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  • Granny takes Tweety to the beach where Sylvester is trying (unsuccessfully) to catch a fish. When he spots Tweety, he naturally tries to grab him. But to get to the bird he'll have to battle the tide that keeps coming in and washing him away. Hilarious short with lots of funny gags and lines. Sylvester's failures are so much fun to watch. Love the diving suit bit. Tweety is adorable as ever. Granny steals the show once she shows up in her bathing suit. The music is lively and upbeat. Great voice work from Mel Blanc and Bea Benaderet. It's a very funny cartoon with some really great animation. The colors are beautiful and the characters, backgrounds, and action are all nicely drawn.
  • OK, so we should know by now that in cartoons, predators expend every last bit of energy in their efforts to get their prey but always fail miserably (think Wile E. Coyote going after Road Runner). In "Sandy Claws", Granny and Tweety go to the beach where Sylvester is having an unlucky time fishing. Sure enough, he sees Tweety and decides to eat him, but every effort results in the sorts of things that befall Wile E. Coyote when the latter goes after Road Runner.

    There was, however, one thing that really didn't make sense here. Throughout the cartoon, tsunamis keep swamping the beach. Now, these tsunamis easily dwarf the one that struck the Indian Ocean in 2004. But while Sylvester always gets soaked no matter how high he climbs, Tweety never gets a drop of water on himself. WTF?! Of course, this is a cartoon, so nothing has to make sense. As long as they entertain us, they're doing their job, and this one certainly made me laugh. They keep the focus on Sylvester so that we can see his plans fail miserably (Tweety, in my opinion, was best in his early days: despite his "cute" appearance, he was the cruelest bird whom I've ever seen). Really funny. You can watch it in another language or turn the sound off altogether and still find it hilarious.
  • CinemaSerf9 February 2024
    Nope, nothing to do with Christmas! Today, our suited Granny clearly doesn't feel the heat as she takes "Tweety Pie" to the beach for a day in the sun. Left to sunbathe in his cage, he is spotted by "Sylvester" who is having no luck at all at fishing! Lunch thinks he! No chance thinks his yellow quarry and the antics that ensue see the cat come up with some ingenious plans to catch the birdie, but even the sea itself seems to be conspiring against him! He tries a boat, then a glorified jet-ski, some water balloons - but all he gets is wet and shark bites. When granny reemerges in a striking pink bit of seaside Victoriana, she even tries to help him - but, well, this cat ain't going cut that mustard. Snag is with these is that after a while, I wanted "Sylvester" to get the better of the smart-assed bird and use the feathers as a tooth pick - but, not today!
  • When his owner goes to the beach, Tweety Pie goes along in his cage. Meanwhile, on the pier, Sylvester is having no luck fishing for his dinner. When he spots Tweety he thinks he is in for a free lunch. But when the tide comes in, cutting him off from Tweety's cage, he has to devise some way of staying dry and getting to his quarry.

    It is a testimony to the imagination of the creators of many of the WB cartoons that they basically repeat the tried and tested formula and gags over and over but still (mostly) manage to make them funny and avoid being overly repetitive. That is the case here – basically if you like the Tweety Pie cartoons then you'll like this. The gags are all slapstick and are nothing new, but the setting of the beach is used well to make it feel a bit new.

    Happily Tweety has only limited screentime and the focus of the cartoon is on Sylvester's efforts to get his bird. This works for me as I always found Tweety to be annoying yet the dastardly Sylvester is a good character who is funny and tragic in a way that only Wily E. Coyote can compete with!

    Overall this is nothing frighteningly new but it does use it's location well to alter the old gags and make them feel a little different and still pretty funny. Not a fan of the series but I did enjoy this one.
  • Not one of their best cartoons(Birds Anonymous and Tweety's Circus), and not sure about the Oscar nomination personally, but still pretty good and entertaining. The plot here is formulaic, even for a Sylvester and Tweety cartoon, and sags a little pace wise at times. Most of the gags are very funny but there are a couple that are rather tired and derivative of those from previous outings. As noted already, Tweety's role is limited, for some this may seem like a blessing but in Sandy Claws he has very little to do and none of it is funny and comes across as just a plot device.

    However, Sandy Claws is very well-animated. Loved the sandy beach setting and everything looks smooth and colourful. The music is something that has consistently been never less than great in this series and it is certainly more than great here, the lively rhythms and lush orchestral writing really enhances the action and gives energy and pace to the cartoon. The dialogue, while not the freshest there's been, is witty and raises a smile more than once, Granny's last line is priceless and very apt. Granny is made to great use and more prominently than she usually is, always did like her but felt a lot of times in the Sylvester and Tweety cartoons that she was under-utilised. Once again though Sylvester is the star, he has the bulk of the laughs and makes them funnier than the material deserves perhaps, he is wonderfully crafty and like most Sylvester and Tweety cartoons it's easy to feel sympathy towards him. Bea Benaderet and especially Mel Blanc voice all the characters brilliantly.

    To conclude, pretty good but rather ordinary. Certainly worth watching but not the cat and bird duo at their best. 7/10 Bethany Cox
  • Warning: Spoilers
    . . . in which Sylvester Cat chows down upon a Tweety or Two (there always seem to be plenty more available), this yellow feathered McNugget-sized character was more an example of product placement by McDonald's R & D team than of an animated individual on par with Porky Pig, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, Foghorn Leghorn, Henery Hawk, or even Michigan J. Frog. Since it took decades for McDonalds and Warner Bros. to agree on the latter's slice of the McNugget\Tweety Profit Pie, some of the Tweety Bird episodes--such as SANDY CLAWS--feature minimal interaction between Sylvester and Tweety. In fact, the bite-sized bird remains so out-of-reach here that he and Sylvester might as well be oceans apart. This, no doubt, reflected the state of negotiations between the two corporate giants as SANDY CLAWS was being drawn. Warner's animators might have been holding out for a couple of Big Macs per artist every lunch break in perpetuity, while the Golden Arches folks perhaps were offering only half-priced small fries. At any rate, Sylvester serves as so much collateral damage in SANDY CLAWS.
  • Nominated for an Oscar, this short makes wonderful use of Granny. Check out her "new bikini bathing-suit"! You almost feel sorry for Sylvester through much of this. He really gets ill-treated here. Given that he's a cat, it should hardly be surprising that his interest in Tweety is culinary in nature, after all. If I were him, I think I'd search for safer and easier sustenance than Tweety, though. Great fun. Highly recommended.