Ration Fer the Duration (1943) Poster

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7/10
Victory Garden Popeye
SnoopyStyle28 November 2020
Popeye has planted his Victory Gardens everywhere. His nephews would rather go fishing. He reminds them about the story of the giant beanstalk and they start planting beans. So in his dream, his nephews have grown a giant beanstalk going up to a giant's home.

I remember the tires although I don't remember this episode. I do like it but it doesn't have to be a dream. I also wonder where Olive Oly is in this one. She would be good as a trophy in the giant's home and why can't the giant be Brutus? I like that they broke the 4th wall a little with the Giants. It's interesting to tie in the war rationing into the story. It's a fun little Popeye short.
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6/10
Average wartime propaganda cartoon
llltdesq5 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is an early Famous Studios Popeye cartoon. There will be spoilers ahead:

This is a World War II-themed short, done to promote recycling for the war effort. This is pretty much an average short, with rather predictable gags.

Popeye, patriotic fellow that he is, is planting a "victory garden" while his nephews are planning on sneaking off to go fishing. Popeye catches them and lectures them on not helping him plant their garden. He tells them a fractured version of the Jack and the Beanstalk fairy tale and they get to work while Popeye takes a nap and dreams the fairy tale, Popeye style.

The giant turns out to be a hoarder and Popeye decides to get all his hoard for the war effort, but the giant catches him. Here, the short turns into a basic Popeye cartoon, with Popeye beating the giant and getting the hoard. That's when the boys wake him up and show him their garden. The end of the short is a pun-fest, a groan-induced one at that.

This can be found and is worth watching once.
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7/10
But where does the Big Guy in the Clouds gain access to . . .
oscaralbert3 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . his mounds of sugar, tea, coffee, cola drinks, hams, cuffs for pants, silk stockings, typewriters, shoes--and especially, empty tooth paste tubes? Has he been gobbling down aviation pioneers such as Amelia E., and taking their stuff? Though such a tragic barrel roll of Fate might explain the coffee and silk stockings, how could these daring aerialists have used up that much dental hygiene product? RATION FER THE DURATION provides little help for puzzling out such mysteries, nor does it explain what pineapples have to do with baby bottles (unless it's anticipating the advent of the Baby Boom Generation). Suffice it to say that the hen laying full-tread black walls is worth its weight in gold.
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9/10
A Different Angle(s), And One Of The Better Popeye WWII Cartoons
ccthemovieman-124 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This was one of the better World War II Popeye cartoons because it was different. Instead of Popeye and the Japanese or the Germans fighting it out, it's about the home front during the War.

It's about "Victory Gardens" and "rationing," things most of the people here on this website (including me) don't know much about.

During the war, a ton of sacrifices were made by the folks at home, here in the United States (and other countries, friend and foe). This cartoon points them out via the famous fable of Jack And Beanstalk. Popeye meets up with the giant in that story and finds out the big guy is hoarding sugar, rubber and many other things. These kind of everyday products were "rationed" and people could only get so much during WWII. Those rations, and the Victory Garden, along with Popeye's nephews, all come together at the end of this story.

Along the way, this was well-drawn and nicely directed. We saw some cool shots of the giant from the floor up and some overhead shots that were different.....little things that helped make this a good visual cartoon. Some of the puns in here were pretty corny but a number of them will make you smile.
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8/10
Popeye on the home front
TheLittleSongbird12 January 2019
Like the character of Popeye very much, have said this more than once. The odd disappointing one aside, really like to love a vast majority of his cartoons. If more Fleischer's output than Famous Studios'. Fleischer's Popeye cartoons tended to be funnier, more imaginative and better made, Famous Studios' on the most part entertained though their later Popeye, and overall filmography actually, cartoons had tighter deadlines and lower budgets evident.

Of the wartime Popeye cartoons made during World War II, 'Ration for the Duration' is agreed one of the best. Also think it is towards the better earlier Famous Studios Popeye cartoons. Generally, the wartime Popeye cartoons varied in overall standard, with some having a good deal of entertainment value and interest, and generally while initially not so sure Popeye works well within the setting. And there were others that were not as funny or imaginative and heavy-handedness and not-for-the-easily-offended stereotypes were also evident.

'Ration for the Duration' can be very corny sure, a few of the puns are ones where you are not sure whether you want to chuckle or groan.

Parts are predictable and some of the drawing lacks refinement.

However, most of the animation is fine, simple but has some nice detail in the backgrounds, the shading is crisp and the character designs are far from ugly or off. The inventive overhead shots are striking. Even better is the music (always important for me to talk about and Popeye cartoons always fared very well in this respect), again lush and cleverly orchestrated and doing so well adding to and enhancing the action. The dialogue amuses mostly and even more so the increasingly wild action. Popeye is amusing and likeable, with great rapport with the rest of the characters, and Jack Mercer as always does a great job voicing him.

Even if there are predictable moments here and there, what sets 'Ration for the Duration' apart from other wartime Popeye cartoons is that it tries to be different. The setting is different and it does a nice twist on 'Jack and the Beanstalk', doing so amusingly but in some places poignantly when one is reminded how rationing affected people back then. It is one of the funnier wartime Popeye cartoons, the action and gags are far from scant, they are well timed and most importantly they are funny. It refrains from preaching too, it is so easy for something to make a point about something important and relevant and lay it on too thick.'Ration for the Duration' may not say much new, but it does educate and to me it didn't go overboard making its point. The supporting characters are colourful in personality, the most memorable being the giant, and are not stereotypes, certainly far from ones to be offended by. In fact there is nothing offensive at all here.

Summarising, very well done. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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8/10
Sure makes me want to do my part for the war effort!
Mary-1819 January 2003
Although the animation is quite simple, the story line is engaging and the visual puns actually fairly funny. It's true that by this time the Popeye cartoons seemed to be a decade behind what Disney or Warner Brothers were doing in animation, but if you're a Popeye fan or have an interest in wartime cartoons, this one is a small gem.
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Classic WWII Propaganda
wilhelmurg11 June 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Here's a classic WWII cartoon that humorously deals the the frustrations of wartime rationing via Jack and The Beanstalk, where The Giant is a hoarder and The Goose lays rubber tires instead of golden eggs. Disney had planned to do the fairy tale (it eventually become the "Mickey and The Beanstalk" section of the 1947 feature FUN AND FANCY) for a couple of years before this cartoon was released - Famous Studios beat Disney to this classic. It should be noted that the first 4 note of Beethoven's 5th Symphony can be heard in the opening and closing of this cartoon, and also when Popeye snores. The 4 notes' rhythm, "dit-dit-dit-dah," are the same as a "V" in Morse Code. During WWII the "V for Victory" campaign was to have people against the Nazis write or paint "V"s in occupied countries to let them know that their enemies were all around them. The BBC began using Beethoven's notes at the start of all their broadcasts to Europe and it became standard show of solidarity around the world for those oppresses by the Axis powers during WWII.
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Good WWII Era Popeye Short
Michael_Elliott19 September 2017
Ration Fer the Duration (1943)

*** (out of 4)

This here is a WWII era Popeye short that has him building a victory farm. He then has to explain to his nephews that during wartime it's best to make good and share what you have. We then go to a Jack and the Beanstalk type story.

If you're a fan of Popeye and his animated shorts then you should enjoy this one as it features some good animation, a clever story and some fun action. The highlight certainly happens towards the end once we get into the Jack and the Beanstalk category and see Popeye having to battle the giant. The film has a good message that of course would have went over well during the wartime.
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