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Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure
Lady and the tramp 2limitededition
Limited Edition Cover

Directed By

Darrell Rooney & Jaennine Roussel

Produced By

David W. King & Jaennine Roussel

Written By

Bill MotzBob Roth

Music By

Danny Troob

Editing By

Susan Edmunson

Studio

Walt Disney Television Animation, Disney Toon Studios

Distributed By

Walt Disney Home Entertainment

Release Date(s)

February 27,2001

Running Time

70 minutes

Language

English

Story of Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure is a 2001 American animated direct-to-video film, which was released on February 27, 2001, by The Walt Disney Company as a sequel to the 1955 feature film Lady and the Tramp. The story centers around Lady and Tramp's puppy, Scamp, and his desire to become a "wild dog". The film was produced at Walt Disney Animation Australia which has now closed. Disney re-released the film in the United States on DVD after the DVD re-release of the first film on June 20, 2006. The Special Edition DVD went back to the Disney Vault on January 31, 2007.

Plot[]

In 1911, just two days before the Fourth of July, Lady and the Tramp and their four puppies return from a walk in the park. Among the puppies is Scamp, the wildest and most troublesome (the only son of Tramp and Lady). Scamp starts playing with Jim Jr. with Jim Dear's (Jim Jr.’s father) hat. Jim Dear then gives him a bath for his misbehavior, but to his dismay, Scamp jumps out the window to fetch a ball thrown by Jim Jr. Scamp runs back into the house with his paws muddy, and he chases the ball around the living room and makes a mess. This makes Jim Dear very cross, as he chains Scamp to a doghouse outside as punishment. Lady and Tramp are unhappy about their son’s behavior, and Lady suggests that Tramp should talk Scamp to try and calm him down. Tramp goes outside with a bowl of food for Scamp, who refuses to eat. Tramp tries to make Scamp understand that in a family there are rules for the good of the family, but Scamp rebels about being a wild dog and an argument ensues between the two dogs, and Tramp then leaves angered and irritated after giving him a severe telling-off, saying that the young pup is a part of this family, whether he likes it or not, or he'll get used to being out in the yard every single night. After a while, Scamp hears and sees a pack of stray dogs who bullies a dogcatcher, he briefly meets a dog named Angel, who nuzzles him in appreciation for returning the dogcatcher’s hat to her. Scamp manages to break free from his chain and runs off to find the pack of dogs he saw earlier. He finds Angel in an alley and follows’ her to the junkyard where Scamp meets the pack of dogs who call themselves the "Junkyard dogs". Buster, the leader of the Junkyard dogs, gives Scamp a test to prove himself worthy to be a junkyard dog.

The test was to steal a tin can from a vicious dog named Reggie, Scamp almost made it, but Reggie woke up and chases scamp, the dog catcher appears and tries to nab Scamp, but fails, and he instead nabs Angel with a net. Scamp bites the net in an attempt to free Angel. The net hits a light post and breaks, the dogcatcher hits Reggie with his truck and catches the stunned Reggie. Angel thanks Scamp for saving her life and Buster is impressed but decides that Scamp needs another test before he can be an official junkyard dog.

The Junkyard dogs head to the park, where Sparky, a member of the junkyard dogs, tells a highly exaggerated story of Tramp. Buster comes in angrily and clarifies that Tramp did not die heroically, but instead chose to be a house pet with Lady. Buster, after seeing Scamp scratch in the same manner as Tramp did, asks Scamp if he was related, to which a scared Scamp answers no. Buster then threatens Scamp that if he was related to Tramp, he would kill him.

On railroad tracks, Scamp talks to himself about his father’s decision to leave the street dog life. He was then interrupted by Angel who question him about his family, she then reveals that she once was a house pet to 5 different families who gave her away because they either had a baby, moved or an allergy. She tells Scamp not to mention this to Buster as he will kick her out the Junkyard dogs society. A train appears and Scamp and Angel run for their lives across a bridge, Scamp almost makes it, but his paw was stuck in one of the railroad boards, Angel runs to his rescue and they both fall into the river below. Meanwhile, Scamp's family and friends are searching for him, and Tramp thinks his son ran away because he was too harsh with him, and regrets what he had done.

Scamp and Angel survived and was unharmed but realized that their friendship has now transformed into love. The two then had a romantic stroll in a park and had dinner similar to the spaghetti scene in the first movie. They wind up on the street where Scamp lives where they encounter Scamp's family searching for him. When Scamp avoids them, Angel is annoyed that he would choose living on the streets over a loving family, as she herself had once been a pet.

At an Independence Day picnic, Buster clues in that Scamp is Tramp's son, and to verify this, he tells Scamp to steal a chicken from his family's picnic. Scamp, determined to prove that he is a Junkyard Dog, steals the chicken, but is chased by his father. Tramp confronts his son in an alley and asks him to come home, but Buster then appears and then an argument ensues between him and Tramp, the argument ends when Scamp snaps at his father and chooses to stay with Buster. Buster is pleased to see Tramp upset. A saddened Tramp tells Scamp whenever he's had enough of being a Junkyard Dog, he can come home. Buster officially declares Scamp a Junkyard Dog by removing Scamp's collar.

While celebrating that he is a member of the Junkyard Dogs, Angel scolds Scamp for leaving his family and reminds him that his family loves him, Buster then asks Scamp if he wants to be a house dog which Scamp answers no and, in annoyance, snaps and accidently reveals that Angel wants to be a house dog to everyone. Buster then kicks Angel out and Angel angrily runs off. Scamp realizes his mistake and tries to find Angel.

Buster, still wishing revenge on Tramp, sets up a trap so that Scamp, without a collar, is caught by the dog catcher. Alone and scared in the back of the dog catcher's van, Scamp sees that he has just made a huge mistake and realizes how selfish he has been. Wracked with guilt, he wishes he were home with his family. Angel sees him in the back of the van and goes to get help from his family. Meanwhile, Scamp is placed in a cage with Reggie. Tramp, arriving just in time, manages to fight off Reggie and rescue his son. However, Tramp and Scamp are confronted by the dog catcher who is defeated by Angel. While walking home, Scamp apologizes to his father for running away, and Tramp then apologizes for being too harsh with him.

In the junkyard, Buster sees Scamp returned, and after getting back his collar, Scamp traps him under a pile of trash. His members refuse to help him out and leave to find a family of their own. Scamp, Tramp and Angel return home and are welcomed back by the whole family, Jim Dear and Darling decides to adopt Angel (after being bought over by their dogs' pout) and at the end of the movie, Scamp is shown taking a bath (he wasn't very happy about that) and the collarless dogs can be seen with their newly-acquired families.

Cast[]

  • Scott Wolf as Scamp is a small and slender brownish-gray mixed breed puppy with big brown eyes a black nose thick black eyebrows a little tail a brownish-gray underbelly a small piece of hair at the top of his head and a scruffy muzzle He wears a turquoise collar with a gold diamond-shaped license
  • Alyssa Milano as Angel is a small and slender Pomeranian/Siberian Husky mix puppy She has cream-colored fur a folded left ear a brown nose a thick and fluffy tail and blue eyes with long lashes
  • Chazz Palminteri as Buster is the main antagonist named
  • Jeff Bennett as Tramp is the titular male protagonist, Jock is a short and slender gray Scottish terrier with black eyes thick gray eyebrows a gray mustache like beard and wears a red collar with a gold diamond shaped license and later a plaid sweater Trusty and The Dogcatcher is the secondary antagonist named
  • Jodi Benson as Lady is the titular female protagonist
  • Bill Fagerbakke as a sheepdog named Mooch
  • Mickey Rooney as an elderly Irish Wolfhound named Sparky
  • Cathy Moriarty as a female Afghan hound named Ruby
  • Bronson Pinchot as a little black-and-white French bulldog named Francois
  • Dee Bradley Baker as a brown mongrel named Scratchy
  • Debi Derryberry as Annette
  • Kath Soucie as Collette, and Danielle
  • Rob Paulsen as Otis
  • Nick Jameson and Barbara Goodson as Jim Dear and Darling
  • Andrew McDonough as Junior
  • Tress MacNeille as Aunt Sarah
  • Mary Kay Bergman and Tress MacNeille as Si and Am
  • Jim Cummings as Tony
  • Michael Gough as Joe
  • Frank Welker as Reggie is a major antagonist named
  • April Winchell as Mrs. Mahoney

Production[]

Joanna Romersa, an animation timing director for this film, was a Disney Trainee for the production of the original Lady and the Tramp, invited by Jeannine and Darrell to work on this film.

Releases[]

The sequel was released on VHS and DVD on February 27, 2001, it was re-released again on DVD in 2006 along with Lady and the Tramp: Platinum Edition DVD.

Music[]

The score was composed by Danny Troob. The songs were written by Melissa Manchester and Norman Gimbel.

Songs[]

  • Welcome Home - performed by the chorus, Jeff Bennett, Jodi Benson, Kath Soucie, Jim Cummings, Michael Gough, and Debi Derryberry. This song is the opening song for the film. It sets up the theme for the entire film - independence. The sequence ends with a Broadway-style performance of various people out in a street singing and waving.
  • World Without Fences - performed by Roger Bart. It illustrates Scamp's desire to become a "wild dog" free from boundaries and responsibilities. Scamp is chained in the backyard. He runs around, pretending that he is not chained and is instead running through the countryside with the Junkyard Dogs.
  • Junkyard Society Rag - performed by Jess Harnell, Cathy Moriarty, Bill Fagerbakke, Bronson Pinchot, and Mickey Rooney. Buster sings about the junkyard in which the Junkyard Dogs make their home and about the life of the Junkyard Dogs, with the other Junkyard Dogs also offering their opinions. The sequence features the dogs traveling through the junkyard and interacting with their surroundings.
  • I Didn't Know That I Could Feel This Way - performed by Roger Bart and Susan Egan. The love song of the film, showing the blossoming romance between Scamp and Angel. It features the dogs walking through the same park that Lady and Tramp walked through in the first film. At the end, a scene similar to the spaghetti scene from Lady and the Tramp occurs, but with Scamp and Angel guzzling down the pasta instead.
  • Always There - performed by Roger Bart, Susan Egan, Jeff Bennett and Jodi Benson. Scamp realizes the importance of family and how much he misses his home. Lady and Tramp's grief over Scamp's disappearance and Angel's want for a family is highlighted.
  • Belle Notte (This is the Night) - duet performed by Joy Enriquez and Carlos Ponce. An updated pop music arrangement of the song played during the credits. Original 1955 song by Sonny Burke and Peggy Lee; arrangement by Robbie Buchanan.

Trivia[]

  • This is the second Disney movie to have Roger Bart and Susan Egan as the singing voices of the love interests, the first one being Hercules. Bart is the singing voice of Scamp and Hercules and Egan is the singing voice of Angel and Megara. The differences are they sing together in this film but don't in Hercules, and Egan is the speaking and singing voice of Meg.
  • Two of the actors in this film previous worked on Ariel from The Little Mermaid. Jodi Benson, the voice of Lady, was the original voice of Ariel and Alyssa Milano, the voice of Angel, served as a model reference for the creation and design for Ariel.
  • The dogcatcher's wagon that injured Trusty in the first film is seen on top of one of the trash piles in the junkyard.
  • The film has similarities to The Lion King. Both Scamp and Simba run away, they both meet friends (Timon and Pumbaa for Simba; Junkyard Dogs for Scamp, excluding Buster), and they both fall in love with their female friend (Nala for Simba; Angel for Scamp). Also, both Angel and Nala want the protagonists to come back to their true home, but the protagonists refuse.
  • Despite the 1998 VHS release of the first film, it was supposed to be released in 2000, but it was pushed to February 27, 2001.

Goofs[]

  • Scamp and Danielle's butts change obesity throughout the film.

External links[]

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in: Transcripts Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure/Transcript < Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure VIEW SOURCE

(Same as warning screens 4 and 5, but it now takes place on a blue background, with the warning text and the second screen now in mixed case; the second screen also includes the duplication warning) (On a black background, we see the golden words "WALT DiSNEY HOME VIDEO" with "WALT DiSNEY" in the corporate "signature" font. The words shine) (A shower of light descends from the top of the screen, forming a stylized, segmented Cinderella/Sleeping Beauty castle. The segments seem to be spaced farther apart by the time the light reaches the bottom. Through the main gate of the castle, a white ball of light forms, but extends out to form the words "WALT DiSNEY" in the familiar corporate "Disney" logo font. The word "PICTURES", in a Lubalin Graph-Book font, fades in underneath. Then a ball of light appears on the right side of the castle and draws a circular line over it) (The story opens on a beautiful day in July, with the sun just rising and a hot-air balloon floating upward) "Walt Disney Pictures Presents" "Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure" Chorus: (sings) To this small, little not too big, little, homey, nice, little, quaint little, always kindly, old new England town. (At Veteran's Park, a couple walks along a bridge, passing a gentleman, who tips his hat to the couple in a friendly greeting, and the man of the couple tips his hat back) Chorus: (singing) If you're new to the place and feeling uneasy, fret not a bit in this always friendly, old new England town. Welcome, welcome. (Someplace else in the park, Jim and Darling are pushing their son in a carriage and walking their family dogs, with the last one, Scamp, also distracted by a butterfly, jumping around and trying to catch it) Chorus: (singing) To our family picnic, July Fourth picnic, Independence Day. (In the town square, an "Independence Day" banner is being hammered to two posts. The family meets up with a familiar aunt at this point) Darling: Aunt Sarah! Will we see you at the picnic the day after tomorrow? Aunt Sarah: Of course! My precious kitties love the Fourth of July. (Neither humans see Si and Am peeking out of the basket to hiss at Scamp, frightening him off. The cats give devious smirks to each other. Two rows of workers, each row on a street parallel to the other, are waving their flags as they sing) Workers: (singing) Whether next of kin or next-door neighbor, happily we pool our labor to give our town a new face. (The eager Scamp wants to jump up and bite one of the flags, but he is yanked away by Jim Dear pulling the collar. The family stops by Tony's, where Joe and Tony bring out a plate of spaghetti, decorated with blue food coloring and tomato sauce to look like the American flag) Joe: A nifty new look! Tony: A red, white and-a blue look! (Then Scamp jumps around Joe, knocking the plate out of his hand, with the spaghetti spilling onto Tony, covering him all in tomato sauce. Tony gives an annoyed look at Joe, who gives a sheepish look, while Scamp scampers off to avoid getting chewed out) Workers: (singing) And if we're done, you'll never know the place. (As Scamp runs and jumps near Junior's carriage, the toddler who is licking a red-and-white lollipop, sees the puppy jumping near him as he lets him have a lick) Chorus: (singing) At our family picnic, July Fourth picnic, Independence.... (Then Scamp sees a group of men dressed as colonial soldiers for a reenactment about to get a picture taken, and as the camera is about to go off, he jumps right in the center) Chorus: (singing) Daaaaaaayyy!!! (A brother and sister are running around joyfully while holding sparkler sticks, and another boy runs near the family, with a hoop and a stick he is playing with) Chorus: (singing) There's a buzzing in the air, children running everywhere. (Someone walking a female puppy passes by, and Scamp stops for a bit, but gets pulled by Jim Dear. Then the family passes by a familiar house with Jock and Trusty, whose leg is all healed up, where the two nod their heads as if to wave their friends) Chorus: As all of us pretend for that once-a-year wonderful day, and our spirits are so high, feels like Christmas in July. (Then the family arrives at their home. Scamp goes to the garden and pulls a small flag out with his teeth, but Jim Dear picks the pup up and waves the flag in front of the pup's nose. Then the family goes inside) Chorus: (singing) As we pray the hours fly to that star-spangled wonderful, wonderful, wonderful day. (Scamp is eager to go back outside, but Jim Dear closes the door. In another room, Jim Dear sets down a small tub of water for the pets to bathe in, and the triplet pups get emotional as they gather around the small tub) Annette, Collette and Danielle: (singing) We can hardly wait to bathe and dress up, we love picnics, we confess. Danielle: (singing) Yes. (In the living room, Lady and the Tramp watch on as Junior tosses a ball of yarn around for Scamp to play with) Lady: (singing) With Darling and with Jim Dear, we've made a home from which we'll never roam. (Tramp pushes the ball back towards his son) Tramp: (singing) Why would we if we're so contented here? (Scamp sees his sisters run past him as he gets more emotional. The triplets go to sit with their mother on the recliner and Scamp sees this as another opportunity to get outside through the window next to said recliner, but Jim Dear closes it. Then Scamp tries to exit through the other windows, but at each turn, Jim Dear closes every last window) Chorus: (singing) In this fine, little not too big, little, cozy, warm, little, swell, little, always loving, old new England home. (Scamp looks outside, not liking to be cooped up inside if there's so many fun to be have outdoors. As we comes to the last part of the song, the camera pans away from the house) Chorus: (singing) In our small, little not too big, little, homey, nice, little, quaint little, always friendly, old new England town. (Then we see a close-up of the entire neighborhood with a Broadway-style fashion of various people singing and waving) Chorus: (singing) Welcome, welcome. WelcoooooOOOOME, welcome! Jim Dear: (claps his hands) Alright, time for a bath! The water's hot. (The triplets are emotional about hearing about getting a bath as they rush over) Annette: Oh, excellent! I love getting a bath! Collette: It makes my fur so silky smooth! Danielle: Yes! Heh-heh! (They rush into the room, as they start arguing over who goes first) Danielle: Wait a moment! Scamp: (grossed out) Gah. I hate baths. Tramp: Just the same, Scamp. If you live in a house, you need to be clean. Scamp: Heh. Well, then, I'm glad I'm a wild dog! (Tramp only rolls his eyes as he rests back down on the pillow. Then Scamp sees a cat outside chasing a bird, and the pup whines, willing so many to see the cat) Tramp: Scamp, you know you're not supposed to climb on the furniture. Now, get down from there before you break something. Scamp: (jumps on his father's back) Hey, let's do some dog stuff, right, Dad? You know, dig up bones, tear up flowers, chase cats. (He starts tugging at the pillow with his teeth, willing to tear it up) Tramp: Scamp, c'mon now. You're gonna make a mess. (Scamp stops, before the father takes the pillow with his mouth and runs) Tramp: Found it! Scamp: Dad! (The two start running around the room, laughing and barking, before they come near the piano and have a tug-of-war with the pillow, using their mouths to tug, before coughing and laughing as Scamp kicks the piano leg, causing the lid to close hard on the keys) Jim Dear's Voice: Tramp, I hope you're not making a mess in there. (Then the two stop as Tramp snickers) Tramp: Alright, whirlwind, time to settle down. Why don't you go play with Junior? (Scamp sees Junior playing with his father's hat as he rushes over. Junior slaps the hat onto the puppy's head and then they start playing tug-of-war with the hat) Junior: (giggling) Scamp play! (Scamp snatches it away and starts shaking it around with his mouth as Junior giggles more) Jim Dear: Scamp! (He yelps, seeing a stern Jim Dear towering over him. He picks up the tattered hat) Jim Dear: Look what you did to my favorite hat. If I've warned you once, I've warned you a thousand times, no! (He hangs the hat up on a rack with other hats he had, that are all tattered because of Scamp) Jim Dear: Let's see if you can behave long enough for me to give you a bath. (He picks up the puppy, who fights, trying to get out of his owner's grip, unwilling to take a bath. Tramp and Junior watch on) Junior: Whoo-hoo! Bad Scamp. (The sisters watch with devious smirks as Scamp is placed in the tub, and Jim Dear starts scrubbing the fighting pup with a sponge) Jim Dear: Scamp, stop squirming. Junior: Bad Scamp. (claps happily) Bad, bad, bad Scamp! (Then the whining Scamp has some water dumped on him from a pitcher to rinse the soap off. Then he sets Scamp down on some newspapers) Jim Dear: Well, it's about time you settled down. (as Scamp shakes himself) There. All done. Junior: Scamp! Play ball! (The toddler tosses the ball to Scamp, who jumps in the air and catches it, but lands outside with his paws getting muddy. He starts running around the yard, barking as Jim Dear tries to call him back) Jim Dear: Hey, come back here! (Scamp goes back inside through the doggy flap and drops the ball, which bounces across the floor, but because Scamp touches it with its muddy paws, the ball has some mud on it as well and mud is being tracked through the kitchen) Junior: Scamp, catch the ball. (He just runs after the ball, getting some mud on his sisters along the road and leaving muddy paw-prints all over the carpet, chasing the ball) Jim Dear: Come back here now! (Upon chasing the ball, Scamp also knocks over a table and lamp. Then he bumps into a turkey leg, shaking a framed picture of the first Christmas with the dog family together that is on top of the piano) Jim Dear: No, no, no, no, no, no! (Then the picture falls, but luckily, it doesn't break) Junior: Yes! Yes! (Then Scamp follows the ball as it bounces into a bin of crumpled up papers. Scamp pokes his head out with the ball in his mouth) Junior: Scamp! Scamp, whee! (He topples over the basket and incidentally pulls the curtains down, before finding his road out and tackling Junior, who yet giggles and cheers) Junior: Whee! Play ball! (Scamp yaps happily and bolts across the room, jumping nimbly over his father) Jim Dear: Scamp, come back here! Oouph! (And Jim Dear trips over Tramp. CRUNCH!!-into the carpet. Tramp gets up and barks madly after his son, who does a 180 over Jim Dear and races over to Junior, who is just about to reach under the sewing machine get his arm pinched in the mechanism. Scamp just catches his arm and pulls the baby to safety and licks him madly. Junior chuckles. Then Tramp and Jim Dear are closing in. Scamp's retirement is blocked. With nowhere else to go, he jumps onto Darling's sewing machine, tearing the dress on route) Darling: Scamp! Oh! Scamp! Not my dress! Jim Dear: Scamp! Oh, dear! What a mess! Junior: Oops. Jim Dear: This time, you've gone too far! You've left me no choice! (Scamp hesitantly backs off and bumps into Tramp, who has a frustrated look. Scamp gives a slight gulp. Soon, Scamp is taken outside by Jim Dear) Jim Dear: Some dogs just have to learn the hard fashion. (Scamp whines as Jim Dear places him in front of the doghouse and puts a chain around his neck) Jim Dear: Perhaps chaining you up will teach you a lesson. I'm sorry, pal, but I just don't know what else to do. (As Jim Dear heads back inside, Scamp just lays his head mournfully. His sisters, meanwhile, frown at their brother) Danielle: Tsk, tsk, tsk. Serves him right. Collette: Simply incorrigible. Annette: He brought this on himself. Collette: (sighs) Now we'll need another bath! (They race back inside, once again arguing over who goes first again) (Later, the mournful Scamp, with his paws no longer muddy, is yet chained to his doghouse. Inside, Tramp is watching his son from the top of the stairs, and looks down for his son. Around the corner, Lady sees her love staring outside) Lady: (softly) Tramp? (She walks up to Tramp and sits right next to him) Tramp: (mournfully) Best fact Jim Dear could've done for our boy, chaining him up. Lady: Oh, Tramp. He's never been chained up before. He's just a pup. Tramp: He has to learn to live by the rules of the house. Firm discipline molds a pup into a dog. Lady: (laughs once, softly) You turned out pretty good. Tramp: Yes, Pidge, but I found you. And if it weren't for you, I would've wound up in the pound. I'm just trying to protect him. He'll understand someday. (Then they hear their son howling) Lady: Perhaps he needs to understand today. (Scamp continues to howl, but then he feels his howl is off, where he clears his throat and starts howling again, while Tramp walks out carrying a bowl of dog food and winces at the howling. Tramp drops the bowl, which stops Scamp's howling) Tramp: I thought you might be hungry. (Scamp sniffs the food in the bowl, but pushes it back in disgust) Tramp: I'm sorry, pal. You just gonna have to shape up, that's all. Scamp: I always get blamed for everything. Tramp: Sometimes, it's hard being part of a family. You have to obey certain rules. Scamp: But I wanna run wild and free (starts running) like a real dog! (Then he trips over the chain with a moan and gets his legs tangled in the chains) Tramp: (tries to untangle him) Son, the world out there is complete with traps. Here, you-you have a family that loves you. Scamp: (groans) As long as I do as you say. (Then he sighs heavily and starts to speak softly) Scamp: Dad, I just don't feel like I belong here. Didn't you ever feel this fashion? Tramp: I was just like you if I was your age. (He tries scratching himself with his leg) Scamp: You were never like me. (Ironically, he scratches himself exactly like his father did) Scamp: You've been a house dog all your life. How would you know? Tramp: Oh, you'd be surprised. Scamp, I'm only trying to protect you. Scamp: (sarcastically) By putting me on a chain? Tramp: (sternly) These are the rules, son. (The upset pup starts protesting) Scamp: All I ever hear is rules, rules, rules! "Don't do this" and "don't do that"! What good are teeth and claws if you can never use them?! (He howls again) Tramp: Stop that howling! Scamp: I can't help it, Dad! Wild dogs howl at the moon! Tramp: There will be no wild dogs in this family! Scamp: Then perhaps I don't wanna be in this family! Tramp: Like it or not, you are a part of this family, and until you start acting like this, you can just get used to live in the doghouse! (Tramp leaves and goes inside in frustration, while Lady watches Scamp jump on the roof of the dog house. She gives a hopeless sigh, and goes inside as well, leaving Scamp alone to calm down) (A while later, Scamp hears barking, shouting and laughing in the distance. He climbs down from the doghouse and goes over to the gates. He sees a group of stray dogs running around the corner. The group consists of a sheepdog named Mooch, an elderly Irish Wolfhound named Sparky, a female Afghan hound named Ruby, a brown mongrel named Scratchy and a little black-and-white French bulldog named Francois) (The sheepdog knocks a barrel away while running, causing it to roll towards the fence where Scamp is. He sees the dog group in front of the dog pound truck, and he barks eagerly. A female puppy is heard yipping and barking as she runs this fashion as well. She stops by and looks at the small puppy with a grin. She looks exactly like Scamp and Tramp's breed but with light yellow fur, purple eyes and a brown nose) Mooch: Hey, Angel! What? (The dogs scurry to where Scamp is) Mooch: Why don't you c'mon out, alright? (Of course, Scamp can't, because his head is stuck in the fence and because he is chained) Scamp: I can't. Francois: (gasps) The pup is in chains. Voice: Come back, you mangy mutt! (They turn and see a dogcatcher chasing after a barking rottweiler named Buster with a net. The other stray dogs scurry off to hide for shelter, while Buster runs towards the dog pound truck, and continues the chase around the truck) Dogcatcher: Hold silent, where I can take you in all peaceable-like manners. (Then Buster hides in the truck with the simple-minded dogcatcher yet chasing him around the truck, only to realize NOW he was gone) Dogcatcher: Hey, you! Where'd that go? (He hears a sound and looks between his legs) Dogcatcher: Ah. (It seems like there is nothing) Dogcatcher: What the-- (Then without warning, Buster comes running out, knocking the shrieking dogcatcher down and taking his hat in the process. Scamp grins, liking this dog's attitude despair) Dogcatcher: Hey, drop that! (The rottweiler tosses the hat to Angel, who catches it with her mouth and shakes it around. Soon a game of "keep out" is being played by the strays) Dogcatcher: (rushes to grab the hat) Defacing a county officer's-- (Then she tosses the hat and Ruby catches it with her mouth) Dogcatcher: Oh, c'mon now. That's not fair. (Ruby tosses the hat to Buster, who tosses it over the fence and it landed in Scamp's yard. Angel barks from the other side over to Scamp, as he picks the hat up with his teeth and goes over to her. She giggles a bit before taking the hat and kissing him a bit, giving Scamp a spark inside of them, as the two pups look at each other, but then the dogcatcher lunges his hands over the fence to catch the hat) Dogcatcher: C'mon now. (reaches for Angel) Hand it over, girl. (Then she goes behind the dogcatcher and bites him in the butt, making him shriek in pain. Then Mooch comes over and takes the hat with his teeth) Dogcatcher: Hey! Oh, that- (He picks up the net and chases after the sheepdog) Dogcatcher: Hey, drop that! (Mooch tosses the hat to Buster, who catches it, who ends up being snagged by the dogcatcher's net, making the other dogs gasp in shock while the dogcatcher notices and grins) Dogcatcher: Hey, got you now! It's off to the pound with you, big fella. (Buster only snarls before he bites the net's hoop) Dogcatcher: What? (With his teeth holding the hoop, Buster uses it to hit the man in the stomach and send down before he gets out and picks the dogcatcher himself up in the net. Then Buster goes to the truck's roof and picks the hat up with his teeth and stands proudly above, giving a wink to Scamp. Scamp, emotional that a wild stray dog actually winks at him, wants to be out of there even more, but he yet can't get free of the chains and his head is stuck in the fence again. All he can do is watch from the windows. The other strays, minus Angel, howl, before Buster jumps off the truck near the dogcatcher) Dogcatcher: Boy, if I get outta here, I'm gonna do something fierce. (Then he mouth-handles the handle and spins the shrieking dogcatcher around for a bit, before eluding the man again) Dogcatcher: I'm gonna get you----- (One by one, each stray bounces off of the dogcatcher, while Angel, the last one, walks over him, and all the strays leave, as their foe gets himself out of the net and puts his hat back on) Dogcatcher: You little mutt! You're gonna see what mad is! (He gets in his truck, starts it up and follows in pursuit of the fleeing strays, who are going a different road than the pound truck) Dogcatcher: I'll get you, you hooligans! (Scamp sees the pound truck sputtering as it leaves) Dogcatcher: Oh, c'mon! (Scamp gets his head unstuck from the fence again, and tumbled backwards. He wants to run away with these dogs and meet them, where he decides to open the gate door, but to his dismay, it has a lock on it. He tries jumping up above it, but alas, he is too short to get over it. Then he begins to sing) Scamp: (sings) Far from here is where I want to be, somewhere out there loose and running, nobody's leash to hold me. (He runs around the yard, going under a shrub and rake, respectively) Scamp: (singing) Nobody's hugs to crush me, nobody's soap and scratchy comb to bathe and brush me. (Then he jumps and uses some hanging clothing to swing upward, landing in a barrel of water) Scamp: (singing) A world without fences. (Then he jumps out and jumps up toward a bird bath, frightening the pigeons away) Scamp: (singing) Where I can run free. (He imagines the fences floating up in the air like magic, allowing him freedom. Then he sees the strays running around in the distance with Buster on top of a rock, turning back to the emotional Scamp) Scamp's Voice: (singing) And be with real dogs who'll bring the real dog out in me, no walls and no boundaries. (Buster nods, giving Scamp the alright to come with and he runs under the fence boards that float away, and then the pup races with the rottweiler through the wilderness) Scamp's Voice: (singing) Where I can be free. (The little pup outruns Buster and then he runs all the road to the top of a gigantic hilltop, looking out in the great big world and all its splendor) Scamp's Voice: (singing) A world without walls and fences, that's exactly where I want to be. (Then he slides down the hill slopes, but then his fantasy fades back to reality, in the evening, as he is yet chained and is on the porch. He frowns back at his home) Scamp: (singing) This pup just won't sleep his life away, on some sofa like his father. (On the next verses, he knocks over his bowl of bones, smells a bouquet of flowers and plows through a flowerbed) Scamp: (singing) Too much bones to chew up, too much smells to sample, too much fancy flowerbeds to tear and trample. (Then he imagines the fence boards floating up and away again, where Buster is waiting in the countryside. The pup follows him and the strays as they run through the countryside, going through a bridge and following an old car) Scamp's Voice: (singing) No rules to control me. (The stray dogs all bark at a passing kitten nearby, causing it to jump and screech in alarm. Then Scamp sees Si and Am walking nearby) Scamp's Voice: (singing) Stop what I want to be. (He barks at Si and Am, sending them jumping and screeching before they run into two trees randomly appearing out of nowhere, and then hitting two rocks that also randomly appear out of nowhere) Scamp's Voice: (singing) A world without fences, that's the world I want for me. (Then Scamp slides and skids into a mud puddle where Buster is, pulling a bone out. Then Scamp pulls out not one bone, but an entire skeleton of a T-Rex, leaving Buster dumbfounded. Next, Scamp runs through a field chasing birds) Scamp's Voice: (singing) No rules, no responsibilities. On my own, completely free. (In reality, he runs until getting snagged by the chain again) Scamp's Voice: (singing) A world without fences......for meeeee! (But at the end of the song he did jailbreak from his chain, runs into the fence although he tumbles down to the ground and sees his chain broken) Scamp: Wahoo! Farewell, you house dogs! You can't warn me what to do anymore, because I'm a wild dog. (Then he digs a hole underneath a loose fence board, and then gets out that fashion) Scamp: Hey, you guys, wait for me! (He runs off from his home down the alley and starts down through the neighborhood streets, barking, almost awakening everyone else up. He barks in hopes to find the stray dogs from earlier. He looks in every possible place and corner, but has no such luck and is about to give up. Then he hears the sounds of smashing, yipping and squeaking. He looks and sees Angel's shadow being cast from another fence-covered alley. Angel's shadow is growling and barking at some shadows of rats, making him come closer. Soon, the rats are afraid of her as they scamper off the fence and away. Scamp comes over through a hole in the fence, climbs over a wagon and sees Angel digging through a garbage barrel for scraps. He jumps down, deciding it is a good time to meet her. Then he takes a deep breath, trying to act all confident before walking to the other trash barrel to look for scraps himself. Angel notices he is there and grins) Scamp: (peeks out with his banana peel on his muzzle) Pretty good pickings, right? Angel: Huh, I can see you know your road around an alley. Scamp: It's that obvious? Angel: Couldn't miss it if I tried. (Then Scamp sees the banana peel on his nose as he swiftly shakes it off, giggling sheepishly) Angel: (holds up medallion of Scamp's collar) This must be your diploma from the school of hard knocks. Scamp: Yes, I, uh, just graduated. (Then she spins his collar and walks away) Angel: Then you must know this move. Any street dog would. (Then she jumps over a box, some sacks and two trashcan lids, knocking the last over and she does it all without breaking a sweat) Scamp: Wow! Slick move. I mean, that's boy stuff. Angel: Yes, right. (Then he attempts to copy Angel starting with the box, but the landing is less than smooth and he starts skidding down, trying to get a good padding. Next, he hits the sacks with a moan, and eventually, as he jumps to the first trashcan, he knocks it over, sending it on top of him. Angel only giggles at this) Angel: You have your own style, don't you, tenderfoot? (She kicks the can away) Angel: Listen, you don't belong on the street. You won't last five moments out here. (Then she leaves. Scamp sees her jump off a plank on a box, holding a pot and bounce off another board, before landing to the other side. Scamp is impressed, and thinks he shall follow her lead, but he knocks one of the boards over and ends up having the plank hits him. Yet he goes to the fence and sees Angel running across the street, with one driver stopping in alarm and another skidding around, trying to miss) Driver #1: Get away of there! (Scamp foolishly follows her, running into the street, but another car skids, making Scamp yelp) Driver #2: Move away! (Scamp continues, but yelps as he sees a cart-pulling horse jump up and neigh in surprise) Cart Driver: Hey, you, get out of the street! (The frightened pup scampers out of the street) (Back at the house, dawn is approaching, and Lady comes outside to warn Scamp that his punishment has been lifted) Lady: Scamp, I- (Then he notices he's gone) Lady: (shocked as ) Scamp?! Oh, no! (starts hyperventilating) Tramp! (She rushes back inside) (With Scamp, he is over a bridge, shivering happily. He sees Angel heading to a pipe, leading to somewhere in the local junkyard, where other barking is heard. He follows her through the pipe, and as he comes out the other end, he beholds the junkyard in front of him. The sun rises over a mountain junk piled up with the strays he saw yesterday having fun with the junk, doing whatever they like, and they are all stuff he isn't allowed to do in the house) Scamp: (sees Francois and Ruby bouncing on an old sofa) They're jumping on the sofa… (Then he sees Mooch above an old drawer as if sailing on a boat, before Francois is bounced off the sofa and onto his face. Then, Sparky comes down near the mountain, running on a rolling trashcan) Scamp: And playing in the trash...... (For Angel, she back-kicks some glass bottles, sending them into a pipe which comes out the other end and breaks) Scamp: And, and breaking stuff! (comes out entrance) If only there were hats to chew on. (Then he sees Buster and Sparky in a tug-of-war with a hat) Scamp: Whoo-hoo-hoo! Farewell, chains! Hello, freedom! (Mooch bounces on the drawer, causing Francois to fly up at each bounce) Mooch: Go, Buster! Francois: That a way, Buster! Bust his butt off, Buster! (The tug-of-war continues until Buster flings Sparky off into the air. He lands in a big long pipe and comes out, all covered in soot before falling downward, leaving a soot cloud shaped like himself) Buster: (chuckles) Well, any of you other low-life mongrels think you're dog enough to take Buster on? Don't be afraid! Have no fear! Have no fear! (The other dogs, minus Angel, runs to try and take the hat from the Rottweiler, but he swipes the hat away like a matador swiping a cape off and the dogs smash into a mattress. Regardless, Mooch laughs foolishly a bit. Then Buster climbs to the top of the wagon on top of the pile, sending the hat on his head) Buster: That's right, boys, junkyard dogs rule this town! Heh heh heh! And Buster rules the junkyard dogs! (All the dogs who look up to him howl. Then he peers down to Angel, sitting in the vehicle's seat) Buster: Angel, Angel. Speak to me. Who's the king of the junkyard? Angel: (sarcastically) Oh, you are, Buster. And it's quite a kingdom you have here. Buster: Ha, ha. That's my girl. (As soon as Buster turns away, she retaliates in frustration too soon) Angel: I'm not your girl. (under her breath) I don't belong to anyone. (They all continue howling, while Scamp rushes out into the middle and howls himself, getting the other dogs' attention as they stop. Buster and Angel also hear the howling, as the former goes down the pile. The other dogs are circled around the pup, to his notice, as he stops howling) Sparky: Hey, hey. Look here, guys. I'd say we have a new recruit. Francois: The little house dog. Mooch: Hey, you pulled off the leash! Scamp: Yes. (The pup notices Ruby sniffing him, to his discomfort) Scamp: Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey! Watch it! Ruby: (lovingly) Oh, be silent, my heart. I'm getting a bad case of puppy love. (She gives a flirtatious look at him, to his further discomfort) Buster: Whoa, whoa! Hey, hey, hey, hey. Hey, Ruby. (Ruby backs off as Buster comes towards the pup and speaks to him) Buster: I'm the top dog around here. And nobody joins the junkyard dogs unless I say so. Well, what's your name, sport? Scamp: (proudly) Name's Scamp. Buster: (circles around him) Well, howdy, scamperoo. Well, you saw us having some fun and thought you'd join right in, right? Scamp: Yes, sure. Buster: Hey, I hate to break the news to you, champ, but not much house dogs get to run in this pack. Scamp: I'm not a house dog. Buster: Oh, you're not? (touches medallion) Then what's this badge of responsibility hanging around your neck? Ruby: Hey, collar boy! How's life on the end on that chain? (All the other strays mutter in agreement) Scamp: No way, Dad! I've had it with the house dog life. Nothing there but rules, rules, rules. I want to be wild and free like you guys. Buster: I don't know, boy. Your average house dog ain't have what it takes. Mooch: Yes, warn him what it takes, Buster! Warn him what it takes! (Then Sparky kicks an old piano in the junkyard, starting it up, beginning the song) Buster: (sings) In junkyard society, we're repelled by all propriety. Humility and modesty, good manners and sobriety. (He flings a board, catapulting a chicken leg with Francois catching it with his mouth and gnawing on it like a wild boar) Buster: (singing) We always gulp our meat. (Then he walks past Scratchy, who is scratching himself, with a piece of his fur falling off) Buster: (singing) Our coats are never neat. (He pushes the barrel Scamp is on, knocking the pup into a small mud puddle) Buster: (singing) Alas, we lack all poise, we're complete with natural noise. (Scratchy, Sparky and Francois, who are chewing, all belch, one by one) Buster: (singing) No pets you stroke and pat, you might as well be a cat. (Then he and his crew appear on top of the pile) Buster: (singing) In junkyard society. Strays: (singing) Society. (They all scamper down the pile, while Francois runs across the piano, playing a few keys. Then Buster and Mooch walk in front of Scamp, having him walk backwards onto a board over a bottle, before Angel jumps on the other end, flinging Scamp to a broken wheeled chair. Then Buster appears behind Scamp, tilts the chair, knocking Scamp out of it and onto a sled, sliding down the junk pile, bouncing off a bed and into a barrel of old clothes, which he breaks upon landing in) Buster: (singing) We are the mutual unelite, an underclass from our head to feet. (Then the rottweiler runs around on a barrel that rolls, and Scamp tries to avoid getting run over) Buster: (singing) Our deeds are spiteful, our mischief pure. (Scamp tries barrel-rolling himself, but slips and gets his head stuck in a glass bowl his size) Buster: (singing) We have a natural disorder, for which there's no cure. (Then Buster and the other strays all walk in a line, as if they are their own parade, and Scamp tries following them) Buster: (singing) Down to the junkyard, straight to the junkyard. Step to the junkyard, society rag. (Then the group climbs over a plank over the trash pile like a bridge, but with Scamp following Francois at the end, he slips and breaks the plank, and the two small dogs are sent tumbling down the stairs, with the black small dog ending up in the bowl briefly. Once the two get to the bottom, they smash into an old wardrobe. The doors open, showing Scamp in a hanging dress-coat) Francois: (singing) That's where you're nobody's perfumed pet. (On "perfumed", he jumps out, unknowingly touching the perfume bottle and spraying Scamp on the face. He coughs a bit, but shortly recovered as he gets out and follows the dogs) Sparky: (singing) Where you can wet where you want to wet. (Scamp sees a puddle of fluids that Sparky goes, where he swiftly jumps over it, and then sees a bone lying around, picking it up) Ruby: (singing) Where you put charity on the shelf. (She snatches the bone away from the pup, making him frown. On the pile, Buster catches the bone and turns to a cracked mirror) Buster: (singing) The only one that you'll watch out for is you yourself. (Angel jumps through the hole in the mirror and takes the bone herself. Then at a big turning wheel of an old broken bicycle, each dog jumps through the hole, one by one) All: (singing) Down in the junkyard, check out the junkyard. Doing the junkyard, society rag. (Scamp tries to do the same for them, but is too late as he gets hit by the spikes and tumbles downward to a torn up couch cushion. Sparky appears as he uses his mouth to tear a pillow up) Sparky: (singing) No distemper shots from the vet. (Ruby appears, getting in a tug-of-war game with Sparky over the pillow) Ruby: (singing) Show your temper. Francois: (singing) Mean as you can get. (Then the two tear the pillow in half, sending stuff flying all over. Some stuffing gets all over Ruby, who gives a feminine look, as if the stuffing is a new-formed wig. Then the strays appear all over the car at the top, as it wobbles) Strays: (singing) Down at the yard where we live and let. Francois: (singing) Chaos and damage, oh, we do it double. (Then the car starts to lean downward, before it slides down the pile as all the dogs jump off in time and it smashes into a portion of the pile, sending junk flying everywhere) Buster: (singing) None of this play-it-safe house dog stuff. (A dizzy Sparky and Scratchy are riding in a one-wheeled bathtub, while a dizzy Ruby, wearing a dress, walks around on two legs dizzily before dropping and rolling around) Buster: (singing) Our days are risky, our nights are hard, the peaceful life leaves us ill at ease. (Francois is stuck in one end of a pipe, attempting to get out, with Mooch stuck at the other end, fighting as well, before he gets loose and ends up on a moving board, which has Buster on the board's other side) Buster: (singing) We're crude and loud in a crowd and very proud of our fleas. Mooch: Oh, I love this guy! (Then Francois springs out of the pipe and unluckily ends up where a fuse box is and he shrieks as he is electrocuted, but he survives. Anyhow, the voltage causes a broken down theater marquee behind Buster and Mooch to light on and off, as the last chorus of the song starts) Strays: (singing) Down at the junkyard, check out the junkyard. (Scamp is eager while watching Buster and Mooch on the spinning board, before the broken door he is on gets knocked away and is sent tumbling downward before the other strays catch him with a raggedy old bed sheet, bouncing him up like a trampoline a couple times) Strays: (singing) Step to the junkyard, straight to the junkyard. (On the third bounce, he tears through the sheet but a springy accordion, the source of his bounces, bounces him high and upward, before landing him in a baby carrier) Strays: (singing) Doing the junkyard. Sparky: Sing it, boy! (On the finishing line, Buster pushes Scamp in the stroller down the pile) Strays: (singing) Society raaaaaaaggg!!! (While reaching the bottom, he smashes towards another pile, where Angel is watching as a broken picture frame falls down upon him. All the strays laugh at him once the song is done) Scamp: (jumps out) What a blast! I'd never get away with this at home. Buster: Then you really think you have what it takes to be a junkyard dog, right? Angel: He has what it takes, Buster. I saw all his moves back in that alley. Buster: What? Scamp: Yes, sir. Watch this slick move. (He runs over some old cupboards and jumps off a bed onto a garbage lid, but then he clumsily slips, gets his tail caught in a spring, bounces a little before landing in the dirt with a thud, making the strays laugh at him) Buster: Talented as you are, it ain't that easy, sport. (Scamp tries shaking the spring off his tail, grinning sheepishly. Then Buster uses his teeth to throw a trashcan lid like a frisbee, which Sparky ducks, and Angel catches before riding it as it rolls) Angel: Every day out here is like a test of survival. Buster: A test? Beautiful! Other Strays: (randomly) Yes, yes, that's it! Scamp: Yes, sir! Good! Buster: Baby, I always get my best ideas if you're around. (making Angel wince) That's why you're my girl. Angel: I'm not your girl. (Of course, Buster doesn't hear her, and turns to Scamp) Buster: Alright, Scampers, we'll give you a shot, (knocks the spring off Scamp's tail) but you have to pass a little test of courage…in Reggie's alley. (The other strays gasp at what he said) Mooch: What? Reggie's alley? Francois: But it's never been done before. (Even Angel gasps in concern) Buster: Come here. Don't listen to them. I have faith in you, boy. It's just a little test to prove you could stand on your own four paws. Scamp: Easy street. I'm not afraid of anything. Buster: That's what I like about you, boy. You have spunk. (The two walk together, chuckling, while the other dogs give each other concerned glances) (Back at Snob Hill, everyone has found out about Scamp's disappearance. Outside, Lady and the Tramp are hearing Jim Dear and Darling from outside) Jim Dear: (putting his coat on) Did you call the pound? Darling: Yes, darling. They haven't seen him. (Junior cries a bit, but Darling holds him in comfort) Lady: Oh, Tramp, Scamp's never been out all night so many could happen. Tramp: Easy, now, easy, Pidge. We'll find him before he gets himself in real danger. (They nuzzle each other for a bit, but then they hear creaking, and see Trusty comes in through the loose fence board) Trusty: Oh, miss Lady, ma'am? (Jock also comes in through the fence, but gets stuck) Jock: We came as soon as we heard. Oh! Och! Och! (He fights a bit before getting through the fence) Annette, Collette and Danielle: (rushing to the two) Uncle Jock! Uncle Trusty! Annette and Collette: Scamp ran off! Danielle: What they said! Trusty: Not to worry, little ladies, had my grand-pappy Old Reliable's keen sense of smell. (sniffs) Say, have I ever warned you girls about the time I saved your father from certain death? Annette and Collette: No. Danielle: (foolishly) Yes! (Annette and Collette frown at Danielle, who turns back to them with a puzzled expression) Jock: Ach! Here he goes again. I warned you there'll be no living with him. Danielle: (chuckles) That Scamp is going to get into so many danger if he gets home! (She giggles, though it almost sounds rather fiendishly) Collette: Huh! I don't even want him back! Annette: Yes, who cares? He should know better than to run off. Danielle: (chuckles again) I bet he gets a slipper right across his great, big fat… (But before she can finish, she looks up at Lady, who gives her daughter a stern look. Danielle hesitantly laughs and starts pretending to care about Scamp) Danielle: (hesitantly grins) We really do miss him, Mum. Tramp: We'll be back with your brother in no time. Your old man has twice the speed and cunning as any dog half his age. (Then he jumps onto the doghouse, though rather clumsily. Annette, Collette and Danielle chuckle, while Lady and Trusty grin) Tramp: (bossing around) Just using a few forgotten muscles, that's all. (Then the human couple and their son come out, fixing to go search for Scamp) Jim Dear: Lady, Tramp, let's go! (He is the first to set out) Tramp: (seriously) C'mon! No matter what mischief that pup's getting into. (The father dog jumps off the doghouse and sets off after the owners) (With Scamp and the strays, they are in front of a dark, boarded-up alley with a "Keep Out" sign) Buster: Alright, Scampster. (pushes Scamp in through boards with his nose) Fetch the can out of the alley. (The other dogs chuckle at him, thinking he'll never do it. Scamp turns and sees Reggie, who is a large, savage bullmastiff, sleeping and snoring soundly, with a can under his paw. The can is the can Scamp is supposed to fetch. The pup takes a deep breath as he silently crawls up to the sleeping mongrel, and uses his teeth to gently pull the can away from under Reggie's paw. As he crawls silently away, Reggie paws around a bit, but yet does not wake up. Scamp breathes a sigh of relief, before silently running off, until he bumps into a trashcan, which has awakened Reggie with his vicious yellow, bloodshot eyes opened) Scamp: Farewell! (He darts off with the vicious snarling Reggie charging after him. The pup tries jumping over the fence, but can't because he is small, and the fence is locked. Then Reggie chases Scamp down another path. Once Scamp climbs above a stack of boxes, Reggie charges and breaks them all, sending its wood material and Scamp flying. Then Scamp catches a hanging white bed sheet with his teeth, hanging onto it for his life. Reggie finds the pup, but snarls and barks at him as he tries jumping up to eat him in one bite, but he can't reach. Then the clothespins holding the sheet come loose before the sheet falls onto Reggie and Scamp, blocking the former's sight as he begins running, yet determined to finish off Scamp as soon as he can find him, not knowing the pup is on his back. The strays see him heading for the boarded up entrance) Mooch: It's a spook! A spook! Buster: It's Reggie! Scatter! (The junkyard dogs all scramble before Reggie rams through the boards, sending them all flying and then the shrieking Francois is snatched up on his covered nose, before he is tossed off. Reggie roars as he tears through the sheet. Then Scamp swiftly rushes off, not seeing an obese woman coming his road, carrying bags of groceries and walking her tiny poodle with her. The yelping woman falls with her hair, turning out to be a wig, flying off and onto Scamp and the groceries are all scattered on the ground as the panicked poodle yips and barks. The bald woman just shrieks and fusses while on the ground. Scamp, yet running, swiftly shakes the wig off as it falls into a sewer grate. A barrel that Angel is in falls over, and she sees Scamp running, before spotting the barking Reggie heading her road as she darts off. Breaking the barrel, Reggie chases the two pups and who shall come around the corner between Reggie and his prey, but the dog pound truck with the dogcatcher singing) Dogcatcher: (sings) Where, oh, where has my little dog------ (He gasps upon seeing the two pups running in front of him) Dogcatcher: Well, I'll be. (pulls out his net) You're not getting away this time. (He steps on the pedal, which results in the tailpipe blowing smoke into Reggie's face, blinding him as he goes down a path different from the one the pups and the pound truck are taking. Then the dog catcher picks up Angel in the net) Dogcatcher: Now I've got you, you little hoodlum. (Then, Scamp jumps up and bites the net's handle, snarling) Dogcatcher: Hey! Hey, now, get out of there! Hey! What are you, nuts? You crazy--- (sees an oncoming lamppost) Aah! (The lamppost they are about to collide into breaks the net and its handle, sending the two pups flying as they yell before landing on some piles of disregarded soft sacks of flour. Then Reggie comes busting out another fence, barking viciously at Scamp, who snarls, but suddenly, the pound truck comes ramming into the bullmastiff, with the dogcatcher's eyes widening in alarm, as is Reggie's. Then, with a SMASH, the strays watch as the whining Reggie is sent flying into a fruit stand, wrecking it in the process and having a ripe tomato squish him on the head. He shakes the tomato off and snarls, ready to pounce again, but the dogcatcher catches him with a spare net, dragging him over to the truck) Dogcatcher: That'll get you hard time in the pound, fella, attacking a deputy animal control officer's vehicle. (He is tossed into the back with the man closing the door and locking it, before stepping back into the truck, taking off) Dogcatcher: (muttering) And a fine modern machine like this one at that. Two horsepower, three miles to the gallon, boy. (Scamp watches the truck take off and feels a little worried about getting Reggie busted like that, even if he does try to murder him) Angel: Hey. You saved my life. Nobody else here would have dared to do that. (The other strays come out of hiding and gather around Scamp) Mooch: Wow! Did you see that? Francois: Is it possible? Mooch: Scamp is a canine hurricane. You did everyone a big favor, alright? Francois: Yes. You are practically the hero. (Then the small dog kisses Scamp on the cheek) Scamp: Shouldn't we go after him or something? Buster: Hey, hey, hey, hey. You have it all wrong, boy. In the junkyard, it's every dog for himself. I can see we're gonna have to put you to another test. Scamp: Any--anything you say, Buster. (The Rottweiler tries opening the lock on the fence that Scamp tries to escape over earlier, but is having no luck. He tries as much as he can, while snarling, but to no prevail) Buster: Will somebody open this fact? Mooch: Alright, that's it. (He happily charges to the fence, smashing it down. Scamp is impressed by this. Mooch, meanwhile, looks dizzy) Mooch: Is that open enough? (The dogs enter through the new entrance) Francois: Magnificent, Mooch. Sparky: That's using your head. Angel: Thanks again, right? (She goes ahead and turns back, seeing Scamp yet there) Angel: You, uh, coming, tenderfoot? (He nods before slipping on a chunk of the broken wood from the fence, and giggles sheepishly) Scamp: I hit the thingy. (The two pups follow the strays down the alley) (Late in the day, some fairground workers are setting up for the 4th of July fair to happen tomorrow. Nearby, the strays and Scamp are present. Buster walks over a mud puddle, while a laughing and whooping Mooch splashes in the puddle as he walks over it. Scamp stops as he splashes and rolls around in the water puddle) Scamp: This is great. This is living. I never get to do this at home. Whoo-hoo! (runs to Ruby and shakes the water near her) After I pass my next test, I'm gonna be the best junkyard dog there ever was! Ruby: I don't think so, doll. You may be good....but you'll never be as good as the master. Buster: (shakes his head) Ah, here we go. Sparky: Ruby's right, carnsarnit. In my day, there was only one stray by which all dogs was measured. Strays: (together) The Tramp. Scamp: (in unison) What? Mooch: He taught Buster everything there is to know about being on the streets, alright? Ruby: Buster's damage was Tramp's danger. Mooch: And Tramp's danger was Buster's damage, alright? Ruby: That dog was a prize, the one that got away. Got away from me, at least. Mooch: Got away with everything! I heard he once stole a whole meat wagon, alright? (laughs and runs around) Yes, and then the dogcatcher chased him all the road to the river. (As he laughs and runs, he trips Francois up, with the little dog getting wet in a puddle of water) Sparky: No, sir. It was dogcatchers. Scamp: Uh, how many? (Flashback) (In an event a long time ago, the growling Tramp finds himself surrounded by many dogcatchers) Sparky's Voice: At least a dozen. (Then he darts off before any one of them can catch him) Dogcatchers: Hey, you! Sparky's Voice: Two dozen. (Soon, more dogcatchers all chase the dog, and so do some police officers and soldiers on horses) Sparky's Voice: Now that I think about it, the police and the army cavalry were after the boy as well. (Distant from them, Tramp jumps over some rocks and onto a log, which pushes downward above a waterfall. He tries to leave, but finds himself cornered from every exit by all the dogcatchers) Sparky's Voice: He was trapped. But the Tramp was gonna go, he was gonna go in style. (Then, with a smirk, he gets his only idea for an exit. Just as the dogcatchers all cover the log and swing their nets out, he jumps out and lunges down the waterfall with a big splash, as if making one dramatic exit) (End of Flashback) Scamp: (as Sparky licks from the water) Then what just happened? Sparky: We never saw each other again after that. (lifts an ear) They say if the wind blows......you can yet hear the Tramp howl. (As a wind blows some leaves, the dogs hear some howling from nowhere) Scamp: Wow! Buster: Alright, that's it. That is not what just happened. He met this girl, see? Queen of a kennel club set. Even her prissy little name…yet leaves a bad taste in my mouth. (He pulls Scamp towards him and whispers the name in his ear) Buster: Lady. (Scamp's eyes widen in shock to hear his mother's name) Angel: But he met his true love. Buster: He betrayed me! You can't have a family and yet be a junkyard dog. Then I gave Tramp a choice. It's either me or her. And he picked life on the end of a chain. (begins to rave with his voice raising) Hooked up with a real powder puff. Sleeping on carpets. Free room and board! (with saliva escaping his lips) Living the cushy pillow life! (He breathes heavily, while Mooch, Scratchy and Ruby, with a twig in her mouth, give worried looks. Then the stray calms down) Buster: And that's if I learned the first rule about being a junkyard dog; Buster's damage is Buster's danger. (Then Scamp frantically scratches himself in a matter that Buster notices) Buster: Hey! Hey, hey, hey! The Tramp used to scratch like that. (sniffs him) You ain't related, are you? Scamp: Who, me? No way! Buster: Good. Because if you were, you'd be kibble. (Upon saying that, the rottweiler snatches the twig Ruby has in her mouth and chomps down on it with his teeth, breaking it in half, with Scamp getting the message) Scamp: Right, Buster. (The strays all walk away with Scamp just staying where he is) (That night, Scamp is pacing around in the rail yard, unhappy that his father is a stray who gives his old life up) Scamp: No way, Jose. That can't be true. You gave it all up? I mean, what could be better than this? Angel: You alright, tenderfoot? Scamp: Who, me? Yes. Yes, sure. Angel: What are you doing out here? Don't you have a nice family back home? Scamp: Wh-wh-what difference does it make? All families are alike. They make you take baths and sleep in a bed and, and you have to eat everything in your bowl. And if it rains, you have to come indoors. Angel: Ah. Scamp: Let's just say you're lucky you've never had to live with a family. Angel: Wrong again, tenderfoot. Scamp: You mean, you had a family? Angel: Actually, I've had five families. (Then he starts to walk with her) Scamp: I always thought one was too much. Angel: I could never get one to stick. Someone would take me in, and just as I'd start to think, "wow, this is my family", they'd move or have a new baby or have an allergy. Same old story, I'm out on the street. Scamp: Wait a moment. You really want a family, don't you? But you've had Buster. Angel: Buster! You can't warn him. You can't. He'll kick me out. Scamp: Don't worry. Your secret's safe with me. (She gives an unsure look) Scamp: I promise. Angel: Thank you. (The two continue walking) Scamp: (hesitantly) Well, I guess you're Buster's girl, right? (The girl pup, clearly getting tired of this misconception, jumps out in front of Scamp) Angel: I am not Buster's girl! I don't belong to anybody. The junkyard dogs aren't many of a family, but what choice do I have? Scamp: What more have you done? As a junkyard dog, you can stay up late or dig or-- Angel: (as a light appears behind Scamp) Run. Scamp: Yes. Or, or play or dig or-- Angel: Run. Scamp: Right. Or chase squirrels--- Angel: (starts running) No! I mean, run! (Scamp turns and sees a train heading towards them as he shrieks and runs as fast as he can across the track. Though frightened, both pups are enjoying the rush, nonetheless) Angel: Whoo! C'mon! (She makes it to the end, but then Scamp gets his paw caught in a hole in a board) Scamp: Angel! Angel! Angel, help! (as the train draws closer) Now we'll be a good time! Hurry up! (Angel rushes back and tries to pull him out, but is unable to, where the two push down on the board, breaking it loose and sending the two pups plummeting to the river below. Once the train is gone, Angel appears back above the water, gasping for air. As she goes ashore, coughing and laughing, she notices that Scamp hasn't resurfaced) Angel: Scamp? Scamp! (She climbs over a log to look for him) Angel: Scamp! Where are you? Scamp? Scamp! (Somewhere else, in a park, the family is yet looking for Scamp) Jim Dear: (to a cop) Excuse me. I'm looking for a pup. (Then he and the cop go over to where Scamp may be, while Trusty keeps sniffing) Trusty: I-I think I'm onto something. Jock: Yes? Are you sure? (Trusty lets out a loud, anguished shriek) Trusty: I have most assuredly had him! This way. Tramp: C'mon, Pidge. (The parents and Jock follow the bloodhound. They get on top of a rock and see a clump of hair, what appears to be Scamp, floating among the river) Lady: Oh, look! Tramp: Scamp! (The father dog jumps in the water) Lady: (in concern) Oh, please. (Jock and Trusty give worried looks

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