VeteranLight
I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.
ThedevilChoose
When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.
Voxitype
Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.
Neive Bellamy
Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
BA_Harrison
I've reached that stage in Tom and Jerry's filmography where every other cartoon seems to have a cute supporting character, whether it be that irritating duckling Quacker, Spike's son Tyke, or, as in the case of Touché, Pussy Cat!, the saccharine Nibbles (or is it Tuffy?). Since I really don't like these characters, I'm finding it tough going
Here, the little, grey, diaper-wearing mouse hopes to become a mouseketeer and so visits Jerry for training. After several mishaps, Jerry is ready to send his new student packing, but when Nibbles steps in and saves Jerry from swordsman Tom, Jerry has a change of heart and makes the little mouse a fully fledged mouseketeer.While the brief sword-fighting action between Tom and Jerry is a lot of fun, the over-sweet grey mouse (speaking French) makes it all incredibly cloying.
TheLittleSongbird
This is one of my personal favourites featuring Jerry as one of the Two Mouseketeers. It is predictable at times, but it is cute and a lot of fun. The animation is detailed, colourful and expressive, and the music is rousing enough for Tom and Jerry, just how I like it. The sight gags are hilarious, and come at a breakneck pace, and the sword play takes me back to the days of Errol Flynn and Tyrone Power and other swashbuckling legends. Tom and Jerry are both great, but Tuffy is absolutely adorable.Overall, this is a wonderful Tom and Jerry cartoon, predictable it is, but it is entertaining as well. 9/10 Bethany Cox
MartinHafer
While I am a huge fan of MGM cartoons, in my opinion, there were two things that made them not as successful as the Looney Toons cartoons. First, in a cost-cutting move, MGM took a great quality animation studio and began producing cheaper looking animation starting about 1954. Ultimately, the jaded studio was so cost-conscious that they later fired all their American animators and had the films made in Czechoslovakia--where no one had even seen one of their cartoons! Second, while most people love the violent and over the top antics in the cartoons, MGM also made quite a few cute cartoons that alienated some of the viewers. I definitely dislike the cartoons featuring Jerry's friends, the duck or the little gray mouse, as they are meant to appeal mostly to little kids but adults may find them way too saccharine.This cartoon is another Mouseketeer toon. This time, Jerry is saddled with trying to make the cutesy gray mouse a swordsman in 17th century France. But unfortunately, the little guy stinks...that is until he ultimately (and predictably) proves himself. Ho-hum.
Antzy88
Tuffy arrives in Paris hoping to join Jerry's band of Mouseketeers. Unfortunately, certain things happen that make Jerry question Tuffy's potential, until Tom, a cardinal's guard, bursts onto the scene... This was the second of four cartoons that featured Tom as a cardinal's guard and Jerry and Tuffy as Mouseketeers, and is very enjoyable -- but isn't it peculiar how this cartoon was made AFTER 'The Two Mouseketeers'? This cartoon was nominated for an Academy Award and was the last of the Tom & Jerry series to achieve such a nomination.