Popeye the Sailor, Vol. 2: 1938-1940 (2008)
Facts
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Popeye the Sailor, Vol. 2: 1938-1940
DVD Price: You save 26%! As of Dec 2 6:33 EST (details)
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| Cast | Popeye the Sailor |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2007 |
| DVD Release | June 17, 2008 |
| Running Time | 218 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 012569798069 |
| Buy this item | $25.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 2 6:33 EST (details) 2 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Animated, Color, DVD-Video, Original recording remastered, Subtitled, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Or 51 new from $24.98, 8 used from $22.00 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Spinach Salesman Extraodinaire |
| The series reaches its best years! |
| Another Great Popeye Collection |
I have always been a huge fan of Disney but Fleischer Studios produced some of the most entertaining, influential animation ever during their short 21 year existence. At their peak the Popeye cartoons were as good as anything Disney ever put out. This DVD collection contains a very nice retrospective on the history and achievements of Fleischer Studios. I had no idea they produced full length features to compete with Disney. As a special bonus the collection includes an entire Superman cartoon `The Mechanical Monsters' which holds up incredibly well 70 years later.
The second Popeye DVD collection is half the size of the first but the quality remains top notch. We finally get to see the Jeep, Goon Island and even Poopdeck Pappy. There are special features devoted to the background and history of the Jeep and Pappy. There is another feature on Mae Questel, the voice of Olive Oyl for most of the Popeye cartoons, that's worth watching. Oddly enough Bluto doesn't even appear until the ninth episode (Customers Wanted) and that one is mostly just flashbacks to previous episodes. One of my favorite characters, Wimpy, hardly appears at all.
What makes this collection so special for me is the inclusion of commentary on many of the cartoons. It really helps fans to understand details about these cartoons they wouldn't naturally be aware of. For instance Fleischer would use different animators for distant and close up shots (probably a common practice in animation studios). After awhile you can actually start to recognize the style of specific animators. Even if I couldn't match a name to a cartoon I could see that there were more than subtle differences in drawings between episodes and I definitely had my favorites. The episode "Popeye meets William Tell" was done by a pair of animators who got their start at Fleischer but had been working for Disney. The cartoon has a very different style that didn't really mesh with the Popeye character (this is admitted by the lead artist from an old interview). You would never know this background if it weren't for the commentary.
Volume 2 is drawn from the years when Fleischer Studios moved from NY to Florida and you can see a difference is tone. I was a little disappointed by the reduced role of Bluto and near disappearance of Wimpy but it does feature perhaps my favorite Popeye cartoon, `Fighin' Pals' where we see that there exists a true friendship between Popeye and Bluto. These cartoons are both timeless and intractably tied to the late 30's early 40's. The humor holds up perfectly but a cartoon like this could never be made today. The rough and tumble, black and white style of Popeye springs from the depression era and the domesticated Popeye of later cartoons just doesn't work. Here is the animated Popeye at his peak. Enjoy. September 23, 2008
| FEWER TOONS THAN VOL. 1 BUT STILL FUN! |
"The Jeep" is the first appearance of the dog, which has the ability to disappear and move through solid objects. Popeye enlists his aid to find Sweet Pea who has wandered out of his crib into the city. This episode is filled with sight gags and Popeye tries to keep up with the Jeep as he walks up, down, and through buildings. It would be another episode on this set, "Popeye presents Eugene the Jeep" that shows us how Popeye first acquired his fantastic pet.
In "Goonland", Popeye is out searching for his father who disappeared when he was born. He discovers him being held captive on Goon Island by the giant Goons. Popeye and Pappy unite to defeat the Goons and return to civilization.
In another episode that involves no Spinach or Bluto, Popeye keeps getting parking tickets from the same cop as he helps Olive with her Spring-cleaning. Here's a tip, watch these episodes with the subtitles on so you can read all of Popeye's mutterings that are sometimes hard to hear. They are hilarious! He constantly calls the cop "Occifer" instead of Officer.
In fact, in one episode, Popeye and Bluto are the best of friends, sort of...Bluto goes off to explore Africa in "Fighting Pals". When his expedition gets lost, Popeye goes to look for him. Tired and exhausted, Bluto actually gives Popeye some spinach to rejuvenate him and the episode closes with a brawl.
Perhaps the most famous short in this set is "Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp" a two-reel short filmed in gorgeous Technicolor. Popeye is Aladdin, trying to win the hand of Princess Olive and finds the magical lamp but an evil, non-Bluto villain wants the lamp for himself.
The set show just how diversified the Fleischer studio was when it came to Popeye. They could do riotous slapstick humor without always resorting to Spinach or fighting. The shorts have been remasterd and are uncut and look gorgeous, especially the Technicolor gem. Not as much material on this set as the first one, but it's great stuff!
August 22, 2008
| POPEYE THE SAILOR, VOL. 2 |
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