Added: 2 years ago
From: s275ironman
Views: 61,128
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (28)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Comment removed

  • Three of the songs are: "I'm in the Mood for Love" (1935); "A Life on the Ocean Wave" (1838); and the "Melody in F" by Anton Rubinstein (1858).

  • 'I played with a sympathy orchestra once.' LOL!

  • 3:36

    lol olive

  • 4:55 to the end all kinds of assault.

  • The color film lab didn't line up their images around 5:25 during Popeye's trombone attack on Bluto. The yellow (possibly a three-strip process) doesn't align. Another Popeye fan suggested this was deliberate...

  • 4:37 Popeye not have pipe!!

  • when i was a kid i saw most of these popeye cartoons (except the banned ones) but this one I dont remember

    TICKLE MY VIRBRATO

  • "Come on, babe. Don't B flat, B natural."

    I didn't know Popeye's feet were so musically talented.

  • Olive suddenly reverts to an earlier version of herself (black elipses for eyes, etc.) when Popeye comes back and plays the piano for her.

  • but but but i was just tryin to make your neck flexable!!!!

  • Check the end of the cartoon...a Mardi Gras remix so to speak of the Popeye theme...SWEET!

  • Notice that the envelope from Sampson Spinach Co. is addressed to Famous Studios.

  • The harmonica stuck in his throat was hillarious

  • This one's very funny, but most of them typically are. Why is Popeye so funny?

    : )

  • @Dac719 he is so funny cuz he is a  cartoon comedian...:)

  • "25 West 45th Street" [4:30] WAS the actual address of "Famous Studios" in New York from 1943 through 1967, when it closed for good.

  • There's A Re-Dubbed Version Of This Cartoon!

    C. Martin Croker-Popeye

    Nancy Cartwright-Olive Oyl

    Kevin Michael Richardson-Bluto

  • Wow-I had no idea you could use musical instruments to literally pick up chicks.

    Also--loved when Olive actually slapped Bluto--usually she just runs and screams.

  • Is that from BT Vision?

  • 4:09 Scream with me! RAPE!!!

    4:30 Federal felony!

  • I agree! This cartoon will certainly indict Popeye!

  • Gorgeous print!

  • I never realized that Popeye had such talented feet!

  • lol 5:30

    Bluto looks like a curvy bottle.

  • polarcolor! wow! great vid!!

  • Polacaolor comes from Polaroid. It was used only from 1947 to 1949 by Famous Studios.

  • Frank Endres' animation (4:25) will change a lot in later Popeye cartoons. Thank you for uploading.

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more