Adventures of Popeye (1935) Poster

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7/10
Comic book Popeye
TheLittleSongbird17 February 2020
Have always preferred Fleischers' Popeye cartoons over those from Famous Studios, with the best period for me being the late-30s where the quality was pretty much consistently pretty good to great. Famous Studios' were all watchable but less consistent, with the later ones suffering from budget and time constraints. 'Adventures of Popeye' may not have been made in Fleischers' very best years for the series, but it does show why the early Popeyes are worth the look.

'Adventures of Popeye' is not one of the best of the whole Popeye series and there are better early Popeyes. Namely because it's a not particularly inspired one and not like what comes into people's heads when thinking of Popeye. It's basically a compilation cartoon, am going to be kinder in not calling it a cheat (have seen far worse cheater-like cartoons that actually do feel lazy whereas this was quite nostalgic and had interesting qualities).

Made up of a very simple and slight framework that ends as unsurprisingly as one can get, with clips of standout moments from four of the best early Popeye cartoons (re-dubbed). Those cartoons being 'Popeye the Sailor', 'I Eats My Spinach', 'Wild Elephinks' and 'Axe Me Another'. The framing story is visually interesting, with very well made and easily interwoven live action, and has nice chemistry between Popeye and the boy, but there's not an awful lot to it otherwise. The clips featured are quite a lot more interesting and entertaining, with all the funny and energetic moments coming from the clips.

The animation is beautifully drawn and with enough visual detail to not make it cluttered or static and lively and smooth movement. The music is also outstanding, lots of merry energy and lush orchestration, adding a lot to the action and making the impact even better without being too cartoonish. Fleischer's direction is always accomplished and his style is all over it. There are plenty of very amusing moments, many bouts of vibrant energy if more in the clips than the framing story and a good deal of charm.

Popeye is as amusing and likeable as ever and liked his chemistry with the cute, but not too much, boy. The appearances of Olive and Bluto, the latter always was a great double act with Popeye, are more than welcome, and although the re-dubbing is somewhat obvious it is done by the three best voice actors for Popeye (Jack Mercer in alternative to William Costello), Olive (Mae Questel, in most of the series with the odd cartoon where she was voiced by Bonnie Poe or Margie Hines, who didn't fit as well) and Bluto (Gus Wickie in alternative to William Pennell) so it is expertly done.

Summing up, won't blow the mind but a nice way to pass the time. 7/10
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7/10
Early Comic Books
boblipton14 January 2024
In this early cheater cartoon, a kid is made mock of for reading a Popeye comic book. Popeye animates from the cover of the magazine and shows clips from some of his earlier cartoons.

Comic books began as reprints of comic strips, like Elzie Segar's THIMBLE THEATER, in which Popeye appeared. It was about the time that this cartoon came out that original comic books began to appear, and many of them were based on characters that appeared in movie cartoons.

Most of the original work in this one consists of the Popster saying, effectively "Do you remember this one" and leaping into the cartoon frame. It was certainly cheaper than animating a seven-minute cartoon.
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6/10
live-action plus clip show Popeye
SnoopyStyle13 January 2024
A little boy buys a Popeye comic book. He gets picked on by a bigger bully. Cartoon Popeye sees this and shows him how he defeated his various bullies. The little boy learns from Popeye and starts eating spinach. Kudos to the kid for eating raw spinach. That is enough to give this a pass.

This is a clip show wrapped around a live-action premise. Normally, clip shows don't rank that high for me. It is a cheap way to fill out the order and it's cheating. For this one, I do like the live-action premise as a way to getting into the clip show. The kid is pretty good. I do wonder if he did anything else.
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Very Good
Michael_Elliott14 July 2008
Adventures of Popeye (1935)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Live action mixes in with the animation here as a young boy is getting picked on by a bully so Popeye teaches him how to handle these situations. For the most part we see clips from earlier Popeye films but they use some of the better clips from the series, which leads to plenty of laughs. The live action stuff is pretty good as well and it mixes very well with the animation. We see earlier clips of Popeye battling Bluto, a wild bull and a giant snake among other things.

On DVD from Warner.
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6/10
Unusual Popeye short, but it's working
Horst_In_Translation25 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Adventures of Popeye" is an 8-minute short film from 1935, so already over 80 years old and the title makes it obvious that it is another Fleischer studios production directed by Dave himself. The one difference compared to all the other Popeye short films (over 100 i think) is that this is indeed a mix of live action and animation. We got Popeye coming out of a book and teaching a kid whe he is so strong and so badass inspiring the kid to eat his spinach. The final sequence when the boy beats up the bully is when animation and live action are mixed together and while the live action parts are weak early on, it's worth waiting for this highlight at the end. However, the animated parts are stronger early on and get weaker towards the end. The most memorable thing about this one is how Popeye is basically a manufacturer here, or his fists are I should say as he turns trees and wood into a baby seat and a coffin, turns jungle animals into fur coats and turns a majestic bull early on in the corrida sequence into a butcher's shop. Olive and Bluto show up as well, but they are really at their most generic and forgettable here, even if one comment by Olive is somewhat awkwardly funny. It's all about Popeye and thee kid even turns into Popeye at the very end. All in all, no greatness, but an okay watch. Check it out if you like old cartoons and the fact that this is in black-and-white does not make it a worse watch than some color cartoons from the 1930s. I recommend it.
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7/10
"Flesher's Margerine" is a cheap substitute for butter . . .
oscaralbert16 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . and "Flesher's Animation" is a crass stand-in for cartoons. One can just picture the "brain-storming" session for the latter gang's ADVENTURES OF POPEYE. Greed-Head Number One says, "Why don't we duck some of the expenses required to churn out 8 minutes of 'new' entertainment by recycling 90 seconds or so from a couple of our OLD cartoons?" Mercenary bozo #2 exclaims "Great idea, J.R.! Let's double down, and slam together a minute and a half from EACH of FOUR 'moldy oldies'?" R.J. (aka, Penny-Pinching Bean Counter #3) then chimes in, "Eureka! Plus, we can scoop up some random, never-to-be-credited tyke from our back alley--oops, I mean 'Employee Day Care'--to exploit in brief live-action bridging snippets that we can shoot on the left over film spool remainders!" Few will view the ADVENTURES OF POPEYE without believing that these are actual, verbatim quotes from the Flesher Folks' production meeting which spawned this lazy trip down Memory's toll road.
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7/10
Despite being a cheater, I very much enjoyed Adventures of Popeye
tavm13 October 2018
I watched on TCM this morning. It starts in live-action when a little boy buys the book with the title of this cartoon. He then gets confronted by a bigger boy and the smaller one then feels defeated. Then Popeye on the cover of his book then comes to life and tells the little boy how he often defeated his enemies, usually Bluto, courtesy of scenes of four of his cartoons. If you're very familiar with how Popeye comes through, I don't have to tell you how the little boy defeats his bully, that's for sure! So on that point, I say Adventures of Popeye is worth a look.
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7/10
This brief cartoon constitutes an early example of blatant product placement . . .
cricket3020 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . through the wallet of Big Spinach. To rub in salt to injury, the ADVENTURES OF POPEYE promotes a Spinach Prescription that is so ludicrous and wrong that it has NEVER worked even once in Real Life during the nearly 85 years that this blatant effort to bamboozle the more weak-minded among American Youth has been in circulation. Since its inception, Tinsel Town has been for sale to the highest corrupt corporate bidder, but seldom has such a crass display of the pitfalls inherent in this perverse propaganda machine been so brazenly flaunted in the face of Core American Values as through the ADVENTURES OF POPEYE. This wrong-headed yarn opens with a milquetoast smaller kid being bullied over his frilly white playsuit by a normal, somewhat older American urchin who's dressed appropriately for a boy playing outside. Instead of doing the obvious thing and returning home to demand that his mom immediately overhaul his Please-Beat-Me-Up wardrobe, the bullied tyke sits and cries until a bogus spokesman for the Spinach Industry starts filling his head with cockamamie fairy tale nonsense while shamelessly shilling for that unpalatable green leafy vegetable. Down here in Texas, any urchin old enough to wield a crayon has always known the true solution to such a situation: Cold blue steel (aka, the proverbial "Peacemaker"). So watch and cringe over the ADVENTURES OF POPEYE, which should motivate you to immediately lend your generous financial support to BANGS (Broke Americans Need Gun Stamps)!
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8/10
A Fleischer "Cheater" was Never Really a "Cheater". They were Always Redubbed
dizexpat4 September 2012
People will point out that this was the first of the Popeye "cheaters"--that is, it consists mainly of footage from earlier cartoons.

However, the clips from the four cartoons here have all been re-dubbed with Jack Mercer, Mae Questel and Gus Wickie doing the voices that had earlier been done by others.

Also, in a Popeye "cheater" they often came up with verbal gags that weren't in the original. (In "Customers Wanted" a clip is shown from the earlier "Let's Get Moving" in which Popeye tosses Olive's piano out of the window while he delivers a great under-the-breath mumbling: "The first movement from Not Paying the Rent"--a gag not found in the original cartoon.)

So, it's important to bear that in mind before referring to these as "cheaters".
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7/10
The Boy Gets to Turn Violent
Hitchcoc14 January 2024
A little boy, minding his own business, has just purchased a book about Popeye. As he is walking along, a bully, twice his size, assaults him. Popeye, who is in the book, sees this and shows the boy a series of vignettes from some of his movies. I'm sure this was a cheap way to put out an animated film. He finds himself in several settings. First he is in a bull ring and turns a gigantic bull into various cuts of meat. Secondly, he is in the jungle with Olive and confronts all these wild animals. Again, he violently dispatches each of them in a creative way. In another he is fighting Bluto on a log on a river. There is a pretty funny high chair bit. Average Popeye stuff.
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10/10
Life Imitating Art Imitating Life.......................
redryan648 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
IN BRINGING THIS production to the movies houses of America and the World, Max & Dave Fleischer were in a sense returning to the familiar ground of the mixed format cartoon. By mixed we mean that it is a combination of animation and live action with real flesh & blood actors.

WE CALL IT familiar in reference to their earlier successes with the OUT OF THE INKWELL Series. Featuring an animated Koko the Clown who would usually be drawn into existence courtesy of brother, Max; each cartoon revolved around Koko's troubles in interacting with people, places and various things who reside in this dimension of flesh & blood, concrete, steel and iron.

THE CARTOON IS also what we refer to as being a 'cheater'. By that we mean of course, a film that makes extensive use of footage and sequences from prior productions. Typically, the portion of the film highlighted is at or near the climax of the ultimate struggle between Popeye and adversary. The inclusion of newly produced, seamless segue action makes the whole concept work like a charm.

THIS WAS THE sort of gimmickry that Max and Dave employed often as in the short in which Popeye and Bluto both were in the Arcade business and fierce rivals at that.

AS FOR THE live action, the story is a parallel to Popeye's own struggles with overwhelming odds in the field of the animated cartoon. A small, innocent boy is ridiculed, threatened and physically abused by a taller, bigger and older boy, who also hollers verbal insults of "Sissy" at the young kid, all because the younger fellow bought a Popeye Comic Book.

AFTER INSTRUCTIONAL INTERVENTION on self help and the inclusion of canned spinach as both a dietary supplement and physical prowess invigorator, the little guy triumphs.

WE FOUND THIS entry to be amusing, creative, satisfying and instructional to the morality of the young kids in the audience.
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Repeat Of Four Previous Highlights
ccthemovieman-120 September 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Well, this was the first "rip-off" in the Popeye series. Unfortunately, everyone had them. I'm speaking of the cartoons in which some new material opens the story, but the bulk of it turns out to be scenes from previous cartoons. For collectors, or just big fans of the series who have the past episodes, this always is disappointing because there is very little new to see.

In here, the new scenes are real-life action ones in which a young boy, dressed with a frilly shirt, is picked on by a bully. The smaller kid had just purchased a Popeye comic book. Popepe "sees" what's going on and tells the kid how he used to handle bad situations, trying to inspire the kid. Thus, we see highlights from four previous cartoons in which Popeye defeated Bluto or a bunch of wild animals.

The real-life kid then downs a can of spinach, and with the aid of mixing animation with real-life action, takes care of the bully. That ending was funny but doesn't make up for the fact this was a "re-run."

If you've never seen the other cartons, then this one would be a good one, but it's a waste when you include this with all the previous cartoons in a DVD package. (For that reason, I didn't register a rating vote for this.)
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