![]() ![]() Ed Wynn - Catstello cries like him on the ladder.Red Skelton's character the "Mean Widdle Kid".Tweety turns over and yells in a very loud and un-Tweety-like voice, to "TURN OUT THOSE LIGHTS!" The cats' eyes, the street light, and the moon all blink out. They approach him, eyes bulging, claws drawn, big teeth exposed. Babbit and Catstello see Tweety on the ground. Tweety tells the air-raid warden "Lights out," and passes by both Babbit and Catstello. Catstello says, "Hey, Babbitt! I'm a Spitfire!" Tweety, mistaking Catstello for a UFO, calls the air-raid warden, causing Catstello to be shot by air-raid warden tanks and fall to the ground, landing flat on Babbit. Finally, Babbit transforms Catstello into an anti-aircraft plane and launches him into the air.Tweety "saves" him by giving Catstello a rope, which is tied to an anvil, which sends the cat crashing really hard into the ground, so hard that it sucks up everything in sight! Catstello falls mid-air, but lands on a wire, which Tweety plays "This little piggy" with Catstello's fingers, without even caring when Catstello constantly yells "BABBIT!" causing him to fall. As Catstello blasts off into the air, Tweety snatches away his apple, eats the worm in it, and tosses the apple away. Next, Babbit plants a bomb right under a demotivated Catstello, who is eating an apple. ![]() Upon encountering Catstello, Tweety starts getting really aggressive, with knocks to the head and a dynamite stick (a more tame version of this gag would later be re-used in " Bad Ol' Putty Tat") Jack-in the box springs: Babbit stuffs Catstello, who is equipped with springs, into a box, causing Catstello to constantly scream "HEY BABBIT!" When Babbit lets him out of the box, Catstello successfully reaches the top of the tree where Tweety lives.When the straightforward approach fails, Babbit then subjects Catstello into doing the following attempts to catch Tweety for food, all in vain: The title is a play on Charles Dickens' 1859 novel A Tale of Two Cities.Ĭatstello hesitates to catch and eat Tweety so that he and Babbit could eat, largely because Catstello is afraid of heights, as well as getting attacked by birds, but Babbit convinces him to do so, since Tweety is only "a tiny little bird", though unknown to them, Tweety is dangerous.Ĭatstello gets height-panic and falls off the ladder. ![]()
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