- Not to be confused with the book.
Garfield: His 9 Lives is the eighth animated and ninth total Garfield television special.
Synopsis[]
Each of the nine stories has a short preface of Garfield in his modern incarnation, explaining how these various lives shaped aspects of Garfield's personality, such as the origin of his fear of the veterinarian, his love of destructive behavior, his proclivity for a slothful lifestyle, and his extremely playful side.
Plot[]
In The Beginning[]
God wants to create cats. He gives his staff instructions on the physical appearance of the cat. He suggests that its eyes should glow in the dark and that it should land on its feet. God plans to give cats six eyes, but the crew tell him that only two eyes are available. God's staff talk about different features on the cat's face. God congratulates them for creating "the perfect animal". His staff become surprised as God then tells them to give the cat nine lives. After the staff ask why (since everyone else gets only one), God tells them that it would make an excellent story, as the screen fades to black.
Cave Cat[]
Garfield comes onto the screen, holding a bone in his hand, and tells the viewer that he formed many of his likes and dislikes in his first life. He says he disliked his rock bed while he enjoyed the size of the Pteranodon drumsticks.
A narrator tells the viewer that ten million years ago, the first cat crawled out of the sea. He also says that everything crawled out of the sea such as the first snake, chicken, crabgrass, and real estate agent. A female cave cat crawls out of the sea and attracts Cave Cat who chases her and bumps into a caveman's leg, who then grips it in pain and hops off, whilst saying "Cat!" (apparently caveman talk for "Darn it!").
In another scenario, a volcano makes the sound "Foom!". Cave Cat says it twice but after thinking more, he thinks of "Meyw" and repeats the sound as he walks away; this scenario being described how Cave Cat first learned to vocalize. Later, the caveman from earlier approaches Cave Cat and puts a collar with a leash on him. Cave Cat starts fighting and is bashed on the head while the caveman shouts "Good Cat"; the narrator describes this as the first domestication of cats. The narrator then says that Cave Cat learned to live with the cavemen and spend his time as modern day cats do; the viewer sees him chasing a mouse who goes into a hole in a rock. Cave Cat sticks his hand in and is burned when the mouse was revealed to be a fire breathing mouse.
Later, another caveman is showing the main caveman a simple trick using his thumb, the narrator saying that it was a simple time when people had to entrtain themselves. Suddenly a tremor occurs and the two cavemen are crushed by the rocks they are sitting on; they emerge and tell Cave Cat that "Big Bob" is coming. The cavemen run before "Big Bob" (who resembles Odie) appears. Big Bob slobbers onto Cave Cat and runs away. Cave Cat shouts and threatens Big Bob saying that he will beat him up. Big Bob returns with a tree, wanting to play fetch and drops the tree unto Cave Cat, crushing him. The life ends there.
King Cat[]
Garfield, with a Pharaoh's crook in hand, explains that in ancient Egypt, cats were considered to be gods (due to their relationship with the cat goddess Bastet) and worshipped as such.
The story focuses on King Cat, the favored feline pet of dimwitted King Amenhotep III (or "Junior" as King Cat called him). King Cat begins the day by having his slave dogs, led by Odie, carry him on his throne to pyramids as they are being built. When the slaves see King Cat, they immediately stop to bow in reverence, forgetting the stone block they are lifting and one of them gets crushed by it as they do so.
As the slaves carry their stone block over (with King Cat sitting on it), one of them falls to the ground in exhaustion. King Cat demands he get back to work, but the slave tells him that he should be more worried about himself. He points to hieroglyphics on the pyramid which show King Cat that should Junior die, he will be buried in the pyramid with all his worldly possessions, including his cat. Between Junior's lack of smarts and his evil brother Black Bart plotting to take the throne for himself, King Cat fears for his own life and swears to protect Junior.
Riding Odie like a horse, King Cat returns in time to see Bart tricking Junior into walking through a fake door at the edge of his raised throne, which will send him falling to his death. King Cat manages to break Junior's fall, getting him crushed. A block then falls out of the throne and nearly crushes Junior until King Cat shoves him out of the way, getting crushed again. Junior berates King Cat for shoving him, which gets him angry until Odie holds him back. As Junior heads into his personal chamber, Bart drops a lit stick of dynamite in front of it. King Cat sees it and, not knowing what it is, but also not knowing Junior is in the chamber, unwittingly throws it inside where it blows and kills Junior, sealing his own fate.
Junior's body is sealed into a sarcophagus and placed inside the completed pyramid, and King Cat is thrown in with him before Bart seals the door shut. Fortunately, Odie finds a loose block that allows him to get inside and rescue King Cat, and King Cat tells Odie that he will do anything to repay the favor. The story ends with Odie being worshipped as Bart's new favorite pet, and slave cats led by King Cat are pulling his throne as they head off to the pyramids.
In The Garden[]
Garfield, already on screen, explains that he considers his third life as his favorite, since while he physically grew old, he never mentally grew up.
In a surreal garden, with butterflies and an orange morning sky, Chloe and an Orange Kitten rest on grass as the Orange Kitten eats marshmallows off of flowers. Chloe, narrating in the third person, states that these are the mornings she and the cat liked best. Chloe then sways a butterfly toward the kitten's way and he chases after it as Chloe explains that it will always feel like summer in the garden, until the kitten slams into a paint bucket, giving him a blue ring around his face. Chloe's uncle Todd then grabs the kitten and cleans his face, as she explains that Todd built the garden during a very intense period of having fun, something he was known for. He dances and plays on the concertina as the concertina turns into various things at once, one of them being a small toy spaceship that he sends flying. Chloe then states that he and the Sun laughed a lot, the latter doing so as it sees the spaceship fly past. One spring day, Todd decided to join the circus and gave the will of the garden to Chloe and the kitten, saddening them.
Since he left, Uncle Todd's spirit, represented by a hot air balloon, continued to loom over the garden. Chloe then states that the garden she and her kitten lived in was not the kind of garden anyone might expect; it was inspired by the love of life and the greater love of living it. The garden had some more identifiable details like plants, rocks and fencing. However, it was not a normal garden because designed into it were all manner of things for making fun, like tubes, globes and bubble orbs of vinyl persuasion, and music played as Chloe and the Kitten romped through the fields, moving from one place to another. However, Chloe stops and calls the Kitten to come over, saying that they share a rare treasure called "Friendship", which itself makes the garden work. They then make a sandcastle and Uncle Todd's apparition showers flowers onto it.
Chloe says it was a good life. However, there was one condition they must follow: before joining the circus, Uncle Todd left them a crystal box sitting atop a checkered toadstool in the center of the garden, itself fenced off - he warned them to never open the crystal box under any circumstances. The duo were never used to following rules since that was new to them, and their curiosity got the better of them as they entered where the toadstool was. They play with the box, deciding whether or not to open it. Chloe then tells her kitten that there must be something very special about the box if it is not to be opened, before the two of them decide on taking action. However, they decide to leave the box alone and dance freely, never to give the box another thought and expressing their gratitude for the garden Uncle Todd gave them. The segment ends with the two of them romping around the garden as it starts to distort and collapse in on itself into a spiral of colors.
Court Musician[]
Garfield, holding a conductor's baton, explains that the fourth life was when he learned how to think on his feet. Despite any potential merits, he now avoids it whenever possible.
It is the year 1720; Garfield in this life is a blue cat owned by George Frideric Handel (nicknamed "Freddie" due to his middle name), the court musician of King George I. The cat spends most of his time lazing around while Freddie writes music for the king's dinner parties, explaining that Freddie was in the process of writing up a fugue for this night's party. A Jester arrives to pester him and Freddie tells him to leave as he must finish the fugue by that night or be executed. Then, the Jester tells him that the king expects a concerto for this particular party as it was a more auspicious occasion than normal, which surprises Freddie. Freddie says he has no time to write a concerto to the party, to which the Jester states that if the king cannot enjoy a concerto, Freddie will still face execution, which terrifies Freddie. The Jester takes his leave, reminding Freddie that the concerto better be good, for the king hates to be disappointed. Freddie relies on his cat to write the final part of the concerto, while Freddie writes the first and second movement.
At the ball, the Jester announces Freddie and his chamber quartet for his original concerto, to which he asks Freddie to perform. Then, he takes an apple out of the mouth of a suckling pig and bites it in half in the manner of a guillotine, reminding Freddie of his execution. The first movement plays and the Jester annoys the musician by tearing up a picture of him and his head and squeezing a doll until its head pops out. As the first part ends, the second movement begins and the Jester watches a slideshow of the Jester's head mounted on the wall, the Jester beheading himself, the Jester at the funeral post-execution and at a pool with two women, to which he quickly goes back to the funeral picture, painfully reminding Freddie his life is on the line.
As the third movement is about to begin, Freddie finds that the sheet music is splotched with cat pawprints and ink blots, which makes Freddie sweat profusely and his cat's teeth chatter in fear. The Jester holds up a sign saying "See ya later, bud" as Freddie prepares for the worst. The musicians begin playing, much to their own surprise, a song that has a jazzy, yet classical sound, which shocks King George and the Queen at first. The cat smiles as the king begins to enjoy the music. Freddie becomes happy and he dons sunglasses as he plays the piano like a rockstar while the king and queen dance to the song. Freddie's cat closes this life by explaining (whilst the Jester expresses his own sore disappointment that Freddie did not fail) that he swore off writing this newly-invented jazz music following that night, saying that "had I stuck with it, there would've been the recording contracts, the concerts, the agents, the managers, the roadies, the groupies. It seemed like a lot of work to me..."
Stunt Cat[]
Garfield laments over how his fifth life as a stunt double was short, as a director orders him to the set. Garfield tells the viewers he will be right back.
Seen in the style of a black-and-white silent movie, Ignatz the mouse is about to drop a giant load of bricks on Krazy Kat (who is preoccupied with smelling a flower) before the director, revealed to be Officer Bull Pupp, yells "cut" and calls "Stunt Cat" over. Stunt Cat (Garfield) is made to stand in Krazy Kat's place and Bull Pupp yells "action". All Stunt Cat can do after looking at what is above him is shrug, as the bricks are dropped on him, ending the life as quickly as it began. Ignatz shakes his head in disappointment as Bull Pupp calls it a wrap.
Diana's Piano[]
Garfield explains that he considers his sixth life to be his luckiest, since it was the life when he fell in love with music. And he also fell in love with his owner, a girl who played the piano just for him.
The story begins with a woman named Sara in a rocking chair with a kitten named Patches wanting to tell him a story about her 8th birthday, one of the most memorable moments in her life, because she got a new kitten and took her first piano lesson. The story begins at the kitchen table where she and her family were having breakfast when her mother came in, and gave Sara a fluffy white kitten, to which she started hugging. Sara's mother suggested naming her kitten "Diana", after the Roman goddess of the hunt of the same name. Then, Sara's mother had another surprise for her, a woman named Mrs. Underwood to give Sara piano lessons, which Sara initially rejects in favor of the kitten. Her mother then states that Sara will thank her for this. It then shows Mrs. Underwood and Sara playing on the piano and Diana swatting a fly bothering her before she fell onto the strings, becoming angry. For the next few months, Sara worked hard on her piano lessons, and every time she played, Diana would place her paw on her foot. Sara would pick her up and places her on top of the piano because she was too small to get up on her own. Sara then wanted to become a better piano player because Diana had a sense when Sara hit a sour note. In a few years' time, she was a fairly good pianist by Diana's standards. Diana loved her music and seemed happier when Sara was playing it. Sara then reminisces that these were happy days and wished that they would never part, until the day Sara left for college, to which Sara did not know who she would miss more: her parents or Diana.
By the time Sara returned home from college graduation, the little child within her wanted to be Diana again, but this time, there were more people in Sara's life than Diana and her parents, which Diana had doubts about. Sara then announces that her boyfriend, Lee and her have decided to marry. Diana, seemingly disapproving of this, then scratches Lee's leg and Sara states that she will move out of her parents' house and take Diana with her. The piano was given as a wedding gift by her parents, although Sara did not have room for it in spite of knowing its importance. When Billy, Sara and Lee's baby arrived, Diana had a new friend, much to her dismay. By that time, Diana was 14 years old and was too old to make it to the top of the piano on her own, but neither could Billy since he was too young.
In the evening, Diana was not feeling well and Sara tucked Billy into bed early and played a concert's worth of songs just for Diana. By the time Sara finished, Diana refused to leave the piano. During the night, Diana got down to the piano's keyboard, laid down and peacefully passed away in her sleep, signifying her testament for her love for Sara's music. In the modern day, Sara, now an adult, then asks Patches if she can play something for him. The segment concludes with Sara saying "It's just as well", indicating she has not quite moved on from Diana's death.
Lab Animal[]
Garfield comes on screen wearing a lab coat and says that he was a lab animal in his seventh life. These days, whenever he sees scientific equipment (such as test tubes), he will vomit.
In Lab 6B, in a government laboratory, an experiment is taking place. An unnamed scientist asks Larry, another scientist, to hold the test cat 19-GB while he gives it an injection. 19-GB yowls in pain as he was injected with the needle. The unnamed scientist comments that this experiment is something straight out of a horror movie, to which Larry replies that if the experiment goes bad, he will put plenty of space between him and the lab. Larry puts the cat back into the cage, and the latter's eyes swirl before blacking out.
The cat wakes up upon hearing the unnamed scientist telling Larry to prepare 19-GB for dissection to see if he has experienced any preliminary organ modification. Cowering in the corner of his cage, 19-GB then attacks Larry. The unnamed scientist demands Larry to get 19-GB, to which Larry says that he is trying, at which moment 19-GB jumps through and shatters a window. His escape does not go unnoticed as a soldier soon spots him and tries to capture him. 19-GB then runs towards a helicopter preparing to take flight and gets on it. He then gets off on top of a cliff's edge, where he climbs up. He wanders through a forest until a search dog chases him up a tree near a stream. However, one of the branches snaps on 19-GB, causing him to fall into the water below.
As 19-GB gets out of the water, he walks for a bit before collapsing from exhaustion. However, the injection from earlier takes effect, which causes 19-GB to transform into a dog. As 19-GB is drinking, a group of search dogs join him. One of the soldiers calls off the search, stating that they will never be able to find the cat, not realizing that one of the dogs is 19-GB as 19-GB's eyes glow.
Garfield[]
With a pillow in hand, Garfield says that all his past lives made him what he is in his eighth life, yet laments that it somehow falls short of his expectations. He then proceeds to sleep on the pillow.
On June 19, 1978, at an Italian restaurant, a female cat gives birth to Garfield. The little rambunctious kitten soon discovers the joys of eating, especially pasta. The owner gets angry at Garfield for eating him out of business, so he takes him to a pet shop, where he is taken in by Jon Arbuckle.
Years later, Jon introduces Garfield to a new playmate, Odie, whom Garfield immediately despises.
As time moves forward, Garfield claims his rightful spot as the true head of the household, with Jon and Odie as his servants. Garfield and Odie hear the bells of the ice cream truck and run outside. Odie bites Garfield’s tail, saving him from being hit by a car. Garfield becomes eternally grateful for Odie's kind act and promises to be thankful forever knowing that while he might not be wildly successful in this life, he was at least alive to live it.
Some years later, Garfield and Odie are now old and flabby. Garfield reminisces about that day to some kittens but makes it appear as if it was he who actually saved Odie, which Odie is not happy about.
Space Cat[]
Garfield states his optimism about living forever, then considers his humanity, despite being a cat. He then introduces a "sneak preview" of what will happen in his ninth life.
In outer space, Space Cat is all alone in a ship, completely lost. The computer informs him that scientists are monitoring the survival instincts of a cat in his final life. Space Cat, lamenting that his lives did not mean so much to him when he had a few to burn and that they stick him in the middle of nowhere in the one that really counts, seeks guidance from his Operational Data Index Element (O.D.I.E.), but it barks prompting Space Cat to insult it. After accidentally turning the gravity off, Space Cat finds himself surrounded by the "Incredibly Huge Galactic War Fleet (IHGWF)" under the leadership of Commander Mendelson. As they do not like intruders in their territory, Commander Mendelson informs Space Cat that to show him they mean business, they will atomize him in five minutes. Space Cat attempts to deploy his secret weapon, a giant claw, but it immediately disables itself.
Space Cat then asks them to have a heart and give him more time, saying that he could not go out with his ship in a mess. Commander Mendelson gives him seven minutes instead of five, saying that in spite of being heartless the IHGWF do appreciate a tidy ship. Space Cat promptly heads over to the crew cloner to dispense a clone crewmate, but it dispenses Odie instead. Space Cat then has Odie re-engage the gravity controls, but Odie then dispenses more clones. When trying to get the ship's guns working, with the clones helping none by jumping in place, Space Cat suddenly gets an idea to disperse the clones into attack ships, to launch an all-out attack on the IHGWF. The clones are fired out from the ship and make their way towards Mendelson's command ship, but Mendelson launches a fire hydrant using a giant slingshot, distracting the clones. Space Cat takes matters into his own hands, in spite of the situaion of "lost, no food, a twit for a computer, an imbecile for a crewmate". As Space Cat prepares to put two wires together, under the impression that as a hero he will win this space battle without dying, Mendelson declares his time is up and fires a laser, destroying the ship and killing Space Cat and Odie.
Afterwards, a single spotlight shines on Garfield and Odie, both of whom are colorless. As a door opens, God appears and asks for their names. After introducing themselves and acknowledging God's understanding they had a rough go of it in the last life, Garfield points out to God that while he knew cats have nine lives and he appreciates having them, he did not think it was fair for anyone to put him and Odie in the position they were in. God agrees with this and decides to give Garfield back his life, then asks which one it was. When Garfield asks if he doesn't keep track of how many lives he had already spent, God says he would normally do so but Heaven's computers were on the blink at the time, so Garfield finagles all nine lives out of God by telling him that it was his first life. God then asks if Odie is a cat as well, so Odie acts like one to convince him.
With a wave of his hand, God restores all nine lives to Garfield and Odie and the color returns to their bodies. The two friends share a happy hug as they vanish. The special concludes when God, in a close-up, is revealed to have cat-like eyes, as he explains "We have to stick together, you know."
Characters[]
Songs[]
Trivia[]
- In Garfield: The Movie, the way Jon acquires Odie is similar to how he does in Garfield's eighth life.
- In the ninth life, the number on Space Cat's ship is 6/19, an allusion to the date of Garfield's birthday.
- Five lives from the book appear in this special.
- The book's fourth life was made into its own television special.
- Commander Mendelson is named after Lee Mendelson.
- The shot of young Garfield eating uncooked spaghetti is later used in the second theme song of Garfield and Friends.
- The book and a special adaptation come in a variety of art styles.
Cultural references[]
- Garfield's fifth life includes the main characters and art style of Krazy Kat, a comic strip by George Herriman.
- "In The Beginning" is a reference to Genesis 1:1 from The Bible.