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Feline Frame-Up

Feline Frame-Up (1954)

February. 13,1954
|
7.5
|
NR
| Animation Comedy Family

After Claude frames Marc Antony, making it look like the bulldog ate the kitty, Marc must try various methods of getting back at Claude from outside the yard.

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Noutions
1954/02/13

Good movie, but best of all time? Hardly . . .

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LouHomey
1954/02/14

From my favorite movies..

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Tacticalin
1954/02/15

An absolute waste of money

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Twilightfa
1954/02/16

Watch something else. There are very few redeeming qualities to this film.

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Edgar Allan Pooh
1954/02/17

. . . this androgynous feline becomes a dead ringer for Crooked Hillary. Of course, this is no accident, because Warner Bros.' uncannily accurate Looney Tunes prognosticators absolutely loved to churn out episodes giving blow-by-blow accounts of the (then upcoming) 2016 U.S. Presidential Election Campaign. In FELINE FRAME-UP, Claude is the feline doing the framing up. Bulldog Marc Anthony represents Rugged American He-Men, exemplified by Leader Trump. Their bone of contention here is a kitten actually named "Pussyfoot" (Believe it Or Not!--you can check the cast credits at this site). Claude fiendishly slanders, libels, and otherwise besmirches Marc again and again, and Harriet's husband--Marc's owner (representing our U.S. News Media)--falls for these crooked lies hook, line, and stinker. Media Man kicks Marc beyond the pale of his Homeland Security nearly a dozen times, before the powerful pooch is able to obtain a signed confession from Crooked Claude about all of "his" nefarious schemes to rig the election for Pet Of The Upper Stairs (POTUS) through allegations of improper Pussyfooting. Hopefully, Leader Trump can be as successful as Marc Anthony in getting the goods on Today's Crooked Feline.

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utgard14
1954/02/18

Great Chuck Jones short starring lesser-known Looney Tunes characters Claude Cat and bulldog Marc Antony. It's the third short featuring the two fighting over a little kitten called Pussyfoot. Claude pushes the kitten around and Marc Antony beats him up in return, only to be scolded by their master. So Claude gets Marc Antony kicked out of the house but that doesn't stop the bulldog from finding ways to get at him. What a fun cartoon. The animation is lovely with bright colors and well-drawn characters and backgrounds. The music is lively and whimsical. The gags are cleverly done and very funny. It's an excellent cartoon that I definitely recommend you take a look at. These characters may not be among the more famous ones but they work together well. If that final line doesn't make you laugh, nothing will.

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Robert Reynolds
1954/02/19

This is my favorite of the shorts starring Marc Anthony, though one of the others, Cat Feud, is a better cartoon. Claude Cat is thoroughly unlikeable in this one. He's deceitful, disgraceful and devious and those are his good qualities! Marc Anthony (clearly a dog's equivalent to Prince Valiant) wins out for the cause and for Truth, Justice and the American Way (oops, wrong hero) and the dim bulb that is the human "master" finally realizes that Claude's been playing him like a pipe organ in church. Marc Anthony's final ruse to get inside is priceless, as are Claude's facial expressions as the plot unfolds. The ending is marvelous and Claude's exit line is perfect. Well worth tracking down and watching. Most recommended.

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LanceManley
1954/02/20

Warning *Minor Spoilers*Not the genius that was Feed the Kitty but still an excellent cartoon.Claude's spiteful teasing of Mark Anthony through the window is pants-wettingly hysterical and is impossibly made even funnier when the dog figures out how to get his own back.Mark Anthony's inventiveness at getting back into the house and his fear when his master catches him are wonderfully done and the facial expressions are again superlative.Only black mark is that Pussyfoot is limited to a cameo in this one.

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