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The Cat Came Back is a 1988 Canadian short animated comedy film by Cordell Barker, produced by fellow award-winning animator Richard Condie in Winnipeg for the National Film Board of Canada. It is based on the children's song "The Cat Came Back" by Harry S. Miller. It was in UK theaters alongside the theatrical release of Disney's Roger Rabbit.
A parody of Newsreel filmstrips featuring stories such as the collapse of a spice factory from every employee sneezing at once, Siamese twins being compressed into one single individual, the cartoon duo of Cat and Mouse announcing their retirement, and the sensation of "whacking" (with paddleball toys) takes the world by storm..
First published in the UK in 1981 as A Hundred and One Uses for a Dead Cat, [1] the collection was eventually republished in 20 countries and sold over 2 million copies. [3] It spawned two sequels, 101 More Uses for a Dead Cat and Uses of a Dead Cat in History , as well as calendars featuring the cartoons and even a book in response called The ...
Welcome to Cat Video Fest, which is less a festival than a film — well, a 73-minute medley of cat videos compiled from around the world and screened in more than a hundred movie theaters across ...
Most people who watch cat videos online do it for fun. I do it for a living. And so it was with great interest that I learned of another soul, all the way across the country, who shared my ...
The Cat and the Kit; The Cat Came Back (1936 film) The Cat Came Back (1988 film) Cat City; Cat Feud; A Cat in Paris; The Cat Returns; The Cat That Hated People; The Cat Who Walked by Herself; Cat-Tails for Two; A Cat, a Mouse and a Bell; The Cat's Out; Catnapped! Cats and Bruises; Cats and Dogs (1932 film) Cats and Peachtopia; Cats Don't Dance ...
Francis, an intelligent and cynical cat, moves into a gloomy, dilapidated house with his owner, Gustav Löbel, a romance writer and archeologist. The top floor of the house gives off a mysterious and distinctly chemical odor. During Francis' exploratory tour of the house, he discovers the body of a cat who was killed by a bite to the neck.
Claws for Alarm is a 1954 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Chuck Jones. [2] The short was released on May 22, 1954 and stars Porky Pig and Sylvester. [3]It is the second of three comedy horror-themed cartoons teaming Porky and Sylvester, continuing his non-speaking role as Porky's pet cat in a spooky setting where only Sylvester is aware of the danger the pair are in.