Popeye the Sailor - Her Honor the Mare (1943)
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Uploader Comments (s275ironman)
Top Comments
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2:59 Hitler was indeed, a horse's ass in real life
Down with Nazism!
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Thanks For The Upload
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All Comments (33)
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@NewAndImprovedToons AMEN, PREACH ON, BROTHER :)
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3:01 FINALLY, HITLER GETS PUT IN HIS PLACE WHERE HE BELONGS, LOL
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3:01 I don't care who you are, that's funny right there.
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I forgot just how good those old Popeye cartoons are!
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@John80220 And don't forget NTA and Harvey Films. Harvey had the post-50 Paramount cartoon library along with the "Noveltoons" series.
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@masoudfun1996 It was from 1954.
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@HomeoftheGoodGuys Is the Paramount logo from 2004 or 1954? I'm getting confused on the years.
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@s275ironman This cartoon has the default paramount logos.Where's the original?
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This cartoon just aired on Boomerang.
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Several other 1944-45 Popeyes showed up in the final season of "The Popeye Show" on Cartoon Network with their original titles -- "The Marry-Go-Round," "Spinach Packin' Popeye", "Moving Aweigh", "The Anvil Chorus Girl," and "Tops In the Big Top" aired with their opening and closing titles and music, and if you do a YouTube search, you can find "W'ere On Our Way To Rio" with the original opening and closing music and recreated opening and closing titles.
John80220 2 years ago
On that version of "W'ere On Our Way to Rio", it seems as though there actually was supposed to be some sort of special ending involving the Paramount logo, which wasn't able to be recreated from the material available. All those titles you mentioned appear to have their Paramount logos sourced from "She-Sick Sailors", thus just being recreations and not truly original. At least finding the original soundtracks has made it possible to accurately recreate these.
s275ironman 2 years ago
"Tops In the Big Top" would have had to have been sourced elsewhere if it's not an original title, since it uses the blue Paramount opening and closing logo (and may have been the first one to have used the 1945-48 titles, though thanks to AAP and UM&M it's hard to say for sure).
John80220 2 years ago
The logos on "Tops in the Big Top" were probably sourced from "Shape Ahoy". But you are right, since AAP was required to remove the Paramount logos, it is hard to accurately document the changes in opening/closing logos and music. Going by the big gap between releases, it is quite possible that the blue background began with "Pop-Pie A La Mode".
One other cartoon was shown on the last episode of Season 3, "A Balmy Swami" with the incorrect logos, sourced from a Cinecolor Popeye short.
s275ironman 2 years ago