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Tom and Jerry M3: Blast Off to Mars is a DVD outer-space-themed direct-to-video film. It was released on DVD and VHS on January 18, 2005, and on Blu-ray on October 16, 2012.

Plot[]

Tom and Jerry accidentally have a chase leading them onto a spaceship which Buzz Blister and Biff Buzzard are taking to Mars. Then Tom and Jerry run off again once on Mars. Then they encounter Martians that mistake Jerry for someone from a prophecy and treat him well. But Tom accidentally destroys their Martian city and is about to be dumped into lava pit with a lava-dwelling monster. But a Martian girl named Peep saves Tom and Jerry. The Martians wish to invade the Earth. Tom, Jerry and Peep goes to Earth to save the Earth. But the Martians disintegrated some people after Buzz said there was no life on Mars. Peep saves the disintegrated people, but however, the Martians attack with a giant robot named Invince-a-Tron. But there's Spike, who will do anything to enjoy his bone. Jerry throws it into the Martian machine, and Spike gets enraged and destroys the machine (and gets his bone back) when a party is held for Tom and Jerry, Spike repairs the machine and Tom gets chased while Jerry and Peep have a happy ending. As for Biff and Buzz, they are cleaning up the mess as punishment for lying that there is no life on Mars, they soon start to argue and fight about it while Spike in the Invince-a-Tron is still chasing Tom into the sunset while waving goodbye to the audience.

Voice cast[]

English[]

Japanese[1][]

  • Kaneta Kimotsuki as Tom
  • Junko Hori as Jerry
  • Ryoko Shiraishi as Peep
  • Kazuhiro Nakata as Biff Buzzard
  • Shunsuke Takamiya as Buzz Blister
  • Daisuke Gori as Commander Bristle
  • Mitsuru Ogata as Dr. Gluckman

In other languages[]

Names, etymology and in other regions
Language Name Definition, etymology and notes
Japanese トムとジェリー 火星へ行く Tom and Jerry go to Mars
German Tom & Jerry - Abenteuer auf dem Mars Tom & Jerry - Adventures on Mars
French Tom et Jerry : Destination Mars Tom and Jerry: Destination Mars
Italian Tom & Jerry: Rotta su Marte Tom & Jerry: Head to Mars
Spanish Tom y Jerry Rumbo a Marte Tom and Jerry Heading to Mars
Portuguese Tom e Jerry: Rumo á Marte Tom and Jerry: To Mars

Notes[]

Tom and Jerry Blast Off to Mars Poster in The Fast and the Furry
  • Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars was the first Tom and Jerry film to be filmed in widescreen and the first one to be filmed in the high-definition format, although the Region 1 DVD were in full screen (cropping the left and right of the image) though not pan and scan as the camera stays directly in the center of the image. Like other television shows and films filmed in high-definition, the monitor the animation team would have worked from would have 16:9 and 4:3 safe areas so that the full screen version would not crop off too much of any important visual elements (such as characters). However, the film is broadcast in widescreen on Cartoon Network in the United States and released in widescreen on Blu-ray.
  • In Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry, a poster of Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars is shown when Tom and Jerry are racing in the final race.
  • When Jerry is about to eat a cookie on the baby grand piano, he sits on a bust of Ludwig van Beethoven.
  • One of the things Tom breaks when trying to pounce on Jerry with a spiked ball is a statue of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
  • When Tom destroys accidentally the Martian city, he is about to be dumped into lava pit, but Peep save Tom and Jerry from the lava pit with the lava monster.
  • In one scene, Commander Bristle watches The Jetsons, another series created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera.

References[]

Gallery[]

Main article: Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars/Gallery
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