologically first pairing of Sylvester and Tweety firms up some of the basics about their true relationship for the entire series. First, Hep Cat Sylvester is not so much Tweety's Foster Dad as its food-sourcing farmer. Second, as Sylvester eats the Beta Version Tweety (when dressed up as a photo journalist), Warner Bros. "Merrie Melodies" animators establish the convention of an infinite line of similar looking and sounding Tweeties (not unlike the forebears of McDonald's McNuggets), but the animators dispense with Re-hatching each Tweety individually (again, who'd want to review a life story of more than one McNugget consumed?--Or, as they say, seen--or eaten one, seen them all). Finally, this Sylvester episode proves that the "Granny" character of subsequent Tweets is a Johnny-Come-Lately interloper whose dibs on the yellow canary are superseded by the bird-ranching Sylvester. And as viewers have come to expect from every entry in this series, TWEETY shows other highlights of Sylvester's Super Cat Career, such as his ability to row a boat UP a large dam's spillway (after he rides Old Faithful's spout!).
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2/10
A really dull cartoon in a weak series
phantom_tollbooth1 October 2008
Friz Freleng's 'Tweet Tweet Tweety' is one of the dullest cartoons in a series I don't particularly like, the Sylvester and Tweety shorts. Set in a national forest, 'Tweet Tweet Tweety' proceeds to run through a series of tired gags with only the setting to distinguish them from past usage. There are a few inventive moments here and there, including a highly unusual beginning where Sylvester actually has to hatch Tweety out to get at him. However, once Tweety arrives on the scene the cartoon takes a nosedive. As a big fan of the original Bob Clampett take on Tweety, Freleng's cutesy pie version has always grated on me and in 'Tweet Tweet Tweety' (a title which betrays the dearth of ideas surrounding this project) the little yellow bird is especially obnoxious and irritating. He even manages to spoil an otherwise fine climax in which Sylvester rows up a waterfall with a quip that doesn't even try to be funny. With Freleng's Tweety, the writers obviously wanted to emphasise the cuteness in favour of gags but a big pair of blue eyes is no substitute for a decent wisecrack. The only other noteworthy feature of 'Tweet Tweet Tweety' is a nifty little gag in which Sylvester and Tweety actually turn time backwards and forwards in order to effect what time a geyser will erupt. Unfortunately, the inevitable payoff of the gag is badly directed and utterly anticlimactic. All in all, 'Tweet Tweet Tweety' recalls the levels of tedium reached in the similarly dull 'Bad Ol' Putty Tat', a cartoon which 'Tweet Tweet Tweety' actually reuses footage from.
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4/10
Watchable in spite of Tweety
movieman_kev30 October 2005
Sylvester cat is in a forest park. He finds an egg that he decides to sit on an hatch, but the egg contains one Tweety bird. And the chase is on once more. The poor cat also has to deal with the park ranger. I inward cringe whenever Tweety opens his mouth or especially sings, I have no clue why, I just really don't like the voice. The cartoon is alright I guess, but NOT because of Tweety, but rather in spite of him. And I have to get through a few more Tweety cartoons. Joy *rolls eyes* This animated short can be seen on Disc 3 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 2 and also features an optional Music & effects only track.

My Grade: C
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