Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats (TV Movie 1988) Poster

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7/10
Better than the 2011 Top Cat movie, but not much....
joebrian558 July 2013
Warning: Spoilers
It's been nearly a year since I wrote a critique of the 2011 film adaptation of Top Cat. I said it was mediocre but I felt there was SOME respect for the original source material... but I'd have to actually go into detail if I wanted to describe how different it was.

Being made by the makers of the original show, you'd expect it to be SOMEWHAT better than the aforementioned film, but not by much.

To start off, the film had better jokes than the 2011 adaptation. At least they kept the quick and witty dialogue aspect of the original series, and I did find myself laughing far more than the OTHER film.

I said before that the 2011 film's story was passable, but now that I think about it, it was actually not that great. Sure, you can argue that Top Cat had stories that were basically repetitive and predictable, but there was at least SOME charm to it, the 2011 film had barely any of that.

Here, though, the plot is basically a rehash of "The Missing Heir" and if you've seen that episode, you can easily tell how it's going to end. But it's like I just said, the show's episodes were often repetitive and predictable... or as Top Cat put it when trying to get Benny down with a trampoline, "This is getting repetitious." Fortunately, the twist ending in this is different than the one in the episode... *SPOILER ALERT!* The lady who wrote the will was not actually dead! *SPOILER ALERT!* Also, I like Top Cat actually teaching kids good morals in that friendship and making someone happy are more important than money... because it totally fits Top Cat's antihero personality and respect (although not a big facet of his personality) for his friends.

...But here's where I think the flaws REALLY show... For example, the film uses pop culture references of the 1980's (when it came out) such as mentioning of Rambo and Magic Johnson. Actually, this is understandable because 1960's humour obviously would've (and still does) meant nothing to kids of the time period. I just felt that it was out of place, but now it doesn't seem so bad.

And then there's the cat-related jokes... sure Top Cat and his friends are obviously cats, but there were virtually no such jokes on the original show. It's also out of place because the original show treated cats as if they were humans and equal to them, almost to the point of not even acknowledging it, the only such cat joke being T.C. and company crowding Dibble out of his bed in the episode "The Long Hot Winter" giving him little place else to sleep, which is often a complaint among cat owners.

Here, they even ACKNOWLEDGE they are cats by going as far as Benny's riddle of "what has four paws, and a tail, and goes meow?"... I know they ARE cats and I know WHAT cats are and stuff... but if the show could treat them like equals to humans without question, why couldn't this? And then there's Kitty Glitter... a lame pun that you can easily assume might lead to a "saying the name wrong" pun, but fortunately, it's only used once by Brain, because he's already dim-witted and it makes perfect sense. Anyways, I found her annoying because she barely did squat compared to anyone else in the film and she has that annoying voice... and on top of that, she's not really worth much anyway.

Oh yeah, and T.C. and his gang rapping actually got on my nerves. I know I said before that modernizing it for the 80's made more sense and that the show itself is already dated, but they didn't have to do that... I found the rap and accompanying visuals practically hard to stomach because I just cannot see one of my favourite cartoon characters doing that... but the 2011 film adaptation did have cellphones, ticket reservations and rude humour unlike this, so it could've been worse.

However, I find the animation to be a somewhat bigger leap from the show's original animation. Hanna-Barbera cartoons from the studio's early years ARE known for their technique of limited animation and their abstract style, which I find appealing even if it's not as detailed as Disney animation. I feel that both the nostalgia factor and the charm and humour of the cartoons were the REAL light at the end of the tunnel. During the 1980's, their animation looked less like it was done in-house on a shoestring budget and more like it was outsourced to parts of Asia and done with more talented animators.

Here, I like the animation because it is fluid and colourful, and clearly showed more movement and personality than in the original, although it is forgivable. Being a TV movie, the animation quality is ALSO excusable.

So... all its flaws aside, it's not a very bad Top Cat film, but not a very good one either, so-so at best, but it's still better than the other Top Cat film by a long shot.
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6/10
Only so-so, Top Cat did deserve better than this
TheLittleSongbird24 June 2017
Top Cat is one of my favourite Hanna-Barbera characters and one of their most iconic, and 'Top Cat' the show was a childhood favourite and still is one of Hanna-Barbera's jewels. Mainly for the witty and very funny humour, its simplicity, the irresistible theme tune, the characters and the voice acting.

So expectations were high somewhat for 'Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats', even with the knowledge that it was basically a made for TV film/special made on a low budget. Expectations that weren't really met but with enough redeeming merits to make a one-time worthwhile watch. It's not among the best of the "Superstars 10" series, a collection of specials/films made during the late 80s featuring Hanna-Barbera stars like Scooby Doo, Yogi Bear, The Flintstones, The Jetsons and Huckleberry Hound. It's also not one of the worst.

'Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats' has a number of strengths. The animation is vibrantly colourful and crisply detailed, not exactly true to the show's animation style but for something not made on a high budget this was pretty good. Most of the energy has a lot of character and energy and fits dynamically. Wonderful to hear a jazzy instrumental version of the theme tune, you really cannot from personal view have a film/special of Top Cat without the theme tune.

Some of the writing entertains, with some amusing wisecracks and in the parts where 'Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats' humour adheres to the style of the original show. Top Cat and the gang are still so much fun to watch and mostly true to personality and the voice acting is very good, it was a masterstroke to bring Arnold Stang back to voice Top Cat and those not the original voice actors are worthy imitators in a good way.

However, too much of the story is pretty weak. It is mostly an episode from the show ("The Missing Heir") extended to feature length. Unfortunately to pad things out 'Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats' is full of scenes that drag on endlessly and scenes and characters that serve no point to the proceedings at all (for example Kitty could have been completely omitted and you wouldn't miss a thing). The clichéd "get rid of the heir" story just complicates things and makes the story feel muddled.

While some of the writing is fine and reminds one nostalgically of the TV show, there are some very out of place and firmly stuck in the 80s culture references, cringe-worthy puns and such that juxtaposed far too much with the parts that had humour that were in the style of the show. Most of the music was fine, but the rapping was assault to the ears and eyes, there may be some bias coming from someone who usually cannot stand rap.

Overall, not bad, with some fun and nostalgia and a great opportunity to see characters one loves, but just so-so due to the weak story, pacing and scenes, humour and characters that added no point and didn't belong. For a show and character as great as Top Cat he deserved better. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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5/10
Copycat
Jlliott12 March 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The film good but you knew when they say a movie based on a TV series is a extend episode that what this is an episode "The Missing Heir"
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4/10
A Poor Shadow of a Great Cartoon
Zantara Xenophobe18 April 2002
Warning: Spoilers
This review contains some SPOILERS

The cartoon series `Top Cat' premiered in 1961, shortly after William Hanna and Joseph Barbera left MGM and created their own company. It was about a group of streetwise alley cats, led by the title character, that liked dreaming up schemes of swindling and putting one over on beat cop Officer Dibble. It was a good show, mostly because of the really clever lines of dialogue that the cats got to say, lines you would miss if you weren't paying enough attention. The only thing I dislike about the show is that I think it dragged because it took the whole half hour for one plot. The show's plots were often simplistic and not worthy of thirty minutes; instead, it would better have served fifteen for each plot. It was still good but, as one viewer put it, was `20 years before its time.' So why was this movie, `Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats,' made at all? Hop into your Wayback Machines and take a trip with me to 1987! The late seventies and early eighties saw a surge of specials and movies starring the famous Warner Brothers characters like Bugs and Daffy. Most of these were good and received a positive response. So leave it to Hanna-Barbera to not miss jumping on the bandwagon and hauling its dusty characters out of the closet. Scooby Doo would get three movies (the first good, the rest bad) before the decade was done. The Jetsons and the Flintstones would both get movies. Even Huckleberry Hound (whom I have always hated) would get one. And of course, there was overrated staple Yogi Bear and a conglomeration of characters that nobody really wanted to see together in a series of (lousy) movies. So even Top Cat got his own movie, which I thought was really great, since the characters have a lot of potential to entertain. Or so I was thinking until about ten minutes into this tragic misfire.

How it could have happened without someone stepping in and putting the brakes to it all I am not sure, but they had the makings of a good show. The most important order being that they brought back Arnold Stang, the original voice of Top Cat. For the rest of the characters, they either got the original vocalists or good imitators. Best of all, the dialogue is pretty swift, full of good wit and subtle one-liners that were on par with the old show. But then comes the plot . . . and what an abomination it is. After some classic lines and humorous moments in the alley, the plot kicks in when Benny saves an old baglady's life. Thing is, she is not a baglady but an eccentric millionaire in disguise, looking for her long-lost niece. A few days later, she dies, and Benny and the gang are called to the mansion in Beverly Hills to hear the reading of the will. In a really bad scene, we find out that the woman left the entire estate to her missing niece, but since she was not there, everything will go to Benny at midnight two days later. Should anything happen to Benny, everything goes to the woman's conniving butler Snerdly and his evil dog Rasputin. Cue the endless, endless, endless array of scenes where Snerdly tries to kill or kidnap Benny. It is all really painful, and you can see every gag coming a mile away. Oh, and there are a few musical interludes where the cats break into song and sing about the movie's plot, just in case the kids get confused. But there is also a really dumb subplot where Snerdly has somehow taken the missing niece away from her aunt and has her working at a car wash. All these scenes just go on and on until the alley cats accidentally stumble upon the niece and decide to do the right thing by getting her to the mansion by the time deadline. Not only is all this boring and unfunny, but it also has fallacies that shouldn't be here, even if it is a movie for kids. After all, the wit and appeal of Top Cat really is more for a aged audience. . . .

How did Snerdly get the niece away from the rich aunt? Why does the niece stay at the carwash on her own accord and where does she actually live?

The cats are very inconsistent, changing their minds as to Snerdly's intentions throughout. It's annoying. Any fool watching knows Snerdly is evil the first time he is on the screen with that evil and obvious look.

The rich woman knows Snerdly is up to no good. So why hasn't she fired him? Why include him as a provision in the will? For that matter, why don't the alley cats just send him packing right away?

What is with that weird moment when Snerdly takes off his glove and reveals an iron hand, which he uses to smash a hold in a wall?

(MAJOR SPOILER ALERT!) In the end, we find out the rich woman did not die, but is disguised as her own lawyer, which makes no sense. Snerdly says he saw her dead at the funeral, but the woman says that it was just someone she hired to take her place. Does that mean she hired a double of herself and BURIED her alive? (END OF MAJOR SPOILER)

Rocketing back to the present in our Wayback Machines, we find this has been the last time Top Cat has surfaced, save some great `Fender Bender 500' shorts played on the delightful show `Wake, Rattle & Roll' that starred R.J. Williams and Avery Schreiber. If you are a fan of the cartoon cat, watch this as a novelty item, but be forewarned it is pitiful after the first ten minutes. Which is pretty sad, since Top Cat deserves so much better than this. Zantara's score: 4 out of 10.
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10/10
The best Top Cat film ever!
gracivasquezruiz23 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
A 1980s animated TV classic starring the coolest alley cats in California. A film about the gang befriending a teenage girl and her aunt.

It is a funny movie, with excellent messages and leading characters with whom you can empathize a lot My favorite part will always be every scene with Amy, the message left by this story was that money doesn't matter, but your friends yes.

That is the story of the 1988 film, "Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats"
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10/10
The best Top Cat film ever.
gracivasquezruiz23 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Warning: SPOILERS.

Hanna-Barbera did a great work on the 1988 animated television classic, Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats. A tale that follows a beautiful 16-year-old teenager, Amy Vandergelt, befriending Top Cat and the gang in her home, Beverly Hills. It is a beautiful jewel to be shown to the world.

My idol from this film is Lilly Moon. Gorgeous is her performance as Amy Vandergelt, the deuteragonist of the movie. I recommend it as a gread classic to enjoy with family and friends.
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