The Commercial Appeal

Story brings Tom and Jerry to big and small screens

- Ed Symkus

Tim Story was enjoying a hot career directing music videos throughout the late-1990s when he took the step up to feature films. He scored with a couple of hits – “Barbershop” and “Taxi.” He met with less box office success when he brought two “Fantastic Four” films to the screen, then had more winners with “Think Like a Man,” “Ride Along,” and their sequels. His terrific 2019 reboot of the “Shaft” series was underappre­ciated, but around the time he was making it, something very different came his way – a script and an offer to direct the Oscar-winning cartoon rivals Tom and Jerry in a feature film that would merge animated and live-action characters (including Chloë Grace Moretz and Michael Peña), and place them all in the midst of contempora­ry Manhattan.

Story, a longtime fan of Hanna-barbera’s Tom and Jerry shorts, jumped at the opportunit­y. He spoke about the film during a Zoom chat from his home in Los Angeles.

Q: You were a kid in the 1970s, watching Tom and Jerry on TV. Who else were you watching back then?

A: Oh, there were so many different cartoons I watched. “The Jetsons,” “The Flintstone­s,” a little bit of “Super Friends,” and everything from “Kimba” to “Popeye.” But I remember that Tom and Jerry were on all the time, every afternoon when I came home from school. I never got sick of them; I was fixated on them.

Q: When you were first asked to do this film, with these iconic characters, were you at all nervous?

A: Sure. I wasn’t having any second thoughts about it, but when you finally say I want to do this, you know that a lot of people are going to have an opinion of how you bring it to life. But I felt comfortabl­e in what these characters were to me. I felt that I had so much love for them that I wouldn’t let the Hanna-barbera world down.

Q: What were the first things you did to prepare for it?

A: I went back and watched some of the old classic cartoons. I even watched a bit of Charlie Chaplin, because I was looking for any inspiratio­n that would allow me to figure out how to get a lot of humor and storytelli­ng with characters that don’t speak.

Q: Part of the reason the old shorts worked so well was the crazy sound effects that accompanie­d the wild action. Was I hearing the actual sounds from the cartoons in your film?

A: Yeah! We used a lot of the original sounds from the cartoons. We got some of Tom’s screams from the archives, and we found some of the actual impacts – of the characters hitting each other. We would sometimes put those sounds into the mix, but also give them a little more beef.

Q: That leads to the question of violence in those cartoons. They were very violent, in a creative way, and your film is, too. In these PC times, did that cause any problems with the studio?

A: No. I remember asking the Warner Bros. folks if they had any reservatio­ns about us taking the violence where we wanted to go. They said no; they said make a Tom and Jerry cartoon. The question I am still getting asked is did you water down the violence? I always say no. We made it a point to stick right to what these characters would do.

Q: There’s also a quick scene near the end, where two cartoon elephants are startled. One says, “OMG.” The other says a slightly muffled, “WTF.” How did you get that one by the censors?

A: (Laughs) We just went for it. Like with all films, we had to go through a ratings board, and our film continued to pass the test. You put it in, and Warner Bros. doesn’t say anything to you. Then you give it to the ratings board, and they don’t say anything. We just wanted to be sure that we made something that spoke to all audiences, and we found that anytime we could wink at that, we made it a point to do so. But I hope we haven’t given any moms and dads a reason to turn off the TV.

Q: What do your own kids think of the film?

A: They’re 16, 14, and 9. My older ones aren’t watching cartoons that much, but my 9-year-old definitely is. I was able to introduce him to Tom and Jerry two years ago when I first got this film. He didn’t know who they were, so I sat him down and let him watch them, and he must have watched seven in a row. He has seen the new film in several stages, and luckily, he got the same thing that I got from them when I was young.

“Tom & Jerry” opens in selected theaters and premieres on HBO Max on Feb. 26.

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? From left, Goldie (in the fish tank), Tom, Chloë Grace Moretz, Michael Peña and Rob Delaney in a scene from the animated/live action film “Tom & Jerry.”
WARNER BROS. PICTURES From left, Goldie (in the fish tank), Tom, Chloë Grace Moretz, Michael Peña and Rob Delaney in a scene from the animated/live action film “Tom & Jerry.”
 ?? DANIEL SMITH ?? Chloë Grace Moretz, left, and director Tim Story on the set of the animated/live-action film “Tom & Jerry.”
DANIEL SMITH Chloë Grace Moretz, left, and director Tim Story on the set of the animated/live-action film “Tom & Jerry.”

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