Little Swee'pea (1936) Poster

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8/10
Swee'Pea's Animated Debut
RJV19 January 2005
Like cartoon producer Max Fleischer's star character Popeye the Sailor, Swee'Pea first appeared in E.C. Segar's comic strip THIMBLE THEATRE. In the baby's animated debut, LITTLE SWEE'PEA, he is an effective foil for Popeye. Here, the sailor takes the baby to the zoo. However, Swee'pea escapes from his carriage and wanders along the cages of various large and dangerous animals. The bulk of the cartoon concerns Popeye's efforts to rescue Swee'pea from these beasts while trying to avoid being mauled himself.

As in most of the Max Fleischer Popeye cartoons I have seen, LITTLE SWEE'PEA has a lot of clever and enjoyable gags. One particularly inventive sequence has Popeye searching for Swee'pea in a hippo's cage only to find the baby right inside the hippo when the beast opens its mouth. One wonders why this particular zoo lacks any staff to prevent babies like Swee'pea from entering these cages. Then again, if anybody was around to stop Swee'pea we'd be denied the joy of seeing Popeye struggle with the animals, wouldn't we? For this cartoon, the Fleischer staff used live-action backgrounds. The results are impressive, creation a 3-D illusion. I've never seen the colorized version of LITTLE SWEE'PEA, nor do I desire to. From what I hear, the people who recolored this black-and-white cartoon obliterated these attractive backgrounds.

And there's always the joy of listening to Jack Mercer as Popeye. He provides an ideal voice characterization, a deep gravelly voice that nevertheless conveys a jovial warmth, revealing the sailor's golden heart beneath his rough exterior. One also gets to hear Mercer's muttered ad-libs, although in my opinion there aren't enough in this particular cartoon.

LITTLE SWEE'PEA, like most of the Max Fleischer Popeye cartoons I've seen, remains fresh and funny after over sixty years. Like all fine cartoons, this is essential family entertainment, testifying to the greatness of both the Max Fleischer studio and Jack Mercer.
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8/10
"There's no if or maybes, I'll never have babies"
ccthemovieman-122 February 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Popeye comes calling on Olive Oyl to take her to the zoo to "sees some am-inals." Olive says, "I'm too busy, but you can take Swee'Pea" After Popeye says "okay," she reminds him, "don't let him get frightened."

Shortly after strolling into the zoo, Swee' Pea goes wandering off (Popeye seems to be in his own world, oblivious to the baby) and winds up in an elephant's cage. Popeye finally wakes up, sees where the little tyke is, and goes to rescue him.While the sailor man and the elephant literally wrestle, Swee' Pea wanders off walking in and out of an alligator's mouth. Popeye runs over, has the same wrestling match and subdues the 'gator by rubbing its stomach and putting it to sleep. He then pounces on the stomach and walks away. The alligator wakes up, grabs Popeye, beats him up and then rubs HIS stomach and puts Popeye to sleep! This routine follows then with a big hippo and then a leopard.

When it's all over, Popeye brings him home safely, only to give him a toy and NOW he's frightened, and Olive clubs our man over the head for scaring the baby.

Popeye (lamnts) sings: "There's no if or maybes, I'll never have babies, I'm Popeye the Sailor Man! " (Toot Toot)
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8/10
Popeye takes Swee' Pea to the Zoo
disdressed122 November 2008
in this animated short,Popeye takes Swee' Pea to the zoo,and of course chaos and hi jinx ensue,with Popeye being pretty much oblivious.this is the 1st Popeye short i have seen,and i thought it was quite funny,and of course absurd.this is one of the short films from the Fleisher studio,who also did a number of Superman animated shorts,17 in all,i think.one of the funniest things about Popeye is his strange way of speaking,or mumbling rather.that and the fact that he always has a can of spinach on him no matter where he goes.of course,as soon as the can of spinach is drained,Popeye becomes super strong.in just over 7 minutes,there is a lot packed into this short.i really enjoyed it.for me,Popeye:Little Swee'Pea is an 8/10
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Who is Swee Pea's parents??
SkippyDevereaux20 January 2005
I never did understand in what relation was this baby to Popeye. Was he (it is a boy, is it not?), Olive Oyl's illegitimate kid? She seemed to hang around the docks a lot, she dated both Bluto and Popeye, heck, she could have dated (wink, wink) the whole 7th fleet for all we know!! But, I digress. This cartoon is a cute one about Popeye taking Swee Pea to the zoo. Swee Pea decides to climb out of his stroller and get inside various animal cages. Swee Pea gets inside the elephant, alligator, hippo cages and is seen riding the leopard out of the zoo before being caught by Popeye and delivered back to Olive Oyl.

But, this is a funny little cartoon from the Fleischer Studios.
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6/10
The animation is better than the gags.
This is basically a 'Baby Herman' movie: a baby keeps obliviously wandering into perilous situations, and then just as obliviously wandering out of them again ... while the frantic guardian, all too aware of the danger, keeps getting hurt. But at least this cartoon gives Popeye a change from his usual formula of trading punches with Bluto or some other menace.

Is Swee'Pea meant to be Olive Oyl's nephew, or is he her illegitimate son? Whatever he is, Olive dumps him on Popeye for the day. Popeye dumps Swee'Pea into the pram, and heads for the zoo. There's some nice multiplane animation during the trip to the zoo, and the sequence with the cartoon elephant seems to contain some rotoscoped footage of a live-action elephant.

Most of the gags are quite obvious. At one point, Swee'Pea rides bareback astride a leopard while the soundtrack plays 'Hold that Tiger'. Given that choice of music, why didn't the animators put Swee'Pea on a tiger instead of a leopard? I suspected that there was some gag coming up involving the leopard's spots, which wouldn't work as well with a tiger's stripes. Sure enough.

I dislike movies about babies, and I like cartoon babies even less. Popeye is funnier without Swee'Pea, and it's unfortunate that Olive's role in this toon is so brief that it gives her nothing to do. More for the impressive animation than anything else, I'll rate this 6 out of 10. The Fleischer Studio's cartoons were released through Paramount. After they lost Fleischer, the cartoons produced by Paramount's in-studio animation unit were consistently the worst animation output by any major Hollywood studio. Even the worst Fleischer Popeye cartoon is far better than any of the post-Fleischer Popeyes.
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6/10
This influential film has informed . . .
cricket3018 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . America's Zoological Policies for nearly a century now. Guided by LITTLE SWEE'PEA, what does an Ohio zoo do when a careless mom allows her toddler to totter over to one of Earth's last 1,000 or so silverback gorillas? Gun down this dangerous critter, of course. During the running time of LITTLE SWEE'PEA, "Popeye" man-handles and brutalizes an elephant, a crocodile, a hippo, and a leopard--so-called "endangered" animals all. However, ordinary people who cannot stomach performance-enhancing spinach need a more savory solution to fend off the exotic animals constantly escaping from America's zoos. (WHO thought up this crazed notion of packing one of everything into an enclosure amid the human population of most American cities, towns, villages, and hamlets, anyway? Why not confine each type of adequately interesting tourist attraction creature to just one spot in the USA, so if someone wants to see flamingos, they go to Florida, and for hippos, they fly to Hawaii?) LITTLE SWEE'PEA demonstrates that these varmints are particular in maintaining a steady diet of young urchins. Surely our best defense against marauding man-eaters is cold blue steel. Sadly, many U.S. citizens cannot afford the military-style assault weapons necessary to bring down a charging lion, tiger, or kangaroo in the scant milliseconds available. Hopefully, LITTLE SWEE'PEA will inspire YOU to support your local chapter of BANGS (Broke Americans Need Gun Stamps)!
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10/10
Hey, it's Popeye. How can I give him less than a 10?
RsqMdc25 September 2005
I grew up watching this Popeye and unlike the heroes the kids have to look up to today he was honest, truthful and always did the right thing even when it meant more trouble for his "predicamink". Granted Popeye never took himself to seriously but that's just another factor that endeared him for me. Just simply a great cartoon as all the old Popeye cartoons are. Oh and for those of you asking about Swee'Pea and where he came from, he was an orphan. One legend has it that Popeye found him in the Swee'Pea vines, thus the name. The other legend says he was left on the Oyle family's' doorstep. According to this version when first introduced to Popeye he "socked" him right in the eye and Popeye said he "layed me in the Swee'Peas!" Thus another origin for the name. Olive seemed to have became his adoptive Mother. So take your pick of origin legends but please allow this to put to rest any notion of Swee'Pea being an illegitimate child once and for all. Let us not tarnish the long standing respect for Popeye and his world.
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10/10
Superb Fleischer debut for Swee'Pea
petersgrgm4 August 2010
I remember Little See'pea as the debut cartoon for the Segar-created baby Swee'Pea. (Sock-a-Bye Baby was not Swee'pea's debut, though I at first thought that the babe whom Popeye was baby-sitting WAS Swee'pea.) This cartoon showed what Swee'Pea was like; when Popeye took him to the zoo (because Olive Oyl was too busy with housecleaning to go with Popeye), Swee'Pea crawled in and out of mischief, with Popeye in pursuit. With the aid of spinach, he spanked the hippo and threw him into the ground, then twirled a leopard, which lost its spots. The punching of the crocodile into suitcases, seen in several other Popeyes, was absent. At the end, Popeye gave Swee'pea a toy monkey, which led him to SQUALL! Olive Oyl thought that Popeye had FRIGHTENED Swee'pea, hit him with her broom. The REAL nitty-gritty was that Swee'Pea was squalling because he did not have his way. This was seen in later Popeyes featuring Swee'Pea, like Baby Wants a Bottleship and Thrill of Fair. All in all, a fine cartoon debut for Swee'Pea.
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4/10
Father of the year?
Horst_In_Translation27 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Okay I know he is not the father (I think), but you know what I mean. "Little Swee'pea" is an American cartoon from 1936, so this one is already over 80 years old and it is another Fleischer Studios production directed by Dave Fleischer himself together with Seymour Kneitel and if this does not tell you already that here we have another from these oh so many Popeye short films, then perhaps the title should as this film carries the name of the baby character that appears in many other Popeye cartoons too. Like most other Popeye stuff, it is in black-and-white, which sure hurts the outcome a bit in my opinion with the fact that we cannot see the animals in color. Popeye and the little fella are off to the zoo and Swee'pea manages to get through the bars into the areas of very dangerous animals such as elephamnts and crocoviles, even if they have no intention to harm the little fella really. Otherwise they easily could have. Still Popeye decides to beat them up. Boo Popeye! How about watching out for the little guy before he runs away, after all it is just a baby and Popeye is basically always one animal too late as Swee'pea moves on fairly quickly. The elephant, the crocodile and eventually the hippopotamus for which Popeye decides to get some help with his spinach. Impressive actually that he did not need it for the other two. How did he lose to Bluto so frequently without his spinach. Questions over questions. Noone knows the answer. But noone really needs to in my opinion because this short film is one I found rather repetitive and uninspired and almost never only mildly funny. Not one of Popeye's best by any means and I give this one a thumbs-down. Also visually not a revelation looking at everything Disney and WB did back in 1936. Skip it.
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10/10
Pretty Funny
gmawdsley25 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Amazing drawing and animation for an old b+w film. Scenery looks amazingly lifelike. The piece is fairly funny. Popeye comes to ask Olive Oil out. He gets sent to the Zoo with Sweepea.

Popeye is basically chasing the baby all over the place at the zoo. And at the end he gets hit by Olive Oil for scaring the baby with a pretty lame toy. I saw this piece on my computer. You can subscribe to the Podcast at http://www.refrederator.com for free.

Amazing what is available at Podcasts on Itunes. Check it out on Itunes. This and other classic old cartoons are available. Very kool!! It is history!!
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10/10
Good one!
Movie Nuttball14 July 2005
When this show was on I watched it every time I could! I thought that the characters were really funny and all had great personalities. The animation in My opinion was crisp, clean, and really clear. Not to mention beautiful! Most of the characters in this show are hilarious like the Looney Tunes characters that we all love. in My opinion these characters are the funnies and talented ever seen. In fact, The things that goes on in this series' cartoons are in My opinion nuts which that is what makes them hilarious! There are so many to like and laugh at and the silly things they do! If you like the original Looney Tunes then I strongly recommend that you watch this show!
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Watch Out for the Elephant!
Michael_Elliott1 April 2016
Little Swee'pea (1936)

*** (out of 4)

Popeye asks Olive Oyl to go to the zoo with him but she's busy so she says he can take Little Swee'pea. Popeye does so and quickly regrets it as the kid keeps wondering off and getting involved with various animals.

LITTLE SWEE'PEA is another winning short from Fleischer's series where there's once again some good laughs and plenty of nice action. The real highlight here is a sequence where the baby is walking underneath the elephant, which keeps coming close to stepping on him. There's also another funny sequence where the baby keeps walking into the mouth of an alligator. The animation itself is of high quality as you'd expect and the action helps keep the film moving.
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8/10
Popeye at the zoo
TheLittleSongbird26 April 2019
Many fine cartoons were seen with Dave Fleischer. Ones that were amusing and charming, though over-cuteness did come through in some efforts and the stories were always pretty thin, with appealing characters, outstanding music and visuals that were inventive and with innovative animation techniques.

While not quite one of my favourite Popeye cartoons, 'Little Swee Pea' is still very well made and great fun, with plenty of amusement and managing to not be too cute. This is not a Popeye versus Bluto cartoon, and another change of pace for Popeye, which are every bit as enjoyable and in a good deal of them even more so than the Popeye versus Bluto efforts. The premise is not an original one, so the cartoon is on the formulaic side, but 'Little Swee Pea' has enough invention to stop it from becoming predictable and repetitive, or too much so at least. It is a fine example of why Popeye and his cartoon appeal a lot to me and what makes them work so well is all evident here.

Olive Oyl is on the bland and underused side, but Popeye and debuting Swee Pea are dead on. Popeye is very easy to like and is is amusing yet easy to feel sympathy for, but despite being a baby Swee Pea manages to be an even more interesting character, avoiding being obnoxious or too cute and is both adorable and funny. Their chemistry/interaction was essential for 'Little Swee Pea' to work and sparkles.

There are many clever and very amusing to hilarious gags, the cartoon is hardly short-changed in this regard. A highlight is the sequence with the hippo. The asides and mumblings are even funnier and helped by Jack Mercer's ever genius vocal delivery, just wish there was more.

Regarding the animation, it is very good as always from this period. It's beautifully drawn and with immaculate visual detail, that doesn't ever feel cluttered or static, and lively and smooth movement. The music likewise, 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.

Jack Mercer easily steals the show when it comes to the voice acting, for all the above reasons.

In conclusion, very nicely done Popeye cartoon and a worthy introduction to Swee Pea. 8/10
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8/10
It's said that there's nothing more American . . .
tadpole-596-91825613 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . than hot dogs, baseball, Chevrolet, and old "Popeye." LITTLE SWEE'PEA begins with "Olive" bamboozling Popeye into babysitting her apparent out-of-wedlock brat, instead of keeping her planned day-at-the-zoo date with everyone's favorite sailor man. This brief cartoon ends with the beleaguered tar singing "There's no if's or maybe's, I'll never have babies!" However, perhaps LITTLE SWEE'PEA's most telling moment comes halfway between Popeye's gonad-bluing and vasectomy, at about the 5:53 mark, when he consumes his trademark can of spinach. These wonder leaves immediately transform the previously scrawny-looking sailor into a stout section of Leader Trump's Great Wall, assuming that it winds up being constructed of bricks. (No doubt Popeye is trying to plant a seed in the mind of POTUS #45!) Bricks are a lot cheaper than concrete or steel, and they last far longer than our concrete highways (which soon break down into a maze of potholes), or steel, which rapidly rusts. China's Great Wall has stood for thousands of years. If Leader Trump simply retrieves the unused trove of paper towels he squandered in Puerto Rico, he can sell them at a White House yard sale (signed, with authentication hologram stickers, of course!), making enough coin to underwrite a Great, Big, Beautiful Brick Wall stretching from the Pacific to the Gulf!
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8/10
classic
SnoopyStyle18 December 2019
Popeye is taking Olive Oyl to the zoo. It turns out that she's busy and he takes Swee'Pea instead. Baby's day out becomes one big adventure. This is a classic Popeye. He keeps saving the baby from the animals. Swee'Pea with the crocodile is a classic scene. There are a few other great bits. The only thing that I don't like is Popeye's closing song where he says he'll never have a baby. It's too cynical for Popeye. Overall, this is a great classic.
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