Plot
Garfield (voiced by Lorenzo Music) wakes Jon early and demands to be fed. Jon (voiced by Thom Huge) tries to go back to sleep, but Garfield (with Odie's help) scares him out of bed with military music and speaking like a drill sergeant. Jon wonders if people with goldfish have this problem. He feeds Garfied pancakes and coffee. Garfield decides to take a nap after breakfast but changes his mind to kick Odie (voiced by Gregg Berger) off the table. Garfield suddenly notices he has to go to the vet. He shoves the date into Odie's mouth hoping to make Jon forget and then notices that tomorrow is Thanksgiving. He reminds Jon who takes him shopping for the Thanksgiving food. On the way home Jon takes a wrong turn and reveals he remembered Garfield's appointment with the vet. While at the vet, Jon tries to ask Dr. Liz Wilson (voiced by Julie Payne) out, but she turns him down. Jon decides to hold his breath while she details the diet that Garfield must go on. Both he and Garfield faint. Liz changes her mind about the date. Jon invites her for Thanksgiving Dinner.
At home, Jon feeds Garfield half a leaf of lettuce for lunch. He has Odie use a whistle to hassle Garfield into his diet. Garfield weighs himself on the talking weight scale and destroys it for comparing him to Orson Welles. He then tries to sneak food from the kitchen but Odie stops him and he figures the lack of food must be making him hallucinate. The next morning Garfield becomes a sourpuss. Jon begins prepraring the meal, but doesn't have a clue how, as he didn't thaw the turkey overnight, doesn't bother to make stuffing, rubs butter on his skin instead of the turkey's and roasts it at 500 degrees instead of 350. Garfield helps ruin the meal by putting garlic powder in the vegetables. Jon shaves and then picks a suit, but forgets to put on pants. Liz arrives and tells him he's not wearing pants by saying, "Nice polka dot boxer shorts." Jon finishes dressing and invites her in. Liz realizes the diet is too strict for Garfield, who kisses her for letting him off. Garfield goes into the kitchen and observes Jon, who finally realizes he doesn't know how to prepare a thanksgiving dinner and wonders what to do. Garfield brings him the phone and with clues, gets Jon to call Grandma. Grandma (voiced by Pat Carroll) arrives seconds later and shoos Jon out of the kitchen and begins preparing the meal. She cuts the turkey into slices with a chainsaw, adds white sauce then batters and deep fries the slices into what she calls her famous turkey croquettes. Jon distracts Liz by giving her a history lesson about Thanksgiving. Grandma prepares sweet potatoes by covering them with butter, brown sugar and marshmallows. She then prepares "one-second cranberry sauce" and pumpkin pie. After quickly setting the table Garfield makes his signature comment, "Nice touch". Before departing Grandma tells Garfield Liz couldn't have found a better man than Jon and that she'd better not blow it. She also tells Garfield to eat a piece of pie for her and leaves. Garfield salutes her and comments "They just don't make 'em like that anymore." Garfield tells Jon, who has put Liz to sleep, that everything is ready. After eating Liz declares that it was a wonderful meal and thanks Jon for inviting her. Jon invites her for next year and she accepts. She then kisses Jon on the cheek before she departs. Jon, Garfield and Odie declare it was a great day and they're thankful for Grandma. Garfield goes back to tormenting Odie after Jon decides to put Odie on a diet.
Read more about this topic: Garfield's Thanksgiving
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“If you need a certain vitality you can only supply it yourself, or there comes a point, anyway, when no ones actions but your own seem dramatically convincing and justifiable in the plot that the number of your days concocts.”
—John Ashbery (b. 1927)
“The plot was most interesting. It belonged to no particular age, people, or country, and was perhaps the more delightful on that account, as nobodys previous information could afford the remotest glimmering of what would ever come of it.”
—Charles Dickens (18121870)
“Trade and the streets ensnare us,
Our bodies are weak and worn;
We plot and corrupt each other,
And we despoil the unborn.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)