King-Size Canary: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Angry Guard Dog]]
* [[Angry Guard Dog]]
* [[Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever]]
* [[Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever]]
* [[Born in The Theater]]: The mouse tells the cat that he will save his life. He knows because ''he's seen the cartoon before!''
* [[Born in the Theater]]: The mouse tells the cat that he will save his life. He knows because ''he's seen the cartoon before!''
* [[Canis Major]]
* [[Canis Major]]
* [[Chekhov's Gunman]]: The mouse the cat meets early the in short, who promises to save him later. He does.
* [[Chekhov's Gunman]]: The mouse the cat meets early the in short, who promises to save him later. He does.

Revision as of 16:44, 8 April 2020

Don't let the title card fool you -- the canary does not actually look like this in the cartoon itself.

King-Size Canary is a landmark 1947 Tex Avery cartoon made during his MGM tenure during The Golden Age of Animation, voted no. 10 on The 50 Greatest Cartoons list. This oneshot short is centered around a hungry cat who, in an attempt to get more meat out of a pea size canary snack ("Well... I'm sick."), pours a bottle of Jumbo Gro Plant Growth formula on him-only to make him grow to gargantuan proportions. The tables keep turning and turning as one of the other keeps drinking more of the formula as their battle continues. Obviously, Hilarity Ensues.

The plot was recycled for the Sylvester Cat and Tweety Bird short Hyde and Go Tweet in which Tweety Bird accidentally drank Dr. Jekyll's formula, much to Sylvester's confusion.


Tropes used in King-Size Canary include: