Willoughby, a dim-witted dog who has no success finding love with other female dogs, falls in love with a metal statue of a female dog with the name "Daisy" on her collar in a homeowner's garden, without realizing that she's not a real dog.
He kisses the statue, and lightning strikes and sends a shock wave through his system, and he thinks she loves him.
He also has to constantly contend with a vicious bulldog, who is guarding the gate to the garden. He eventually gets rid of bulldog by locking him out of the garden. Afterward, he kisses the statue again, and again, lightning strikes and sends a shock wave through his system, and he thinks she still loves him.
While resting in the garden, the statue is carted away in a truck marked "Scrap Metal for Victory" for fighting World War II. He frantically runs behind the truck to the ammunitions depot, calling "Daisy's" name numerous times, and he cries, thinking he lost her, and will never see her again, but a bomb marked "Daisy" rolls off the other bombs and into his arms. Overjoyed, and takes the bomb back with him to the garden.
Devastated over "Daisy's" transformation, he kisses the bomb, and it explodes in his face, and he happily yells out: "Wow! She hasn't changed a bit!"
Gallery[]
Lobby Cards[]
Screencaps[]
Voice Cast[]
Pinto Colvig as Willoughby The Dog
Sara Berner as Female Dog
Mel Blanc as Love Bird
Tedd Pierce as Vicious Bulldog
Goofs[]
The American Turner "dubbed version" replaces the 1941 MM end music with a 1939-1941 ending cue, although the European Turner "dubbed version" retains the original ending cue.
When the female dog bluntly rejects the goofy dog "Nah, I wouldn't like to be your girl-!", there appears to be an abrupt cut-off in her dialogue, where after she her line ends with "girl", her mouth moves without her saying anything before completely finishes her line of dialogue.