Popeye the Sailor: 1933-1938, Volume 1 is the first authorized collection of theatrical
Popeye cartoons on home video. This four DVD set with 60 theatrical Popeye cartoons was released on July 31, 2007. Also included inside this box is a booklet of 1936 vintage Popeye comic strips titled "The S'prise Fight!" and a recipe sheet with 25 cents off coupon for two cans of Allens' Popeye
Spinach. These cartoons are fully restored with the original
Paramount Pictures logos at the beginning and ending of each cartoon. They are arranged in the order they were released to theaters. This collection was released by
Warner Home Video.
Because these uncut and uncensored 1930s vintage cartoons contain material which may be considered politically incorrect today, each disc in this collection includes a title card disclaimer which summarizes that the cartoons depict sexist, ethnic and racist stereotypes that may be offensive to modern audiences.
Background
The first Popeye cartoon was released as a
Betty Boop cartoon. Paramount held the
copyright for every Fleischer cartoon. Early Popeye cartoons ended with the Fleischer "
Out of the Inkwell" ending in which the mouth of the ink bottle zoomed out, places itself on the desk then the cap somersauts itself back on the bottle. The final Popeye cartoon with this ending was the 1934 cartoon "Let's You and Him Fight." The rest of the 1934 Popeye cartoons had the standard Paramount end card. Beginning with the 1935 Popeye cartoon "Beware of Barnacle Bill", the Popeye cartoons had a new end card featuring a large
anchor which was used for all subsequent Fleischer produced Popeye cartoons. The anchor title was retained when
Associated Artists Productions distributed the Popeye cartoons to television stations. Until the 1934 Popeye cartoon
Strong to the Finich, the titles bore the words "
Max Fleischer presents..." Beginning with the next 1934 Popeye cartoon
Shiver Me Timbers!, the titles bore the words "
Adolph Zukor presents a Max Fleischer cartoon." Zukor was president of Paramount Pictures. The original voice of Popeye was
William "Billy" Costello, a.k.a. "Red Pepper Sam." He was replaced in 1935 by Fleischer in-betweener and story man
Jack Mercer, beginning with the cartoon
King of the Mardi Gras, leading to a lifelong career for Mercer as the voice of Popeye.
DVD listing
Unless otherwise indicated, these are one reel black and white cartoons.
Dave Fleischer received director credit on every cartoon in this set.
Disc one
1933
1934
- Sock-a-Bye Baby
- Let's You and Him Fight
- The Man on the Flying Trapeze
- Can You Take It?
- Shoein' Hosses
- Strong to The Finich
- Shiver Me Timbers!
- Axe Me Another
- A Dream Walking
Special features
Disc two
1934
- The Two Alarm Fire
- The Dance Contest
- We Aim to Please
1935
- Beware of Barnacle Bill
- Be Kind to Aminals
- Pleased to Meet Cha!
- The Hyp-Nut-Tist
- Choose Yer Weppins
- For Better or Worser
- Dizzy Divers
- You Gotta Be a Footbal Hero
- King of the Mardi Gras
- Adventures of Popeye (compilation film, partial live-action)
- The Spinach Overture
1936
Special features
- Retrospective documentary: "Forging the Frame: The Roots of Animation 1900-1920"
- Popeye Popumentaries: "Wimpy the Moocher: Ode to the Burgermeister", "Sailor's Hornpipes: The Voices of Popeye"
- From the vault: Three Bray Productions/Sullivan Studios shorts: "Bobby Bumps Puts a Beanery on the Bum" (1918), "Feline Follies" (1919), "The Tantalizing Fly" (1919)
Disc three
1936
- A Clean Shaven Man
- Brotherly Love
- I-Ski Love-Ski You-Ski
- Bridge Ahoy!
- What-No Spinach?
- I Wanna Be a Lifeguard
- Let's Get Movin'
- Never Kick a Woman
- Popeye the Sailor with Little Swee' Pea
- Hold The Wire
- The Spinach Roadster
- Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor in Technicolor (two reel, fully restored with its original theatrical titles)
- I'm In The Army Now (compilation film)
1937
- The Paneless Window Washer
- Organ Grinder's Swing
Special features
- Popeye Popumentaries: "Blow Me Down! The Music of Popeye", "Popeye in Living Color: A Look at the Color Two-Reelers"
- From the vault: Six Out of the Inkwell shorts: "Modeling" (1921), "Invisible Ink" (1921), "Bubbles" (1922), "Jumping Beans" (1922), "Bedtime" (1923), "Trapped (1923)
Disc four
1937
- My Artistical Temperature
- Hospitaliky
- The Twisker Pitcher
- Morning, Noon and Nightclub
- Lost and Foundry
- I Never Changes My Altitude
- I Likes Babies and Infinks
- The Football Toucher Downer
- Proteck The Weakerist
- Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves in Technicolor (two reel, fully restored with its original theatrical titles)
- Fowl Play
1938
- Let's Celebrake
- Learn Polikeness
- The House Builder Upper
- Big Chief Ugh-A-Mugh-Ugh
Special features
- Popeye Popumentaries: "Me Lil' Swee'Pea: Whose Kid is He Anyway?", "Et Tu, Bluto? Cartoondom's Heavist Heavy"
- From the vault: Four Out of the Inkwell/Fleischer Studio shorts: "A Trip to Mars" (1924), "Koko Trains 'Em" (1925), "Koko Back Tracks" (1927), "Let's Sing with Popeye" (1934)
See also