Popeye the Sailor: 1933-1938, Vol. 1

by Warner Home Video

$64.98
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Average Rating: * * * * *
Sales Rank:18862 (lower is better)
Price Used:$42.24
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Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
Release Date:2007-07-31
Label:Warner Home Video
UPC:012569797963
Binding:DVD
Published By:Warner Home Video
ASIN:B000P296AS
Category:DVD

Actors and Actresses

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Description

The plot lines in the animated cartoons tended to be simple. A villain, usually Bluto, makes a move on Popeye's "sweetie", Olive Oyl. The bad guy then clobbers Popeye until Popeye eats spinach, which gives him superhuman strength. The fundamental character of Popeye, paralleling that of another 1930's icon, Superman, also invokes traditional values possessing uncompromising moral standards and resorting to force only when threatened, or when he "can't stands no more"! The first volume includes 58 (7-10 min) theatrical blk & white shorts from 1933 to 1938 and 2 two-reeler 20 minute color cartoons. (Notable shorts: * POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINDBAD THE SAILOR was an Academy Award� Nominee. Betty Boop appears in a cameo as a hula dancer in the 1st short "Popeye The Sailor")

DVD Features:
Documentaries
Featurette
Music Only Track
Other

Amazon.com

In 1933, a squint-eyed sailor with outsized forearms danced a hula with Betty Boop--and began one of the great series in American cartoon history. Popeye had made his debut in Elzie Segar's comic strip "Thimble Theater" four years earlier, and the jump to animation only increased his popularity: by 1938, he rivaled Mickey Mouse. During the '30s, when Disney was creating lushly colored, realistic animation, the Fleischer Studio presented a gritty black-and-white world that was ideally suited to the bizarre misadventures of Popeye, Olive, and Bluto. The animators ignored anatomy, with hilarious results: Olive Oyl's rubbery arms wrap around her body like twin anacondas, and her legs often end up in knots. Exactly what Popeye and Bluto saw in this scrawny, capricious inamorata was never clear, but they fought over her endlessly. As the series progressed, the artists grew more sophisticated: in "Blow Me Down" (1933), Olive does some clumsy steps to "The Mexican Hat Dance;" one year later, in "The Dance Contest," she and Popeye perform deft spoofs of tango, tap, and apache steps. The stories are little more than strings of gags linked by a theme: Popeye and Bluto as rival artists; Popeye and Olive as nightclub dancers or café owners. But the minimal stories allow the artists to fill the screen with jokes, over-the-top fights, and muttered asides from the characters. Cartoon fans have waited for years for the "Popeye" shorts to appear on disc, and the Popeye the Sailor 1933-1938 was worth waiting for. The transfers were made from beautifully clear prints with only minimal dust and scratches. The set is loaded with extras, including eight "Popumentaries," numerous commentaries, and 16 silent cartoons. It's a set to treasure. (Unrated, suitable for ages 10 and older: violence, tobacco use, ethnic stereotypes) --Charles Solomon

Customer Reviews

Popeye is great, as always!!! - Reviewed on 2009-01-07
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We recently ordered volume 1 of the Popeye cartoon collection and can hardly wait to order volumes 2 and 3!! We are enjoying these remastered cartoons as much as we enjoyed them as kids! This generation is missing out on lots of fun if they miss this collection! If you are in the baby boomers group this collection is a must for your video library! If you loved Popeye and all the gang as a kid, we know you will enjoy them at least as much now! The music in these old cartoons is incredible! Get it now!
Great - Reviewed on 2008-12-27
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Others have researched this title. All I will add is I remember watching Popeye. The tunes on this first collection where not what I remember. They are better. They are black and white but the the quality is superb. The video is super clean and the audio is the best considering the age of these shorts. I started watching Popeye in the early sixties and I guess these were pulled from syndication before I came along. Imagine my surprise at getting the chance to see these shorts as Popeye came of age along with the art of animation. Quite a treat for me anyway.

The Fleischer Studios produced some really nice stuff. Beating Disney to some eye catching tricks. Not that Disney didn't keep up. These shorts are not as PC as Disney's stuff which makes them all the more engaging.

My HAT is off to Warner Brothers for a first class restoration job. You guys are the best!
A DVD set that's "strong to the finich!" - Reviewed on 2008-09-23
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Popeye the Sailor is one of the most iconic characters in animation, a bloke who champions peace and only puts up his dukes when looking to set things right. As a child, the Popeye shorts were my most favorite series of all time, and that feeling has followed me into my adulthood, in which I am now a big animation enthusiast. And now, I can finally watch them in their original, uncut, black-and-white masters, the way they were meant to be seen. A plus is the choice for releasing the shorts in chronological order, allowing you to document the evolution of the series. In the first volume set, you receive 60 shorts from 1933 to 1938, two of which are from the trilogy of famous color two-reelers: "Popeye meets Sinbad the Sailor" and "Popeye meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves". The cartoons are all amazingly animated and very humorous and charming, giving you chuckles big and little throughout. The restoration is marvelous, as there is no single speck of grain, and the sound comes in clear as a bell. Even more astonishing is the wealth of extras: several documentaries (big and small) outlining the Popeye series and various details within it, as well as a heaping helping of vintage silent cartoons from the 1910s and 1920s, including severalshorts from "Out of the Inkwell", the Fleischer Studios' first successful series!

This is a set not to be missed, for fans of Popeye, fans of cartoons, or just plain for the child in us all! And seeing as how King Features finally agreed to letting these out on official home video, you can bet the entire series is going to be treated this nicely by Warner Bros.!
"I YAM WHAT I YAM" - Reviewed on 2008-09-03
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Start your Popeye collection with "POPEYE THE SAILOR: 1933-1938." All the classics as you remembered them are here uncut and uncensored with all the original paramount introductions. Great for all ages and a definte collectors item. Don't miss out on the fully restored original versions of the first ever Popeye cartoons!
Missing Disc 1 - Reviewed on 2008-08-18
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7 customers found this review not to be helpful.
The order I received contained 1 copy of Disc 2, one copy of Disc 3 and 2 copies of Disc 4. It was missing Disc 1. Not impressed by this at all!
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