Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueOlive and Popeye open up a diner, but have to deal with Wimpy and Bluto being deadbeat customers.Olive and Popeye open up a diner, but have to deal with Wimpy and Bluto being deadbeat customers.Olive and Popeye open up a diner, but have to deal with Wimpy and Bluto being deadbeat customers.
- Réalisation
- Casting principal
William Costello
- Popeye
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
William Pennell
- Bluto
- (non crédité)
Mae Questel
- Olive Oyl
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Dave Fleischer was responsible for many gems. Ones that were amusing and charming, though over-cuteness did come through in some efforts and the stories were always pretty thin, with appealing characters, outstanding music and visuals that were inventive and with innovative animation techniques.
While maybe not quite classic Popeye, though it is close, 'We Aim to Please' is still very good and very funny, using the diner setting cleverly. Have always enjoyed many of the Popeye cartoons a good deal and like Popeye very much, Fleischer's efforts were always well animated and scored with lots of entertainment value and great chemistry between Popeye, Olive Oyl and Bluto. 'We Aim to Please' has everything that makes the Popeye series so appealing in its prime era and does nothing to waste the three main characters or make them less interesting.
The story is an interesting and beautifully paced one, never being dull, if formulaic (not uncommon with the Popeye cartoons), though with a lot of variety and creative moments. The humour and gags make it even more entertaining with very amusing to hilarious gags that cleverly utilises the diner, and the cartoon is hardly devoid of them.
All three characters are great, though Olive Oyl's material is not as great as Popeye and Bluto's, though she is used very nicely. Those two are spot on and their chemistry drives 'We Aim to Please' and has so much energy. Popeye is always amusing and likeable but for me Bluto is here the funnier and more interesting character. Stealing the cartoon though is Wimpy, always a very entertaining character who should have been in more cartoons and this is one of his funniest appearances with the best line (mentioned already).
Furthermore, the animation is beautifully drawn and with enough visual detail to not make it cluttered or static and lively and smooth movement. The music is also outstanding, lots of merry energy and lush orchestration, adding a lot to the action and making the impact even better without being too cartoonish. Fleischer's direction is always accomplished and his style is all over it.
Voice acting is dynamic and of very good quality. Mae Questel fits and voice Olive Oyl well, much better than Bonnie Poe. The same can be said for William Costello, though there is a preference for Jack Mercer.
All in all, nearly a classic but not quite. 8/10 Bethany Cox
While maybe not quite classic Popeye, though it is close, 'We Aim to Please' is still very good and very funny, using the diner setting cleverly. Have always enjoyed many of the Popeye cartoons a good deal and like Popeye very much, Fleischer's efforts were always well animated and scored with lots of entertainment value and great chemistry between Popeye, Olive Oyl and Bluto. 'We Aim to Please' has everything that makes the Popeye series so appealing in its prime era and does nothing to waste the three main characters or make them less interesting.
The story is an interesting and beautifully paced one, never being dull, if formulaic (not uncommon with the Popeye cartoons), though with a lot of variety and creative moments. The humour and gags make it even more entertaining with very amusing to hilarious gags that cleverly utilises the diner, and the cartoon is hardly devoid of them.
All three characters are great, though Olive Oyl's material is not as great as Popeye and Bluto's, though she is used very nicely. Those two are spot on and their chemistry drives 'We Aim to Please' and has so much energy. Popeye is always amusing and likeable but for me Bluto is here the funnier and more interesting character. Stealing the cartoon though is Wimpy, always a very entertaining character who should have been in more cartoons and this is one of his funniest appearances with the best line (mentioned already).
Furthermore, the animation is beautifully drawn and with enough visual detail to not make it cluttered or static and lively and smooth movement. The music is also outstanding, lots of merry energy and lush orchestration, adding a lot to the action and making the impact even better without being too cartoonish. Fleischer's direction is always accomplished and his style is all over it.
Voice acting is dynamic and of very good quality. Mae Questel fits and voice Olive Oyl well, much better than Bonnie Poe. The same can be said for William Costello, though there is a preference for Jack Mercer.
All in all, nearly a classic but not quite. 8/10 Bethany Cox
Olive Oyl and Popeye start up a diner. They do a song and dance. Olive suggests moving to the busier corner and Popeye gives their diner a push. Wimpy and Bluto are a couple of bums. They eat but they don't pay. Popeye fights it out with Bluto.
It's a standard Popeye cartoon although they are not sailors. It's got all the Popeye moves. I wouldn't mind for some more imaginative scamming especially from Wimpy. He still doesn't have his catch phrase. It does have the standard Popeye Bluto fight. It should have been a food fight where Wimpy can grab his share. That's the regular move with that story.
It's a standard Popeye cartoon although they are not sailors. It's got all the Popeye moves. I wouldn't mind for some more imaginative scamming especially from Wimpy. He still doesn't have his catch phrase. It does have the standard Popeye Bluto fight. It should have been a food fight where Wimpy can grab his share. That's the regular move with that story.
10llltdesq
Make no mistake-although officially Popeye's cartoon, one J. Wellington Wimpy is the star here. Wimpy is (or should be) the icon for the American approach to consumerism-"I'd gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today." Wimpy never worries about that far off Tuesday, when his hamburgers will come home to roost (no doubt with indigestion not far behind), he just wants his hamburger today and hang Tuesday. Wimpy reminds me a lot of W. C. Fields' persona-he too was always concerned with current results, regardless of future consequences. Both also have just a touch of larceny in their heart. Wimpy is my favorite character in the series and his appearances were always too brief and too rare for my taste. Much better sidekick than the rather annoying Shorty ever was or could be. Here's to you, Wimpy, wherever you are. May all your days be Wednesdays. Well worth seeking out. Most Recommended.
Popeye and Olive Oyl open a diner. Their first customer is Wimpy, who bums a hamburger and leaves, promising, as always, to pay on Tuesday. This encourages Bluto also order and try to stiff the proprietors. As usual, a fight ensues.
There are no bad Popeye cartoons in this period, when the Fleischers and their staff were figuring out what they could do with the character, as long as they obeyed Dave Fleischer's rule to put as many gags into a cartoon as possible. That's what goes on here. There are big gags, like how Popeye changes the location of the diner, and there are medium gags, like how Olive makes sandwiches, and tiny gags like the menu.
There are no bad Popeye cartoons in this period, when the Fleischers and their staff were figuring out what they could do with the character, as long as they obeyed Dave Fleischer's rule to put as many gags into a cartoon as possible. That's what goes on here. There are big gags, like how Popeye changes the location of the diner, and there are medium gags, like how Olive makes sandwiches, and tiny gags like the menu.
This starts out like a Betty Boop cartoon, meaning with a song. Popeye and Olive have opened a diner and they are seen outside of it on opening day, singing and dancing "We Aim To Please."
After that, we see Wimpy and Bluto standing on the other side of the street, observing. "Watch me obtain a hamburger without the necessary fee," says Wimpy. He goes inside and says, "I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today." That line went on to be used by him for the next 30 years. It became his trademark, along with the hamburger-eating, of course.
There's not much of a story to this, but it was very entertaining. We only see two customers, but they are Customers From Hell, mainly Bluto. Wimpy won't pay, of course, but Bluto's aim is to demolish the place! He does everything he can to disrupt the the diner and act like some moronic vandal, just for the sake of being a no-good you-know-what.
If you have this cartoon on DVD, freeze-frame she shot where Popeye shows the menu and read it - it's pretty corny and funny.
After that, we see Wimpy and Bluto standing on the other side of the street, observing. "Watch me obtain a hamburger without the necessary fee," says Wimpy. He goes inside and says, "I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today." That line went on to be used by him for the next 30 years. It became his trademark, along with the hamburger-eating, of course.
There's not much of a story to this, but it was very entertaining. We only see two customers, but they are Customers From Hell, mainly Bluto. Wimpy won't pay, of course, but Bluto's aim is to demolish the place! He does everything he can to disrupt the the diner and act like some moronic vandal, just for the sake of being a no-good you-know-what.
If you have this cartoon on DVD, freeze-frame she shot where Popeye shows the menu and read it - it's pretty corny and funny.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring the Great Depression, diners were a popular choice for cheap, quick food. They were the forerunner of today's fast food chains. Unfortunately, many Americans could not even afford to eat at such establishments.
- GaffesPopeye hands Bluto six sandwiches. Bluto spreads them out on his arm and there are nine. He flips them over, moves his arm, and there are eight. He tosses them in the air and eats all seven of them. Then again, math was never Bluto's strong subject.
- Citations
Wimpy: I'd gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Så er der forfilm: Épisode #2.11 (1982)
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Détails
- Durée7 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was We Aim to Please (1934) officially released in Canada in English?
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