Cats & Dogs

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Unfortuatenly, you don't have a choice on who you root for.

The quintessential Cats Are Mean movie.

The movie opens like a fairly standard comedy. A dog named Buddy chases a cat throughout a small suburb, causing havoc as they go. Things get weird when a truck pulls up in front of Buddy and he is captured by the many cats driving it. As soon as this happens, a call goes out to dogs around the world, letting them all know that their agent has been "cat-napped." So opens Cats & Dogs.

As it turns out, cats and dogs are a lot smarter and better organized than us humans think. Many of the world's dogs are actually members of an international secret organization dedicated to protecting humans from the evil cats. Buddy was on a particularly vital case, protecting the Brody family, while the father of the household finishes his formula to eliminate dog allergies. Obviously, the cats don't want that to happen, and so the Brody family needs constant protection, in the form of a dog agent disguised as the family pet.

The dogs plan to have a trained agent puppy take over Buddy's job, but a slip-up in the replacement of the dogs at the puppy farm causes a young civilian beagle, named Lou, to become the Brody's pet. It's now Lou's job to protect the Brody family from the diabolical machinations of the evil, horrible, unspeakable feline mastermind known as... Mr. Tinkles!

A sequel to the movie was released July of 2010: Cats & Dogs: The Revenge Of Kitty Galore. It increases the James Bond/Spy Film references and spoofs. It also retcons away the innate evilness of felines seen in the first film, establishing that there are heroic cats, they just tend to keep to themselves. Until now...


Tropes used in Cats & Dogs include:
  • Exclusively Evil: Cats in the first film, though this is dropped in the sequel.
  • Always Lawful Good: Dogs
  • Animal Jingoism: Dogs versus cats. Very self explanatory.
  • Animals Lack Attributes: Lou is played by a couple of different beagles. Any scene in which he rolls on his back (particularly if someone is scratching his belly) will be played by a female, who naturally has less in that department. Despite this, Butch's comment on his immaturity is "He's still got his you-know-whats, for cryin' out loud!"
  • Animal Superheroes: Superspies, at the very least.
  • Big Bad: Mr. Tinkles in the first film. While he still appears in the second film, Kitty Galore takes over the role of Big Bad.
  • Big Red Button:
    • You don't just press the big button! It's actually transport to HQ.
    • A big red button appears on the satellite in the sequel. The heroes attempt to press it in an attempt to shut off the machine, but it turns out to be the button that activates the machine. Oops.

Kitty Galore: "Thank you!"

  • Black and White Morality:
    • Played for laughs. Dogs are good, and cats are evil.
    • Subverted in the second film, where it's revealed there's a secret cat organization that protects humans as well as catkind.
  • Butt Monkey:
    • Mr. Tinkles henchman Calico in the first film.
    • Also the unfortunate mouse Kitty Galore keeps as a pet whom she names Scrumptious. She treats the rodent as her own personal plaything, throwing him up in the air repeatedly; squeezing him; and, at one point, pounding on his head thinking that he is a computer mouse.
  • Cats Are Mean:
    • And have been since ancient Egypt.
    • The second film essentially works on subverting this trope by revealing that although some cats are mean, plenty are heroic and care about humans just as much as the dogs.
  • Cat Stereotype: There's a Russian Blue cat who only has a Russian accent but but also acts like a spy movie villain.
  • Diabolical Mastermind: parodied with both Mr. Tinkles and Kitty Galore.
  • Did Not Do the Research:
    • Minor; the Russian cat is not actually a Russian Blue, but a British Shorthair. (Note: The filmmakers preferred that breed's coloration. They had to breed the kitten themselves because they specifically wanted a 9-week-old one.)
    • The below mentioned claim that Australia is the epicentre of the world's dairy production: while Australia has a large cattle industry, the majority of that population are beef cows, rather than dairy cows.
    • Dogs aren't colour-blind. Their sensitivity to colour is extremely limited compared to humans, and they are red-green colour-blind, but they're not as incapable as the film made out.
  • Evil Laugh:
    • Mr. Tinkles. Very often.
    • And Kitty Galore. Also very often (but used effectively to show her madness).
  • Large Ham: Mr. Tinkles.
  • Pun:
  • Right-Hand-Cat:
    • Mr. Tinkles. For bonus points, he's the Big Bad and the cat.
    • Switched around with Kitty Galore, who has a right hand mouse named Scrumptious (albeit unwilling).
  • Shout-Out:
  • Spy Gadgets: A number of them in both films. dog houses are secret bases. Toilets and squirrels are communicators. Collars are actually a multi-purpose Utility Belt. Doggy treats are disguised as bombs. The list goes on and on.
  • Species-Coded for Your Convenience:
    • The dogs are the heroes. The cats are the villains. Simple, no?
    • Somewhat averted in the sequel, but the main villain still happens to be a cat.
  • Suspiciously Specific Denial:
    • "This is your boss. Not a talking cat trying to take over the world."
    • The sequel has a pair of Scottish tabbies, Angus and Duncan, trying to kill Seamus. Angus gets rid of the humans by hacking into the radio and saying, "This is your captain, Angus Mc... uh... Not-a-cat, speaking!"
  • Technicolor Science:
    • The shelves upon shelves of vials and beakers in Professor Brody's basement laboratory.
    • The inside structure of the secret organizations of the cats and dogs in the sequel.
  • World Domination:
    • Mr. Tinkles's ultimate goal.
    • Also the goal of Kitty Galore.

Tropes only in the first film:

Mr. Tinkles: I want you to stay here.
Calico: Why?
Mr. Tinkles: Because I hate you.

Tropes only in Revenge of Kitty Galore:

Tinkles: "Look... I can't help you find other villains all right it's a professional courtesy thing! I'd be blackballed! laughed at! I'd lose my pension! However...I will say this.....A cat's eye...reveals....everything!"
Pigeon: "What? What's that supposed to mean?"
Mr. Tinkles: "It's a riddle, Sherlock?! I was tying to be mysterio - oh, never mind!"

  • Cute Kitten: Catherine's adorable nieces.
  • Demoted to Extra: Mr. Tinkles, the main villain from the first movie, spends most of the time locked up Hannibal Lecter style in Alcatraz's cat prison before making his escape towards the very end. Lou, the beagle from the first movie, is also demoted into a supporting character by making him leader of the doggy spy agency, putting him on the sidelines. Sam gets the worst of them all, appearing for all of 5 seconds and only gets in about one line before walking away to never be seen again.
  • The Dog Bites Back: Galore's right hand mouse, Scrumptious, snaps after so much time as her coddling plaything and releases her from her constraints atop the satellite dish, sending her flying into a cotton candy machine.
  • The Dragon: Paws is definately this for Kitty Galore. He starts off as an Expy of Jaws and at the climax it turns out he's also a kitty version of The Terminator
  • Enemy Mine: Kitty Galore's plot apparently is so evil that cats, dogs, and pigeons team up to take her down.
  • Fatal Flaw:
    • Digg's inability to trust others and follow orders, as well as his extreme hatred towards cats.
    • As is typical of her species, Catherine has a debilitating fear of water. She is frozen with fear when she tries to save Diggs hanging precariously over the edge of a boat in motion, and nearly breaks down when she and Diggs are threatened with drowning. In the end, she overcomes her phobia just in time to save themselves from drowning.
  • Freudian Excuse: Kitty Galore was once a member of MEOWS but one of her missions had her accidently fall into a vat of hair remover, turning her hairless and making her the the butt of jokes of the cat organization as well as being kicked out by her human owners who were disgusted by her appearance (and on Christmas too!). This single event is said to have turned her into one of the most dangerous and evil cats of them all.
  • Hannibal Lecture: Mr. Tinkles reminds Butch that he's still just a field agent, figures out that Diggs was kicked out of the K-9 unit, and implies that Catherine has daddy issues. The bird he just threatened to eat.
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: Kitty Galore is Georgette
  • Interspecies Romance: Implied with Diggs and Catherine, even including an interrupted Anguished Declaration of Love.... well, like.
  • Leeroy Jenkins: Diggs suffers this majorly. Catherine and Butch make a careful plan to sneak up and catch Calico and his pigeon liason, but it gets thrown out the window when Diggs just charged right in due to impatience. His tendency to do things his way without getting permission had cost his team several times because of his inability to follow orders.
  • Jurisdiction Friction: Both MEOWS and DOG is going after Kitty Galore (DOG citing that she's a cat threatening dogs, while MEOWS citing that she's their mess -- that is, their ex-agent), and are unwilling to let the other take over. Resolved by an unprecedented step in the political history of the organisations: Cats & Dogs working together.
  • Keet: Seamus the pigeon.
  • The Other Darrin: Lou, Butch and Calico all have new voice actors. Averted with Mr. Tinkles, Sam and Peek, who have reduced roles but the same voices.
  • Precious Puppies: A brief scene of Lou's kids causing innocent trouble in his office.
  • The Reveal: This page may not make a secret of it, but up until Catherine's interrogation (over twenty minutes into the movie), there's nothing to indicate that Revenge of Kitty Galore hasn't kept up the first movie's Exclusively Evil stance on cats. Then Catherine's collar malfunctions and Butch recognises some of the words heard...
  • Robotic Reveal: Kitty's hechman Paws turns out to be an automaton during the final battle. This is actually a bit weird, since we previously saw him trying to eat a mouse...
  • Sequel Hook:
    • After defeating Kitty Galore, Diggs is called to HQ and is shown a live video showing that Mr. Tinkles has escaped from prison with Calico. Subverted after the credits, when Mr. Tinkles says where he is not knowing that his camera is still on, so the Dogs know where he is and will promptly arrest him again.
    • It is also shown that Diggs, Butch, Catherine, and Seamus are still working together, hinting at another sequel.
  • Too Dumb to Live:
    • Mr. Tinkles henchman Calico is flanderized in the sequel from simply being clumsy and incompetent to "so dumb that when he is cornered by the heroes in a closed room, he releases a trap of piling cat litter before realizing he's not outside."

Pigeon: "I am no longer the dumbest animal in the room!"