Cat, Dog & Co. (1929) Poster

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8/10
Flea rights activists
huboon1 June 2003
Farina, Joe, and Harry are led astray when their dog-powered go-karts try to follow a cat up a tree. Hedda Hopper, president of the "Be Kind to Animals Society," lectures them to tears and they become animal rights activists. Joe refuses to kill a flea that keeps biting him (because fleas have souls, too). Wheezer dreams he is standing trial-- with a judge and jury composed entirely of animals.

This was one of the last of the "Our Gang" silent shorts. Great stuff.
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8/10
Imaginative and fun short
kpetnews13 March 2017
The Gang, having turned their dogs into car engines that chase cats up trees, gets a talking-to from the head of the Be Kind to Animals Society (played by future gossip columnist Hedda Hopper!). She seems to have the magic touch, for Harry, Joe and Farina immediately decide to become animal rights activists to the extreme. Joe even castigates Mary and Jean for trying to kill a flea!

Wheezer, meanwhile, is abusing animals right and left until Joe asks him how he'd like it if he were small and the tortured chickens were huge. This leads Wheezer to dream of his being on trial, where animals are the judges. The prosecuting attorney monkey leads the jury through Wheezer's transgressions, and the ultimate verdict is for him to be devoured by the jury! When he wakes up, he immediately shares the gang's activist fervor and starts releasing animals left and right, leading to the usual silent film shenanigans.

A fun short, the dream sequence alone is worth the price of admission, though the use of real (and rather disinterested-looking) animals hampers the effect a bit, though the scene where the chickens try to "devour" Wheezer is rather visceral for a silent comedy! Two other problems: the kids seem to rely on goofy double-takes a little too often, and the bit where the cartoon flea "adopts" Joe wears out its welcome over the course of the short. (I've seen enough of Joe Cobb's left knee to last a lifetime.). But the wackiness of the animals running riot over the city is an appropriate climax to the short.
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8/10
Cat, Dog, & Co. was another funny "Our Gang" effort
tavm7 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This Hal Roach comedy short, Cat, Dog, & Co., is the eighty-seventh in the "Our Gang/Little Rascals" series. It's also the next to last silent one. The beginning H. M. Walker inter-title reads, "Be kind to all animals-Even an oyster appreciates sympathy." As Joe, Harry, and Farina race their kiddie cars, which are all propelled by a pulling dog under each one, a lady snitch tells them she's notified the society about this and the cat they chase up a tree. The Mrs. President of the Be Kind to Animals Society (Hedda Hopper) convinces all three to show compassion to every living creature. Joe first demonstrates this newfound lesson when, after seeing Jean and Mary Ann attempt to step on fleas that bother Pete the Pup, tells them not to hurt even the smallest living thing. One of them (in animated form) then says, "Hooray! A friend! I'll stick to him!" which he does to Joe throughout the short in constant irritation. Then Weezer gets a talking to after trying to chop a chicken's head but it takes a dream in which he's being tried before a jury of giant poultry with a prosecuting monkey and an owl judge he previously threw things at to convince him. So the gang frees dogs, rabbits, and mice to the consternation of various passersby as they twitch and grimace at every turn before the policeman tells them all to put them back in. And then there's Pete with the flea problem again...Another funny "Our Gang" short that milks as much laughs as possible out of the "Be Kind to Animals" theme. Highlights are Weezer's dream trial especially when one giant chicken pecks him on the head and the nightmarish ending, before he wakes up, as they all try to devour him! That sequence, as well as the animated flea that also was in an earlier "Our Gang" short-Thundering Fleas, was the work of Roy Seawright whose subsequent work would include the invisibility effects in Roach's "Topper" series and who would then become an associate of animation director Tex Avery. About Ms. Hopper, she would eventually become a famous Hollywood gossip columnist that occasionally printed "Our Gang" items, especially about Farina. One more note: while silent, Cat, Dog, & Co, did have synchronized music score and sound effects (like dogs barking or chickens clucking), originally on disc only, that was pretty effective here.
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8/10
Our Gang goes all PETA.
planktonrules31 August 2018
When the story begins, the kids are using dogs to power their cars. The dogs seem to be happy doing this, but soon a meddling biddy castigates the kids for being cruel to animals. Soon, the local leader of the Be Kind to Animals Society shows up and she nicely explains to the kids why they need to treat animals better. She deputizes them and soon the kids are running about town causing all sorts of mischief...all in the name of helping animals.

The best part of this short is Wheezer's weird dream where he's on trial in an animal court for being cruel to them. The sets and what happens are truly bizarre...and funny. As for the rest, it's about what you'd expect if you love the series.
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