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Garfield's Babes and Bullets

Garfield's Babes and Bullets
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Garfield's Babes and Bullets title card
Created by Jim Davis
Written by Jim Davis
Ron Tuthill (original story)
Directed by Phil Roman
Co-directors
Bob Nesler
John Sparey
Starring Lorenzo Music
Thom Huge
Gregg Berger
Desirée Goyette
Julie Payne
Lindsay Workman
Nino Tempo
Narrated by Lorenzo Music
Theme music composer Desirée Goyette and Ed Bogas (music and lyrics)
Lou Rawls (vocals)
Country of origin United States United States
Production
Executive producer(s) Phil Roman
Producer(s) George Singer
Editor(s) Sam Horta (supervisor)
Tim Borquez
Mike Gollum
Julie Gustafson
Brian Mars
Running time 24 minutes
Production company(s) Film Roman
United Media
Paws, Inc.
Release
Original network CBS
Original release May 23, 1989
Chronology
Preceded by Garfield: His 9 Lives
Followed by Garfield's Thanksgiving

Garfield's Babes and Bullets is a 1989 animated television special directed by Phil Roman, based on a short story of the same name by Ron Tuthill in the book Garfield: His 9 Lives. It features Lorenzo Music as the voice of Garfield, the house cat, re-imagined as a private detective named Sam Spayed attempting to solve a murder mystery.

The special won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (One Hour or Less). It has since been released on DVD.

Feeling bored, Garfield looks into a closet and finds a trenchcoat and fedora. He begins to fantasize he is Sam Spayed, a second-rate private investigator in a film noir atmosphere. Sam receives a visit from Tanya O'Tabby, a beautiful woman who hires Sam to investigate the death of her husband, Professor O'Tabby, who apparently drove off a clifftop road. Tanya believes it was murder, as her husband was an excellent driver, but the death was ruled as a simple car accident. Sam agrees to take the case.

No solid proof of murder comes to light when Sam visits the morgue, although he notes that O'Tabby's shirt, chest and stomach hairs have yellowish-brown stains on them and secretly pockets a mysterious, painted "stone" that the coroner overlooked. Next, Sam goes to the university where O'Tabby worked and meets the late man's colleague and former advisor Professor O'Felix. He tells Sam how O'Tabby was on his way to visit an elderly benefactress the night he died, but dismisses Sam's idea that the professor was having an affair, saying his one weakness was instead a coffee addiction.

Sam phones Tanya to tell her what he knows so far, only for his newly-hired secretary Kitty to spill coffee on him when he mentions talking to O'Felix about O'Tabby's "woman trouble". While cleaning himself up, Sam realizes that the "stone" is actually a piece of a broken coffee mug and the stains on the late professor's clothing and body must have been coffee. He deduces that Kitty worked for O'Tabby before she came to Sam's office, and accuses Kitty of O'Tabby's murder, believing her motive was that she loved O'Tabby but he didn't love her. Kitty tearfully insists that she did not kill the professor, having simply left the university out of being unable to bear not having him. She also explains that she did more than make coffee for O'Tabby, giving him potent sleeping pills to treat his insomnia.


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