PlatinumRead
Just so...so bad
Pacionsbo
Absolutely Fantastic
Sharkflei
Your blood may run cold, but you now find yourself pinioned to the story.
Michelle Ridley
The movie is wonderful and true, an act of love in all its contradictions and complexity
morrison-dylan-fan
With a poll currently taking place on IMDbs Classic Film board for the best movies from the 1915-1919 era,I began to search online for titles to view,and I was surprised to stumble up on the debut appearance of Felix the Cat,which led to me getting ready to see Felix's first tail.The plot:Promising to keep the mice away from taking all their food & drink,a cat called Master Tom waits until the shadows of his owners are long gone,and then secretly leaves the house for a date with Miss Kitty.Seeing no sign of Tom,the mice decide to come out and make make sure that this time the cat will not get the cream.View on the film:Despite sadly not featuring a score,director Otto Messmer is still able to make the film pop with a tremendous bite,thanks to Messmer giving Felix (here named Master Tom!) a gritty,pulp appearance,with Messmer also skilfully using speech bubbles to give the title an animated comic book atmosphere.Along with the stylish design,Messmer also reveals an excellent,jet-black Comedy streak in the movies screenplay,as Miss Kitty reveals that their date was far from innocent,and Felix/Master Tom dies from a suicide!,which thankfully did not stop Felix from coming back to life.
ccthemovieman-1
This story takes place in "Pussyville." I am not making that up, nor am I touching that line. Similar to Felix The Cat in looks, we have "Master Tom" as the main figure in this story, which has literally no sound nor sound-effects, just title cards, courtesy of "Paramount Magazine" and a few comic-strip balloonsBasically, the story is Master Tom wooing a female. Their "trysting place," as the card puts it, is a garbage can. We also see what happens when "the cat's away," as five mice trash the house. They're funny to watch.Without saying more, the ending of this cartoon is really unexpected. It literally made my jaw drop.Overall, this is extremely primitive and dated but so bizarre that you can't take your eyes off it. It was part of the Popeye The Sailor 1933-1938 DVD set. Look for it under the bonus feature, "From The Vault."
tavm
In what was the earliest appearance of Felix the Cat, Feline Follies, he is called Master Tom and is more cat-like here than in most of his subsequent appearances. In this one, he's a house cat guarding some mice in the kitchen. When he gets away for awhile to rendezvous with his girlfriend, the mice make a mess of the kitchen. He serenades her with his guitar while she dances. Later, some notes appear literally and become wheels for go-carts they ride on. When he comes back and finds what the mice have done, the female head comes and throws him out. He then goes back to his girlfriend and sees other cats in a crowd look interested in her. The cat then goes to a gas site where he finds a hose and commits suicide...Yikes, what a downer beginning for animation's first superstar character! Otto Messmer must have not of thought of long-term commitment when he created his famous feline. Good thing with a more appealing design, and a more lasting name in Felix, this character would eventually take over the silent animation world. So for many Felix enthusiasts out there, this is worth seeing for at least historical interest.
Lupercali
Originally part of an 'issue' of 'Paramount Magazine' which consisted of Bobby Bumps in "Their Master's Voice" (by Earl Hurd), "Feline Follies" and Bud and Susie in "Down the Mississippi" (Frank Moser).This is generally thought to be the first Felix cartoon, though he's called 'Master Tom' at this stage, and bears only a fairly tenuous resemblance to his later appearance. The story is pretty uninteresting. Tom heads off for a rendezvous with his girlfriend, some mice come out while he's away and cause havoc, and he cops hell when he gets back again. There's little of the wit or inventiveness of the later 20's Felix cartoons, though significantly we do see Tom do some trademark Felix things, like pluck question marks out of the air and turn them into go-cart wheels.I find this cartoon interesting because to me it opens up the Messmer/Sullivan debate a little. It's more or less accepted now that Felix is Messmer's creation, but the fact that in this earliest supposed appearance he's called 'Tom' lends some credibility to the argument that Felix was a development of Sullivan's 'Thomas Kat' who debuted in 1917. I suspect the truth is that both guys deserve credit for Felix in one way or another, but what would I know? Anyway, a decent cartoon, and historically important, but not mind-altering.