Shutter Bugged Cat (Tom and Jerry)

Shutter Bugged Cat is a 1967 Tom and Jerry cartoon directed by Tom Ray.

Plot
Tom watches clips of him attempting to catch Jerry.

Bad Qualities

 * 1) It's a clip show of the Chuck Jones era of Tom and Jerry as it reuses footage from "Part-Time Pal", "The Yankee Doodle Mouse", "Nit-Witty Kitty", "Johann Mouse", "Heavenly Puss" and "Designs on Jerry". Apparently, the same thing applies to "Matinee Mouse".
 * 2) Most of the shorts rely on old footage rather than new clips.
 * 3) The classic shorts themselves look like stock footage with filters applied.
 * 4) Plot hole: The inclusion of the scene from "Heavenly Puss" where Tom gets hit by the piano is confusing since said scene from that episode is all part of a bad dream Tom had and therefore never actually happened, so how did Tom even film that "flashback" to begin with?
 * 5) Bad and recycled ending: Tom nails Jerry's mouse hole shut, and decides to make a mouse trap to catch Jerry (using footage from the 1955 short Designs on Jerry). Jerry gets out of his mouse hole and finds the trap. He modifies a measurement on the blueprints in order again to make the trap fail (like he did in Designs on Jerry). The trap is set, but the safe contraption (a part of the trap meant to get him) hits Tom instead. Later, Jerry films Tom ripping the blueprints he used for the mousetrap.
 * 6) Just like "Matinee Mouse" released the previous year, since both William Hanna and Joseph Barbera by that time has been long gone from MGM (having left the studio in 1957 following the MGM cartoon studio's shutdown), this cartoon credits both their names as directors despite William Hanna and Joseph Barbera having absolutely no involvement in this cartoon, hence tainting Hanna and Barbera's reputation in the process.

Good Qualities

 * 1) Good music by Dean Elliott.
 * 2) Like "Matinee Mouse", this episode still has some new footage.
 * 3) Tom and Jerry's designs look closely to their originals.
 * 4) Interesting concept of this short being based the Wile E Coyote and Roadrunner short "Roadrunner a Go-Go".

Trivia

 * This episode is loosely based on the Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner Cartoon "Roadrunner a Go-Go" as both feature reused footages from the old cartoons, ending up with the same result.