Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars

Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars is a 2005 American animated science fiction comedy-adventure film starring the cat-and-mouse duo Tom and Jerry. Produced by Warner Bros. Animation and Turner Entertainment Co., it was the second made-for-video attempt to recapture the style of William Hanna and Joseph Barbera's original film shorts from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. With both the pre-production and post-production processes being based in the United States, it was animated overseas by Filipino-based Toon City in Manila, Philippines.

Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars
DVD cover
Directed byBill Kopp
Produced byTom Minton
Written byBill Kopp
Based onTom and Jerry
by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
Starring
Music byJulie Bernstein
Steven Bernstein
Edited byKen Solomon
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Home Video
Release date
  • January 18, 2005 (2005-01-18)[1]
Running time
74 minutes
CountryUnited States
Philippines
LanguageEnglish

The film was released on DVD and VHS on January 18, 2005, and on Blu-ray on October 16, 2012.[2] Alongside Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry (also written and directed by Bill Kopp), the release of the film coincided with the 65th anniversary of the cat-and-mouse team's debut in 1940.[1] It is Joseph Barbera's first solo work without his partner William Hanna, who died on March 22, 2001.

Plot

Tom (voiced by Bill Kopp) chases Jerry (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) as usual from their house and across town until they arrive at the "International Space Place", where astronauts Buzz Blister (voiced by Jess Harnell) and Biff Buzzard (voiced by Billy West) are heading to Mars. In the process, Tom and Jerry are caught during the speech (first misunderstood as aliens due to Tom getting hit by green paint backstage) and the staff try to capture them, but only Tom is caught and thrown out. During the testing of dehydrated food, Jerry knocks over a cup in the process, resulting in the food going all over the place in an explosion. Soon, the staff tries to catch Jerry, but figuring that only Tom can catch him, they bring him back to the base and give him a mission to eliminate Jerry. During the chase, the duo land onto a rocket ending up at Mars where Tom and Jerry are left behind. A green female alien named Peep (voiced by Kathryn Fiore) along with an alien dog Ubu (voiced by Frank Welker) and two more martians (voiced by Jeff Bennett and Tom Kenny) arrive to which Jerry is then taken to the martians' lair where he is mistaken for the “Great Gloop”. After much calamity and a discovery that Jerry is not the Great Gloop, Tom, Jerry and Peep hijack a flying saucer (UFO) so that they can get back to Earth and warn everyone about a potential attack by the martians. They manage to stop them, but a gigantic orange vacuum cleaner robot named the “Invince-a-tron” eventually arrives on Earth and begins to suck everyone up with its vacuum. Tom, Jerry and Peep ultimately foil the Invince-a-tron by using a bone to get Spike (also voiced by Frank Welker) into his brain and make it malfunction, destroying it.

In the aftermath, Tom and Jerry are rewarded with a Hummer by the U.S. President (also voiced by Jeff Bennett) for saving Earth from being destroyed by the Invince-a-tron. Before they could even drive it, however, they are attacked once again by a newly-repaired Invince-a-tron controlled by Spike, who vows revenge on them for the destruction of his bone. Peep flies back to Earth with the flying saucer and rescues Jerry, but leaves Tom behind to be chased by the Spike-controlled Invince-a-tron. In the epilogue, Biff and Buzz are cleaning the mess as punishment for lying that there is no life on Mars; they soon start to argue and fight about it as a horrified Tom is still being pursued by the Spike-controlled Invince-a-tron into the sunset.

Voice cast

Production

According to Bill Kopp, the film's director, the script was written in 2003;[3] the film was announced by Business Wire on November 22, 2004.[1]

Widescreen

This was the first Tom and Jerry film to be filmed in widescreen and the first one to be filmed in the high-definition format, although the Region 1 DVD and the U.S. version of Boomerang were in full screen (cropping the left and right of the image), though not pan and scan as the camera stays directly in the center of the image. Like television shows filmed in high-definition and other films filmed in high-definition, the monitor the animation team would have worked from would have 16:9 and 4:3 safe areas so that the full screen version would not crop off too much of any important visual elements (such as characters). However, the film is broadcast in widescreen on Cartoon Network in the United States and released in widescreen on the Region A Blu-ray.

Reception

The film received a negative review from Radio Times, which gave the film a two-star review and said "the characters are drawn a little too sharply, and the running time is just too long for the pacing that made the original shorts so perfect".[4] Screen Rant has listed the film as one of the worst Tom and Jerry movies ever made saying "The plot is fairly convoluted with the journey to and the journey from Mars feeling like they could have been made into two separate films which is likely why it received a lower score".[5] Writing in 2016 in the book "Mars in the Movies: A History", Thomas Miller described it as "utterly pointless".[6]

Internationally, the film was also reviewed poorly. The Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet said that "the first five minutes of this movie, in which Tom & Jerry ravage a regular kitchen, are much better than the trip to Mars with all its consequences".[7] The German film review website MDPress gave the film 6/10, criticising the film's lack of logic even in the context of a children's cartoon.[8]

Renee Schonfeld of Common Sense Media gave its only positive review, rating it 3 out of 5 stars and saying "This franchise entry is funnier than some and has a wittier, more well-developed story than most."[9]

Follow-up film

Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry was released on October 11, 2005.

gollark: Yes, since we're on the lobby.
gollark: OR CAN WE?
gollark: Actually, two.
gollark: Also, I found an exploit in `repeat` which crashes it.
gollark: That output, I mean.

References

  1. Warner Home Video (November 22, 2004). "Tom and Jerry's All-New Feature-Length Movie! Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars, Featuring the Voice Talents of Everybody Loves Raymond Star Brad Garrett" (Press release). Business Wire. Retrieved October 5, 2016.
  2. "Tom and Jerry Blast Off to Mars Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. September 13, 2012. Retrieved October 5, 2016.
  3. Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars. DVD/Blu-ray. Warner Home Video, 2005.
  4. Thompson, Rose. "Tom and Jerry Blast Off to Mars". Radio Times. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  5. Olsen, Carly. "The 5 Best Tom & Jerry Films (& The 5 Worst) According To IMDb". Screen Rant. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  6. Miller, Thomas Kent (2016). Mars In The Movies: A History. McFarland. p. 244. ISBN 147662626X. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  7. Wandrup, Fredrik (26 May 2005). "Tom & Jerry - Blast Off To Mars". Dagbladet. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  8. Fankhauser, Philipp (7 September 2005). "Tom und Jerry - Abenteur auf dem Mars". MDPress. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  9. Schonfeld, Renee. "Tom & Jerry: Blast Off to Mars". Common Sense Media. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.