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Sylvester finally eats Tweety and kills him at last, but he's thrown in jail for 100 days and the show is strictly canceled until further notice resulting in the world crashing down on him by an angry mob of thousands of furious people, telling and reminding him that he's a naughty, black-hearted cannibal. Tweety and Sylvester are doomed.
On September 9, 2008, Warner Home Video released The Complete First Season of The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries on DVD in Region 1. This release comes exactly 13 years since the premiere of the show. No further DVD releases have been announced. Three episodes from season 1 are included as bonus features in the direct-to-video film King Tweety. [8]
Tweet Tweet Tweety (1951): The sequence where Sylvester swings towards Tweety on a balcony while barely avoiding a construction pillar several times until he eventually got flattened. A Pizza Tweety Pie (1958): The final sequence where Sylvester eats spaghetti in the restaurant after he vows to keep birds off his dietary list.
Final appearance of Tweety; Only Sylvester cartoon directed by Gerry Chiniquy; Final Sylvester cartoon produced by Warner Bros. Cartoons; 99 Road to Andalay: December 26 MM Friz Freleng and Hawley Pratt (co-director) Blu-Ray: Looney Tunes Collector's Choice: Volume 4; with Speedy Gonzales; First Sylvester cartoon produced by DePatie–Freleng ...
Originally running for 90 minutes in length, the first four episodes featured Looney Tunes shorts with newly made title cards, as well as short segments originally featured on Animaniacs, The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries, Pinky and the Brain, and Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain.
The pair have mainly made cameos in modern Warner Bros. animated projects, their most major appearance being in "Ice Cat-Pades", a segment of the 1995–2000 series The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries. They both are also playable characters in the video game Looney Tunes: World of Mayhem. [8] [9]
Cool Cat reappeared later in The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries TV series, for which he was voiced by Joe Alaskey. He made brief cameos in most, if not all of the episodes, appearing on posters in the background, walking by in street scenes, etc.
98 episodes: 3 Amblin Television: 2 Taz-Mania: 1991–95 Fox Kids 65 episodes 4 3 The Plucky Duck Show: 1992 13 episodes 1 Amblin Television Spin-off of Tiny Toon Adventures. 4 The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries: 1995–2002 Kids' WB (1995–2000) Cartoon Network (2002) 52 episodes: 5 5 Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain: 1998–99 Kids' WB 13 episodes 1 ...