Garfield, Jon, and Odie head out into the great outdoors.Garfield, Jon, and Odie head out into the great outdoors.Garfield, Jon, and Odie head out into the great outdoors.
- Won 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 win total
Lorenzo Music
- Garfield
- (voice)
Thom Huge
- Jon Arbuckle
- (voice)
Gregg Berger
- Odie
- (voice)
- …
George Wendt
- Ranger #2
- (voice)
Hal Smith
- Dicky Beaver
- (voice)
Orson Bean
- Billy Rabbit
- (voice)
Desirée Goyette
- Girl Cats
- (voice)
- (as Desiree Goyette)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Garfield briefly fantasizes about a trip to Hawaii, he imagines a volcano erupting and a beautiful islander asking for help in saving her tribe. This would later be used as part of the plot of a subsequent special, "Garfield in Paradise."
- GoofsThe paper with the warning about the escaped panther turns black before the fire burns it, not after.
- Alternate versionsThe original TV broadcast included more singing from Garfield during his fantasy vacation scenes. After "Hawaii might be nice," he originally sang a couple of bars of "The Hukilau Song" before saying "Boy, this is the life." Similarly, he originally danced and sang a few bars of "La Cucaracha" before seeing the "beautiful señorita" cat (and ruining her brother's hat). Both of these clips have been abridged on home video releases.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Phelous & the Movies: Phelous's Garfield Halloween (2013)
- SoundtracksR and R
Vocals by Lou Rawls
Featured review
Even after 18 years, "Garfield in the Rough" holds up very well. One of the reasons is a strong script by Jim Davis, Garfield's original creator. He deftly weaves humor and tension.
Excellent voices help this production, too. Garfield, everyone's favorite overweight house cat, is voiced as always by the late, very talented Lorenzo Music. Thom Huge does the voice of his owner, Jon Arbuckle, a role he performed in every Garfield special (sadly, to date he has not found any success elsewhere). Gregg Berger, voice acting veteran, plays both the brainless but loyal dog Odie, and the first Ranger. The other Ranger is played by George Wendt, better known to millions as Norm on "Cheers." Woodland creatures Dicky Beaver and Billy Rabbit are played by highly respected actors Hal Smith and Orson Bean, respectively. And several girl cats, existing only in Garfield's fantasies, are played by Desirée Goyette.
Goyette, along with Music, and no less a figure than Lou Rawls himself sing several lovely songs in the show (and of course, Huge sings a couple as well). The music does a good job of setting the mood. Special notice must go to a song which is briefly heard on the radio, after the news report about the deadly panther. Not only is it an excellent joke (it's described as "Fun Music" but sounds like the most depressing song in the world), but the brief seconds we hear of it, combined with the report, do an excellent job of turning the frivolous atmosphere into one of foreboding.
The animation is perhaps the one area where it could have used some work. Occasionally it gets a bit rough, and not very detailed. But most of the time it was great.
Oddly enough, the rough look was the only possible look that would have worked for the show-stealer: the panther. If it was *more* detailed, it wouldn't have been as scary. And let me tell you, to children, that panther is terrifying. Even adults get chills down their spines from that beast. Garfield's attack on it is almost certainly the most selfless thing he's ever done.
All in all, "Garfield in the Rough" is a very good animation special that anyone can view over and over again.
Excellent voices help this production, too. Garfield, everyone's favorite overweight house cat, is voiced as always by the late, very talented Lorenzo Music. Thom Huge does the voice of his owner, Jon Arbuckle, a role he performed in every Garfield special (sadly, to date he has not found any success elsewhere). Gregg Berger, voice acting veteran, plays both the brainless but loyal dog Odie, and the first Ranger. The other Ranger is played by George Wendt, better known to millions as Norm on "Cheers." Woodland creatures Dicky Beaver and Billy Rabbit are played by highly respected actors Hal Smith and Orson Bean, respectively. And several girl cats, existing only in Garfield's fantasies, are played by Desirée Goyette.
Goyette, along with Music, and no less a figure than Lou Rawls himself sing several lovely songs in the show (and of course, Huge sings a couple as well). The music does a good job of setting the mood. Special notice must go to a song which is briefly heard on the radio, after the news report about the deadly panther. Not only is it an excellent joke (it's described as "Fun Music" but sounds like the most depressing song in the world), but the brief seconds we hear of it, combined with the report, do an excellent job of turning the frivolous atmosphere into one of foreboding.
The animation is perhaps the one area where it could have used some work. Occasionally it gets a bit rough, and not very detailed. But most of the time it was great.
Oddly enough, the rough look was the only possible look that would have worked for the show-stealer: the panther. If it was *more* detailed, it wouldn't have been as scary. And let me tell you, to children, that panther is terrifying. Even adults get chills down their spines from that beast. Garfield's attack on it is almost certainly the most selfless thing he's ever done.
All in all, "Garfield in the Rough" is a very good animation special that anyone can view over and over again.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Garfield en el Bosque
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
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Top Gap
By what name was Garfield in the Rough (1984) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer