Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueOlive brings her new goldfish onto Popeye's sailboat, but the fish jumps out of its bowl and into the sea. Olive convinces Popeye to go after it, but the fish wants to play and manages to av... Tout lireOlive brings her new goldfish onto Popeye's sailboat, but the fish jumps out of its bowl and into the sea. Olive convinces Popeye to go after it, but the fish wants to play and manages to avoid Popeye until both get trapped inside a jellyfish. After taking a severe pounding from ... Tout lireOlive brings her new goldfish onto Popeye's sailboat, but the fish jumps out of its bowl and into the sea. Olive convinces Popeye to go after it, but the fish wants to play and manages to avoid Popeye until both get trapped inside a jellyfish. After taking a severe pounding from the jellyfish, Popeye eats his spinach, takes on various other marine life, and returns th... Tout lire
- Directors
- Writer
- Stars
- Jellyfish
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Olive Oyl
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Popeye
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
The is a short (five minutes) but very wild ride as Olive's new pet goldfish "Gertrude" jumps overboard, and Popeye has to rescue her (after Olive calls him a coward for not wanting to do it. You could blame him; the goldfish spat in Popeye's eye. He's a wise little sucker.) The bulk of the cartoon, then, is Popeye's chase in the ocean after this little fish. He meets all kinds of creatures, including a giant jellyfish, which swallows our Sailor Man.
I won't say everything that is in here. Suffice to say it's very fast-moving and the artwork is good, too. Sight gags are numerous, both above and below water, and most of them are pretty clever. If you're a Popeye fan, you'll enjoy this.....particularly the ending!
Don't be off by this cartoon's dubious title, which some today may find somewhat sexist. The title doesn't really have to do anything with the cartoon itself and gives a wrong impression of it before watching, both in what it's about and what happens and also because there is nothing much of a negative attitude towards women or as they're described in the title. The closest 'Females is Fickle' comes to that is what Olive does at the end, considering what Popeye went through that was quite frustrating, despite her actually have good intentions at this point, and one is totally on Popeye's side seeing how he takes it at the end. If anybody is put off that is a shame because 'Females is Fickle' is among the better 1940 Popeye cartoons.
'Females is Fickle' is one of the shorter Popeye cartoons and somehow it does feel a little too on the short side. The very end was a little unsatisfying and like the story had run out of gas.
It has always felt odd hearing Olive voiced by somebody else other than Mae Questel, Margie Hines somehow doesn't do it for me (that's true too in all the cartoons where she replaced Questel), her voice doesn't fit the character design or have the same amount of energy when voicing her and she fails in making Olive (who has little to do here) endearing enough.
However, Popeye has great comic timing and that it is evident that he'd do anything for Olive showed him to be a likeable character too. The undersea characters are colourful support and really liked how they were used in the numerous and often hilarious gags. Especially in the second half and the wonderfully wild climax, the pace throughout is lively and the fight sequences are visually inventive, exciting and fun.
Animation is neatly and expressively drawn (especially with Popeye) and still very much like the work that goes into the backgrounds. The music, appropriately like its own character, is as beautifully orchestrated and characterful as ever. Jack Mercer shows once again shows why he was the most popular Popeye voice actor and the definitive one.
Summarising, impressive. 8/10
There are some pluses to this Fleischer cartoon, like the lack of Bluto, and I still recall the couplet with which Popeye ends the cartoon. The minuses, however, include some reused gags, and something wonky about the animation that makes Popeye. Look a bit two-dimensional against the background. The Fleischers were proud of their ability to increase the sense of depth in their cartoon, using one of Max's inventions, a cyclorama for background. Did they fail to bring it down to Florida when they moved the studio? Still, there are plenty of gags, making this a typically good example of the Fleischer cartoons.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSea Shell Oil is a pun on Shell Oil. Sharkskin suits, the "must have" of snappy male dressers of the time, were not actually made from sharks. The fabric weave is meant to emulate the texture of a shark's skin.
- Autres versionsThere is a redrawn colorized version from 1987 originally commissioned by Ted Turner.
- Bandes originalesColumbia, the Gem of the Ocean
(uncredited)
Traditional tune
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Durée6 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1