Tweety's High Flying Adventure

Tweety's High-Flying Adventure From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Tweety's High-Flying Adventure is a 2000 direct-to-video animated film produced by Tom Minton and James T. Walker, written by Tom Minton, Tim Cahill and Julie McNally, directed by James T. Walker, Karl Toerge and Charles Visser, starring Sylvester and Tweety. It also features Lola Bunny (in a cameo as an anchorwoman) in her only adult appearance outside of Space Jam. The movie is an updated spoof of Jules Verne's Around the World in Eighty Days. It was the first (and, so far, the only) long form animated film featuring Tweety in the lead role. Its original working title was "Around the World in Eighty Puddytats", which remains on the end credit roll as a title of one of its three major songs. Many of the key creative people from the 1995-2000 TV series "The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries" also worked on "Tweety's High-Flying Adventure", which commenced shortly after the series wrapped production in May of 1999. Co-producer Tom Minton instigated the project, which was only the second internally produced direct-to-video animated film done at the Warner Bros. Animation division in Sherman Oaks, California.

Plot (Edit) When Colonel Rimfire announces at the Looney Club about his beliefs that cats are the most intelligent animals (after his many plans were foiled by Cool Cat), Granny, hoping to raise enough money to save a nearby children's park, makes a wager that her Tweety can fly around the world in 80 days, collecting the pawprints of 80 cats in the process. Sylvester, still hoping to make Tweety his personal snack, is incensed at the thought of some other cat getting the little bird first and vows to follow Tweety around the world and catch the canary himself. When he gets really close, Tweety jumps into a boat. With half of his mission complete, he goes into an ancient building. It turns out almost all of them are cats. Getting away safely, Tweety completes his mission, and Granny is able to save the park.

[edit] Characters Here are the Looney Tunes characters in order of appearances in the movie:

Tweety Bird Sylvester Granny Colonel Rimfire Daffy Duck Bugs Bunny Penelope Pussycat Pepé Le Pew Foghorn Leghorn Prissy Henery Hawk Egghead, Jr. Charlie Dog Pete Puma Gossamer Aoogah Hugo, the Abominable Snowman Speedy Gonzales Rocky and Mugsy Hector the Bulldog Hubie and Bertie Hippety Hopper Tasmanian Devil Wile E. Coyote Yosemite Sam Marvin the Martian Lola Bunny Cool Cat The Shropshire Slasher The only three principal Looney Tunes characters absent from the film are Elmer Fudd, Porky Pig, and Road Runner.

[edit] Voice actors Joe Alaskey - Sylvester, Tweety Bird, Colonel Rimfire, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Marvin the Martian, Henery Hawk June Foray - Granny Tress MacNeille - Prissy, Airplane Worker, Queen of England Jim Cummings - Tasmanian Devil, Rocky, Yosemite Sam, Cool Cat, Bandit, Casino Cat, Policeman Jeff Glen Bennett - Casino Cat, Foghorn Leghorn T'Keyah Crystal Keymah - Aoogah (uncredited) Stan Freberg - Pete Puma Kath Soucie - Lola Bunny Julie Bernstein - Additional Voices Steve Bernstein - Additional Voices Elizabeth Lamers - Additional Voices Pat Musick - Additional Voices Rob Paulsen - Sphinx, Ship Crewman, Casino Cat, Additional Voices Frank Welker - Mugsy, Hugo the Abominable Snowman, Hector the Bulldog

[edit] External links Tweety's High-Flying Adventure at the Internet Movie Database