Ajouter une intrigue dans votre languePopeye pushes a baby pram down city sidewalks and lots of noise keeps the kid awake and crying. In typically brutal manner, Popeye deals with the noise makers including a busking Harpo Marx,... Tout lirePopeye pushes a baby pram down city sidewalks and lots of noise keeps the kid awake and crying. In typically brutal manner, Popeye deals with the noise makers including a busking Harpo Marx, music school, construction site, and car horns.Popeye pushes a baby pram down city sidewalks and lots of noise keeps the kid awake and crying. In typically brutal manner, Popeye deals with the noise makers including a busking Harpo Marx, music school, construction site, and car horns.
- Réalisation
- Casting principal
William Costello
- Popeye
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Mae Questel
- Baby
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
This is a really funny early Popeye, with some really excellent visual effects. Swee' Pea is making life most unhappy for all concerned-himself, Popeye and all the poor souls Popeye silences in order for the little noisemaker to stay asleep (a consummation devoutly to be wished) and thus to be silent. Costello is okay as Popeye here, though he never really did very well in my view. I'm not sure he understood the character terribly well. All in all, a fairly good cartoon largely consisting of sight gags of a fairly violent nature. Good early effort and worth seeing. Recommended.
Popeye has been given the task of looking after a baby. Because his environment is so noisy, he sets about destroying, with his fists, everything that comes in his path. This includes destroying buildings, cars, musical instruments, and other obstacles. He also kills Harpo Marx and probably others working on construction.
Popeye and a baby are out in the streets. He's desperately trying to keep from waking the baby with all the street noises. He punches out Harpo. There is a noisy music school. He sinks a ship for blowing its horn. He punches a radio signal. He turns a construction site into rubble. He destroys a traffic jam caused by the stroller.
First, a crying baby is always annoying and rarely funny. The concept is funny, but damn Popeye is doing some damage. I think he killed a bunch of people. It's still funny even with all the murdering. It is notable that he doesn't use his spinach. Basically, Popeye is a killing machine in this one.
First, a crying baby is always annoying and rarely funny. The concept is funny, but damn Popeye is doing some damage. I think he killed a bunch of people. It's still funny even with all the murdering. It is notable that he doesn't use his spinach. Basically, Popeye is a killing machine in this one.
"Action speaks louder than words." At least, that is what some people say. This short proves that the quote is associated with Popeye the Sailor.
This short is about a simple situation: Popeye is babysitting, and no, it is not Swee'Pea but Betty Boop's baby brother Billy; that's what I heard. Anyway, Popeye tries to make sure he takes his nap. But with the sounds of old New York, it isn't easy. If Popeye heard the honk of a horn or the whistle of an ocean liner, he would go and smash the noisemaker to bits. That is what I meant when I chose that precise quote.
My favorite scene is when Popeye tries to sing Billy to put him to sleep. In the first verse of the song, the voice wasn't the familiar "croaky" one. It was the natural singing voice of his voice actor, Billy Costello. I also love the scene when Popeye sends a punch by wire to a radio station and slugs the singer. So anyway, I really love this Popeye short.
This short is about a simple situation: Popeye is babysitting, and no, it is not Swee'Pea but Betty Boop's baby brother Billy; that's what I heard. Anyway, Popeye tries to make sure he takes his nap. But with the sounds of old New York, it isn't easy. If Popeye heard the honk of a horn or the whistle of an ocean liner, he would go and smash the noisemaker to bits. That is what I meant when I chose that precise quote.
My favorite scene is when Popeye tries to sing Billy to put him to sleep. In the first verse of the song, the voice wasn't the familiar "croaky" one. It was the natural singing voice of his voice actor, Billy Costello. I also love the scene when Popeye sends a punch by wire to a radio station and slugs the singer. So anyway, I really love this Popeye short.
You just have to be a certain type to appreciate the humor in cartoons like this. It takes a certain sick sense of humor, something not everyone has. Cartoons like "Boom Boom", one of the first Porky Pig cartoons with his co-star, Beans the cat, in which the two spend the whole film dodging malicious bombs with minds of their own. And the present film, in which Popeye proves even more of a bully than Bluto himself ever was. This was the REALLY early days, when Popeye would beat the living crap out of anyone and anything in his path. The cartoon is stuffed with gags, including the theme song which here is, naturally, the lullaby "Rock-A-Bye Baby", which is punctuated with all kinds of violent sound effects.
Like I said, it takes a certain type to savor this.
Like I said, it takes a certain type to savor this.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAt one point Popeye sings a lullaby that turns into a crazy yodel. Actor William Costello achieved this by alternating his real singing voice with that of the sailor. Such vocal pyrotechnics were Costello's signature as a vaudeville entertainer.
- Versions alternativesAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnexionsEdited into Quiet! Pleeze (1941)
- Bandes originalesI'm Popeye the Sailor Man
(uncredited)
Written by Samuel Lerner
Played during the opening credits
Sung by William Costello (as Popeye)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Popeye el Marino: Silencio, bebé durmiendo
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée6 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Sock-a-Bye, Baby (1934) officially released in Canada in English?
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