by Linda Kay
Produced by: Richard Taylor Cartoons
This review contains some cartoon Kitty Carnage Warnings!
Cat Out of the Bag Alert! This review contains some spoilers for these short films!
Synopsis: A boy named Tony and his pet cat Charley (voiced by Kenny Everett) learn valuable safety lessons in this series of British public information films aimed at children.
Cartoon Cat: This series of short films, created by using paper cut outs, traumatized a generation of children with their cutesy yet terrifying messages of safety in which Tony translates Charley’s bizarre meowing to give an important message, always starting with the words, “Charley says.” In the first film, Falling in the Water, Charley and Tony are with Tony’s father who is fishing in a river. The pair become bored and start playing in puddles some distance away.

Charley ends up falling in the water and nearly drowns.


In the Kitchen finds Charley sniffing around the stove where mother has several pots and pans full of food.

The hot steam from one pan nearly burns Charley, who is then splattered with the grease of cooking sausages.

Charley joins Tony and meows in his erratic manner, which Tony explains to the viewing audience means to stay away from stoves.

In the next short, Matches, Tony and Charley are playing with blocks and Tony tops their structure off with a box of matches.

Charley lunges across the blocks and the matches fall out of the box, but Charley stops Tony from messing with them.


Next is Mummy Should Know in which Tony and Charley are playing outside when they are asked by their friends to join them for a picnic.

Charley reminds Tony he should ask his mother, but she is talking with the milkman at the door.

By the time Tony’s mother gives her permission the friends have left. The mother assures Tony and Charley they did the right thing and take them on a picnic anyway.


The most disturbing of the shorts, Charley’s Tea Party, has Charley and Tony running back and forth past a table set for tea.

Charley smells some fish on top of the table and pulls on the tablecloth.

Tony hears a crash and Charley yowling in pain and rushes back to find Charley sprawled on the ground surrounded by broken crockery and burned by hot water.

No doubt Charley, and a lot of children in the viewing audience, learned not to pull on tablecloths!

The final short which aired in the 70’s and 80’s was Strangers. Tony and Charley are playing in the park when a man asks Tony if he’d like to see some puppies.

Tony is about to go with the man when Charley stops him, reminding him that Tony is not supposed to go off with adults he doesn’t know.

When they tell Tony’s mother what happened, she rewards them with some food (Charley often gets a whole fish to eat in these shorts.)

In 2014 two more shorts were produced for the Electrical Safety Council which featured the voice of comedian David Walliams. These two shorts lack the charm of the originals, being almost a parody of the series, but the messages are still viable. In the first, Charley and Tony learn the importance of not overloading electrical sockets.




In the second it’s Tony’s birthday and his mother lets him throw a party. They go get a karaoke machine but buy a cheap knock off and Charley ends up being electrocuted.





Final Mewsings: They should have made a short about not giving cats fish with bones!
Many thanks to Mark Murton for letting us know about this series of short films.
To discuss this film and other cats in movies and on television, join us on Facebook and X.
