Tom and Jerry:
The Complete CinemaScope Collection
Hanna-Barbera
175 min. / Technicolor / 2.35:1 / 1080p / DTS-HD MA English 2.0 Mono/Stereo
Heading into this review, let me share the salient fact that I’m a pushover for classic cartoons. There are many I love, there are some I find passably entertaining, and there are plenty that run out of steam very early in the series (I’m lookin’ at YOU, Casper) but if they’re on home media and they were produced anywhere before the mid-1960s, I want ‘em and I watch ‘em and I have fun with 'em.
That said, Tom & Jerry have never really been favorites of mine; I don’t have an explanation of why (I like Herman & Katnip well enough, after all) but that has never stopped me from watching their cartoons given the chance. There was an earlier set that had the first group of T&J, and a planned Vol. 2 that seems to have been cancelled at the last minute, and now all these years later we get this final batch of their theatrical shorts, all in beautiful widescreen 2.35:1 with brilliant picture and sound. As usual, there’s an “Intended for the Adult Collector” disclaimer on the back of the box, and also as usual, I just chortle and show the darn things to any kids who happen to be around. I get awfully annoyed at “grownups” who act fussy about these cartoons; it’s nice that we can enjoy them, but if a little kid can watch and laugh at them, I really don’t care what I or one of the other so-called adults in the room thinks, particulary the parsnickety ones.
Enough of the set up! There are no less than 23 CinemaScope Tom & Jerry cartoons here, produced from the mid-to-late 1950s so you won’t find the lush backgrounds of the best 1940s cartoons, and no, these are not the best of Tom & Jerry, but several of them are dazzling to look at with today’s modern wide TV screens, and the well-mixed sound (some of the cartoons are in stereo) booms around the room. Thankfully, there are only a few wince-inducing stinkers (from an adult standpoint) in the group, and if you know how I feel about suicidal animals in cartoons or Our Gang shorts, you know which ones I mean. There are several cartoons in the group that are part of a series with Tom & Jerry as Musketeers, and several very cute cartoons with a little duck. Probably my favorite in the whole set is That’s My Mommy (1955); the little duck thinks Tom is his mom and follows him around affectionately while Tom guiltlessly tries to figure out a way to eat him. The cartoon manages to be both hilarious AND cute. Other than that, you’ll find several cartoons with Spike the Bulldog, a troublesome baby, and remakes of older cartoons (it’s hard for a Tom & Jerry NOT to be familiar, it’s not like they have a plethora of plots from which to choose).
There’s my critique, folks. The cartoons are what they are, they’re cute and often funny, the widescreen image and HD sound are wonderful, and you get three bonus CinemaScope cartoons, two with Spike and his son Tyke and also the perennial holiday favorite Good Will To Men. These are some of the best looking 1950s cartoons I’ve ever seen, and they make a great intro before watching a Technicolor MGM musical from back in the day. More than two dozen cartoons! What are you waiting for?!?!