LastingAware
The greatest movie ever!
Hulkeasexo
it is the rare 'crazy' movie that actually has something to say.
Deanna
There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Guillelmina
The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.
Edgar Allan Pooh
. . . for we Americans of (The Then) Far Future, their rightly famed Animated Shorts Seers division (aka, The Looney Tuners) once again outdo themselves (as well as any rhyming pronouncements that over-rated Bozo from Yesteryear, Nostradamus, ever attempted) with this brief cartoon from 1954, DR. JERKYL'S HIDE. Many viewers have wondered WHY this particular Sylvester Cat outing features a couple of mutts speaking with foreign accents. There are several explanations for this, most of which only have made sense to the casual animation fan during the past few historic months. As DR. JERKYL'S HIDE screens, Sylvester is alternately his normal self and a scary monster. The only way the Looney Tuners could have made it more clear to whom in Today's news they are clairvoyantly referring is to show Sylvester typing out irrational late-night Tweets with his diminutive digits. Certainly Warner is warning the USA of a self-destructive so-called political party which increasingly insists upon installing demented geriatric geezers suffering from the middle or late stages of Alzheimer's Disease atop the Button of America's nuclear arsenal. No wonder the Looney Tune Folks are depicting the other characters in this DR. JERKYL'S HIDE tale as foreigners. During recent days the International Community has been increasingly scared to death by the Real Life Symptoms of a Coming Apocalyptic Meltdown, as first forecast by this Sylvester episode.
TheLittleSongbird
Despite the high IMDb rating and the two previous positive reviews, Dr. Jerkyl's Hide is very rarely shown and is hardly mentioned when talking about great Looney Tunes. It is a shame, because while it is not one of the best Looney Tunes' cartoons or among Sylvester's greatest ever it has very little wrong with it and is deserving of more praise.As it is with most Looney Tunes cartoons, Dr. Jerkyl's Hide is very nicely animated, perhaps among Fritz Freleng's most visually beautiful cartoons of the early 50s. The colours are rich and vibrant, all three characters are well drawn and the backgrounds are fluid and have lots of detail to admire. Some of the animation is also imaginative, Sylvester in his 'evil' guise is pretty frightening but it's the physical comedy and the expressions of Alfie where the cartoon scores highly in this regard. Carl Stalling's music as ever is outstanding, his music is consistently of a very high standard and are often among the highlights of their cartoons. And this is demonstrated wonderfully in the orchestration, which is lush and clever and the rhythms, which are lively and characterful, it matching with everything seamlessly and even adding to the enjoyment.While Dr. Jerkyl's Hide is not exactly new concept-wise (Looney Tunes have explored this concept quite a few times), the interplay between the two dogs and the visuals make it seem fresh enough and it never feels repetitive. Watching the cartoon for the first time I did not see the last two minutes coming, and the pacing is the opposite of tired, the cartoon literally whizzing by. The script is razor sharp and hilariously witty, especially between Alfie and Chester, and there are some very cleverly constructed gags, the physical comedy between Sylvester and Alfie and the last two minutes being particularly good. Sylvester does not have an awful lot to do despite being the star, other than showing this Jekyll and Hyde personality, but he is amusing enough and works really well with Chester and especially Alfie.Chester has some hilarious dialogue that is voiced with gleeful relish by Stan Freberg, but the standout character here for me is Alfie, who bags most of the laughs and he is also the character that you feel sorry for. The voice acting from Mel Blanc for both Sylvester and Alfie is terrific, as ever he excels in voicing more than one character, making them individual and giving them completely different intonations and personalities from one another. In conclusion, a very good and underrated cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
Lee Eisenberg
While Sylvester usually is lovable sap getting his comeuppances for chasing Tweety or Speedy, he occasionally got used in different kinds of roles, namely when he co-starred with dogs Spike and Chester (Spike is named Alfie in "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide"). In these cartoons, the big, menacing Spike would go try to make mincemeat out of Sylvester, but something would always happen to make Spike believe that Sylvester was some sort of monster...at which point Sylvester would show up and puny Chester would clobber him.So it goes here, in which Sylvester runs into Dr. Jerkyl's laboratory, drinks a certain potion, and...well, you can probably guess what happens. It's a quite enjoyable cartoon. Mel Blanc and Stan Freberg were always a cool voice combo.
dispet
this is among my all time favourite looney tunes. the characters of the two dogs in it are hilarious and sylvester is great in a more catty role than usual. when he transforms into the giant monster cat and beats the you know what out of the bulldog, hahaha, it is so funny and the look on the little dogs face everytime it happens, this is what cartoon comedy is all about.it is to bad we will never see cartoons like this again, instead we have to put up with animaniacs and all this speilberg produced wannabe bullsh*t. Well at least we can always return to the classics like these. thank god for mel blanc and croonies