The Paneless Window Washer (1937) Poster

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8/10
....Able To Wash Tall Buildngs In A Single Bound!
ccthemovieman-119 February 2007
Bluto, owner of the "Paneless Window Washing" store, drums up business by squirting mud all over the windows of the tall building across the street. He then goes over there, with his ladder, and yells out in each window that he's a window-washer, and thus gets business. However, on the 20th floor, where public stenographer Olive Oyl is busy typing, Bluto is rebuffed with a voice that says, "No, thank you." It's Popeye, who's also in the office. "Whaddya mean?" retorts Bluto.

"Because I'm washing 'em," replies Popeye.

The war is on. Both Bluto and Popeye try to outdo each other, showing what tremendous window-washers they are....and they perform some amazing (and funny) feats! After those clever bits, the two of them get into a big fight, as usual, except this time both of them are punching each other despite being on different buildings! (You have to see it.)

This early black-and-white Popeye cartoon was very entertaining and fun to watch. There is something about these primitive-looking '30s cartoons that are unique.
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7/10
Not Too Shabby!
Hitchcoc28 March 2019
Bluto runs a window cleaning service. The problem is that he also supplies the grim on the windows. He would be fine, crooked as he is, if he would leave Olive and Popeye alone. But he can't and soon the two are going at it. There are some clever fight scenes. And, eventually, the spinach comes out. One thing already mentioned is that Olive is not the object of Bluto's affection, as she usually is. It's one of the better of the series, in my opinion.
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8/10
simple fun
SnoopyStyle18 December 2019
Bluto and Popeye are rival window washers. Bluto uses underhanded methods to get work. Olive Oyl refuses to hire him since she has already hired Popeye. The two battle on the outside ledge of the highrise building. This is simple Popeye fun. Bluto is bad and Popeye fights him. It's simple and fun.
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Wash Them Windows
Michael_Elliott4 April 2016
The Paneless Window Washer (1937)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Bluto is in the window washing business where his racket is to get windows dirty so that he can clean them. He gets to the window's of Olive Oyl but she rejects his service because Popeye is going to do the cleaning. Soon the two men are battling over the proper way to clean a window.

Here's another very good entry int he Fleischer series, which included some very good shorts. This one here is extremely fast-paced and best of all is the fact that there's plenty of fights and violence to keep things very entertaining. Once again the animation itself is wonderful and especially a sequence where Popeye is beating Bluto every which way he can and Bluto's body just floats around like a feather.
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7/10
Nowadays no one seems to know what a "stenographer" did during Yesteryear . . .
pixrox126 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . much less a "public" one. But, since THE PANELESS WINDOW WASHER takes place almost entirely around "Olive's" 20th-story "public stenographer" office, viewers must search this brief cartoon for clues as to what a "stenographer" actually was. Uncharacteristically, Olive is first seen here wearing over-sized spectacles, which make her look like a really skinny hoot owl. This is a dead giveaway that "stenography" must have something to do with bird-watching. Reading between the lines, then, when a member of the public wants to know what kind of a bird is on their feeder, they make a collect call to Olive (or a rival stenographer), who rakes in a fee when she pops out the binocular lens of her strange-looking eyewear, scans the caller's yard, and names that bird. The most common incoming phone call most people receive even today is tagged by Caller ID as "swan likely," as the Modern Telecommunications Industry pays homage to the Olden Days public stenographers such as Olive. This, of course, does not answer the tangential (or, in this case, scarlet tanager) question of WHY "Bluto" calls his business--which is located at street level below Olive's window perch--THE PANELESS WINDOW WASHER. If a window has no pane, then there's absolutely nothing there to wash!
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9/10
One of a handful of Popeye shorts where Olive's affections are not a point of contention to fight over.
llltdesq2 July 2003
This is a comparatively rare short, in that Popeye and Bluto aren't fighting over the "honor" of having Olive Oyl for a girlfriend (a battle which never ceases to amaze me-Olive is a vain, shrewish, flighty and not terribly intelligent woman. But then Popeye and Bluto aren't prizes either. C'est le vie.) but rather Bluto's questionable business tactics. Window washer Bluto creates work by splashing mud far and wide. Popeye one ups him at his stock and trade and the battle for the ages has another, very funny and quite creative installment. Having temporarily de-commissioned the U.S.S. Popeye and ever the gentleman, introduces his hands to her neck, but Popeye eats his vegetable and rides to the rescue. Excellent short, well worth watching. Recommended.
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10/10
The Paneless Window Washer is another hilarious Fleischer Popeye entry
tavm25 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Another hilarious Popeye cartoon from Max and Dave Fleischer. Bluto is a window washer not above dirtying some glass fixtures in order to clean them again. But stenographer Olive says "no" when he asks her if she wants some service. That's because Popeye had already gotten there first to offer his services! This results in a tit-for-tat battle up and down and between various buildings with Popeye ending up hanging on a flagpole before getting his trusty spinach. Guess who wins the battle after that? You gotta marvel at the way the animators keep finding ways to get freshly minted gags in the constant Popeye vs. Bluto fights that manages to keep you entertained for almost 6 minutes of cartoon fun. Way better than many of the later Famous Studios entries even though many of the same animators made those. Once again I think Max and Dave made the difference. Well worth seeking out.
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9/10
Window washer rivalry
TheLittleSongbird12 May 2019
Dave Fleischer and Fleischer Studios were responsible for many gems. Ones that were amusing and charming. Over-cuteness did come through in some efforts and the stories were always pretty thin, but appealing characters, outstanding music and visuals that were inventive and with innovative animation techniques more than compensated.

'The Paneless Window Washer' is classic Popeye the Sailor and far from painful. It is great and never less than very funny and most of them even hilarious, for me one of my favourite Popeye cartoons and one of the best Popeye/Olive Oyl/Bluto outings. Have always enjoyed many of the Popeye cartoons a good deal and like Popeye very much, Fleischer's efforts were always well animated and scored with lots of entertainment value and great chemistry between Popeye, Olive Oyl and Bluto. 'The Paneless Window Washer' has much of makes the Popeye series so appealing in its prime era and does nothing to waste the three main characters or make them less interesting.

The story is an interesting and beautifully paced one, never being dull, if formulaic (not uncommon with the Popeye cartoons). The humour and gags make it even more entertaining, the best parts are properly wild and are hilarious. The ending is one of my favourite endings of all the Popeye cartoons.

All the characters are great, though Olive Oyl's material is not quite as great as Popeye and Bluto's she is far from squandered. It is more with Popeye and Bluto where the cartoon especially entertains. The two of them are spot on and their chemistry drives 'The Paneless Window Washer' and has so much energy. Popeye is always amusing and likeable enough but for me Bluto is here the funnier and more interesting character.

Furthermore, 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.

Voice acting is dynamic and of very good quality on the whole, Mae Questel is a good fit for Olive Oyl, the voice that most sticks in my mind for the character and who voiced her the best. Gus Wickie is even better and gives Bluto so much life, but Jack Mercer and the way he mumbled and delivered his asides is especially good.

In conclusion, a Popeye classic and far from painful. 9/10
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4/10
Popeye the window cleaner Warning: Spoilers
The title "The Paneless Window Washer" already says what this short film is about. It is a 6-minute black-and-white cartoon from 1937, so already almost 80 years old. Once again, Popeye and Bluto express their interest in olive, but only one of them may clean Olive's glass and no this is not a suggestive statement. It really is about window cleaning. Fighting ensues up there in wuthering heights, hilarity not so much sadly. But then again, I have never been one of the very biggest Popeye fans and this cartoon here cannot change things for the better. i found it a fairly forgettable effort and it wasn't a funny watch at all. Certainly not on par with Disney and Warner Bros from that time, I have to give it a thumbs down. Not recommended.
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