Feline Follies

1919
6.1| 0h4m| en
Details

The first appearance of Felix the Cat (as Master Tom). Tom falls in love with a lady cat, and while they're out courting at night, the mice ransack the kitchen.

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Paramount

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Reviews

SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
Micransix Crappy film
Dynamixor The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de) "Feline Follies" is a 1919 4-minute black-and-white cartoon about Felix the cat. American director Otto Messmes made this one almost 100 years ago and he went one to become one of the defining animation filmmakers in the 1920s before the real boom of cartoons started a decade later. He is probably not a name to many anymore today, but the Animation Oscars Annie Awards honored him with their most precious award.The animation in this cartoon here is still really basic, that's why I cannot really recommend it, but the jokes are all fine and were reused in much more known films in decades afterward, such as the cat that is blamed for the chaos the mice made, or the mice having a party when the cat isn't home or people in the neighborhood complaining about cat noise. A solid watch all in all I guess, but really only for people who like old films.
MartinHafer "Feline Follies" is the first Felix the Cat cartoon, though it isn't exactly the Felix that was popular through the 1920s. The character looks similar and it was brought to the public by the same folks who made the Felix cartoons, though he is more like a real cat in this cartoon and they call him 'Master Tom'.The film begins with Tom going out for a walk and meeting a cute white female cat. They spend time together--much to the annoyance of everyone but the mice! And, in the end, the ending (which I won't divulge) is very, very dark--and the sort of cartoon parents probably would NOT let their kids see! So dark that I was actually pretty shocked.While this cartoon is much too normal for my tastes (except for the ending), it is historically important and worth a look if you are an aficionado of the history of cartoons.
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.