[s1e16] Puttin' On The Dog -
The comedy of errors follows Tom as he attempts to navigate the pound on all fours while keeping his "new head" attached. Jerry, ever the mastermind, quickly sees through the disguise and spends the rest of the short making sure the resident dogs—including the iconic —discover the imposter in their midst. Why It Stands Out
Interestingly, composer Scott Bradley utilized Arnold Schönberg's twelve-tone technique for the cartoon's score—marking one of the first times this avant-garde technique was ever used in a film score. [S1E16] Puttin' On The Dog
Sneaking Into the Dog Pound: A Look Back at " Puttin' On The Dog " (1944) The comedy of errors follows Tom as he
This short is a masterclass in the "Ass in a Lion Skin" trope, where Tom’s disguise leads to increasingly absurd slapstick. Sneaking Into the Dog Pound: A Look Back
Many fans consider this a spiritual sequel to The Bodyguard (1944), as it explains why Spike might be locked up in a pound. Production Credits Puttin' on the Dog (Short 1944) - IMDb