

#Tom and jerry series ended in full#

Ignoring Jerry's warnings, Tom pushed himself and his finances to the limit and beyond, in futile attempts at winning back the white cat's affections-however, because of his vast wealth, Butch was able to get the white cat much larger and more extravagant versions of the gifts that Tom would get for her. Having seen the white cat for what she was and how she'd made a fool of his best friend, Jerry vainly urged Tom to give up and let her and Butch have each other. However, the white cat ultimately proved herself to be nothing more than some opportunistic gold-digger, as she wound up leaving Tom for her next-door neighbor: a super-rich black tomcat named Butch. Tom and Jerry were once near-inseparable best friends, but then one day, Tom fell head-over-heels in love with a beautiful white female cat, who, in the beginning at least, seemed to reciprocate Tom's feelings for her. Jerry recalls the events leading up to Tom's current state: Jerry believes that "it's better this way, and for the first time since he met her, he will be happy.

Jerry knows that, when he gets home, his other friends will ask him why he didn't even try to stop Tom. Watching from a bridge crossing the tracks overhead, Jerry laments his old friend's current state. This cartoon was released on Novemby Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.Ī depressed Tom sits on the railroad tracks, apparently bent on suicide-by-train. Although, Butch would make another appearance (along with his other alley cat pals Meathead, Topsy, and Lightning) in the Spike and Tyke cartoon Scat Cats before the studio's closure. This cartoon marks the final appearance of Butch in the Tom and Jerry cartoon produced before the MGM cartoon studio shuts down in 1957. As of March 2014, very few airings are known, but it has been shown briefly on Cartoon Network in the USA. However, the short aired for only once on Cartoon Network Southeast Asia in November 2010. Because of this - and Tom and Jerry's implied suicide at the end - this cartoon has rarely been seen on American television, although it has aired once on TNT in the early 1990s and made its rounds on local affiliate channels. Also, unusual for a Tom and Jerry cartoon, while all the others have a comical storyline, this one has a tragic one. Since Jerry narrates through inner monologue, the short does not break the cardinal rule of not having Tom and Jerry physically speaking on screen.

Unusually for a Tom and Jerry short, Jerry speaks, narrating the story in voice-over via Paul Frees. The cartoon was animated by Ed Barge, Irven Spence, Lewis Marshall, and Kenneth Muse, with layouts by Richard Bickenbach and backgrounds by Robert Gentle. Blue Cat Blues is the 103rd one-reel animated Tom and Jerry short, created in 1956, directed and produced by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera with music by Scott Bradley.
