Lighthouse Mouse (1955) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Lights on/Lights out with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
TheLittleSongbird17 August 2015
While I am not the biggest fan overall of the Sylvester/Hippety Hopper series, some of the cartoons are still good. Lighthouse Mouse is not one of their best cartoons, and it was at this point where the series' one-shot concept was starting to wear thin but it is still fun and well-made.

The weak point of the Sylvester/Hippety Hopper cartoons is nearly always the story, and it's no exception in Lighthouse Mouse. The cartoon does start off quite slowly and takes too long to set up, properly coming to life when Sylvester appears, and not much special or inventive is done with the concept of a baby kangaroo being mistaken for a giant mouse so it does feel a little stretched-thin and routine despite how well-made and fun it is. Sylvester's owner is a bland, roughly drawn and annoying character with a stereotypical and overdone-sounding accent, bringing very little different to the long line of owners that treat their pets badly in cartoons (pretty much the only thing that isn't so bad against him is that he isn't sadistically violent), while the mouse (apart from the beginning where do you feel sorry for him) is basically a plot device and does barely anything, to the extent that you sometimes forget that he's even there.

Lighthouse Mouse is animated well though, while it is not the best-looking cartoon in the series there is some lovely dark atmospheric colours as well as some vibrantly bright ones, detailed backgrounds and beautifully and smoothly drawn characters on the whole. Even better is the vibrant and character music score from Milt Franklyn, it fits wonderfully and does add a lot to the action, it's rousing in energy, orchestration is rich and beautiful and rhythmically it's very lively yet dynamic. Love Hippety's hopping theme, which fits so well with his characteristics. While the story isn't the best, it does pick up when Sylvester appears and maintains a lively pace without feeling too repetitive. Lighthouse Mouse is a funny cartoon too, without being one of the funniest of the series. The dialogue is very witty (especially the interplay between Sylvester and the parrot and Sylvester's final line) and the gags are well-timed and range from very amusing to very funny, especially the explosion and Hippety and Sylvester's fight inside the light (the bit before with Hippety and the mouse was also good).

What were even more fun were Sylvester's facial expressions which are priceless (McKimson sure knew how to animate and characterise facial expressions), especially his first sight of Hippety and after the explosion. The parrot doesn't have an awful lot to do but his interplay with Sylvester is still very funny, and while Hippety like the mouse is also a plot device he is cute and amusing and the physical comedy still looks great. Sylvester however steals the show, he has such great comic timing but he is also very easy to root for. Mel Blanc's voice work is excellent as always.

Overall, fun Sylvester and Hippety cartoon but not among the best or funniest of the series. 7/10 Bethany Cox
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Really clever!
JohnHowardReid22 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
CAST: "Sylvester", "Hippety Hopper".

Director: ROBERT McKIMSON. Story: Sid Marcus. Animation: Philip De Lara, Charles McKimson, Herman Cohen, Rod Scribner. Lay-outs: Robert Givens. Backgrounds: Richard H. Thomas. Voice characterizations: Mel Blanc. Music director: Milt Franklyn. Sound effects editor: Treg Brown. Color by Technicolor. Producer: Edward Selzer.

Copyright 1955 by The Vitaphone Corp. A Warner Bros. "Merrie Melodies" cartoon. U.S. release: 12 March 1955. 1 reel. 7 minutes.

COMMENT: "I'm a pussycat, not an electrician!" complains the put-upon Sylvester, who has the job of repairing a lighthouse cable after it has been consistently disconnected by a mouse (whose slumbers the light is disturbing). "I never thought being a pussycat could be so complicated!" our feline is forced to sum up. Not only does he have the mouse to contend with, plus a grumpy lighthouse keeper and his tell-tale parrot, but the shipwrecked Hippety Hopper as well.

Well-drawn, cleverly characterized and most ingeniously plotted, this is a highly entertaining example of the Warner cartoon craftsmen at their best, just at the turn of the changeover to UPA style. That style has influenced the drawing of the keeper here, but otherwise Lighthouse Mouse is commendably very much in the ultra-smooth, classically refined tradition.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"While you sleep that crazy moose is loose in the hoose."
utgard1426 August 2016
Fun Sylvester & Hippety Hopper short from Robert McKimson. In this cartoon, Sylvester is the cat of a lighthouse keeper. When a mouse is messing around with the lighthouse light, it causes a ship to crash into the rocks and drop some crates overboard. Inside one of the crates is Hippety Hopper. When Sylvester is tasked with catching the mouse responsible for all the trouble, well...you know how this is going to go.

One of the more unique Hopper cartoons. Most were pretty similar, and this one does follow the patterns of the series, but the lighthouse setting mixes it up some. Also, I've always had a thing for lighthouses so this one has a little added appeal for me. The animation is beautiful with rich colors and well-drawn characters and backgrounds. The music and voice work are great. There are several very funny bits with Sylvester reacting to Hopper with disbelief ("It's stigmatism! That's what it is!"). All in all, it's a fun cartoon. I could do without the corny parrot but otherwise it's good.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Terrorists often have been compared to rodents . . .
oscaralbert21 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . but in this Warner Bros.' animated "Merrie Melodies" short, one of them is literally such a critter. The other is a marsupial named "Hippety Hopper," waging a personal campaign against the exploitation of zoo animals. Able to speak "rodent" (just as Harry Potter's fluent in the serpentine Parseltongue language), Master Hopper enlists a very dexterous mouse in his Cause, which employs the tactic of disabling lighthouses in shipping lanes as part of a strategy to eliminate the world's import\export business and keep all wild animals on their home continents (along with foreign oil, Swiss cheese, and Chinese handcuffs). Hands-off "mouser" Sylvester--who renounces his natural rodent-killing gifts in favor of cheap, man-made spring traps--doubles as Lighthouse Island's electrician. Though this entire quick flick lasts less than 393 seconds (well under seven minutes, even INCLUDING 42 seconds of opening and closing credits), Polly (the lighthouse keeper's parrot) counts off 70,843 ticks (which SHOULD take it more than 19 hours!), proving the adage, "Time flies when you're having fun."
2 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
obviously, lighthouses have gone out of style
lee_eisenberg28 October 2007
I've long wondered why Sylvester has to suffer so in the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons. Whatever the reason, he sure gets a whipping in Robert McKimson's "Lighthouse Mouse", as a sleep-deprived rodent and Hippety Hopper join forces to keep the light turned off. And then the lighthouse owner gets on Sylvester's case. Go figure! Yes, Sylvester always gets the short end of the stick, but these cartoons always consist of good taste. Whether up against Tweety, Speedy Gonzales or Hippety Hopper, Sylvester always provides his fair share of laughs. I hope that Warner Bros. starts releasing Hippety Hopper's cartoons on DVD sooner or later.

I guess that this cartoon also functions as a last look at lighthouses. With the sophisticated technology that ships now have, lighthouses have long since become obsolete.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed