Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaPorky and two pals stumble onto a Mexican town on the day of the town's annual bullfight. When they learn the contest winner gets 1,000 pesos, Porky and the pals get costumes - Porky a bullf... Leggi tuttoPorky and two pals stumble onto a Mexican town on the day of the town's annual bullfight. When they learn the contest winner gets 1,000 pesos, Porky and the pals get costumes - Porky a bullfighter, the pals a bull costume. When Porky steps into the ring, he fights not the pals dr... Leggi tuttoPorky and two pals stumble onto a Mexican town on the day of the town's annual bullfight. When they learn the contest winner gets 1,000 pesos, Porky and the pals get costumes - Porky a bullfighter, the pals a bull costume. When Porky steps into the ring, he fights not the pals dressed as the bull, but an actual one.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Porky Pig
- (voce)
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- Second Tramp
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- Bull
- (voce)
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- Bull Roars
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Recensioni in evidenza
Also have much admiration for Tex Avery, an animation genius whose best cartoons are animated masterpieces and some of the best he ever did. While not one of the best Porky Pig cartoons and Avery himself went on to better things, 'Picador Porky' is still very good and certainly makes the most of a setting that needs fire and passion, both present. There is really not much to criticise actually, although as said there is a vast personal preference to Mel Blanc's Porky voice than Joe Dougherty's in the early Porky cartoons, Blanc's sounds more natural and fits Porky's personality more (that his is the more familiar voice is another factor perhaps).
'Picador Porky' looks great. The character designs would become more creative later (and do prefer Porky's later design) but everything is beautifully drawn, sumptuously shaded and meticulous in background detail, some of it is quite inventive too. Carl Stalling's music is lush and characterful, with clever orchestration and a mastery of not just adding to the action but enhancing it as well (Stalling was a near-unequalled master at this, though Scott Bradley gave him a run for his money).
The gags are very funny, hilarious too in places, and timed beautifully, with signs of Avery's wonderfully wild signature style that suits the setting perfectly. Not his most imaginative work but incredibly well-executed nonetheless.
Further advantages are an amusing and likable Porky, fun supporting characters, lively pacing and witty vocals with reservations only for Dougherty. Billy Bletcher in particular is typically larger than life.
In summation, very enjoyable. 8/10 Bethany Cox
*** (out of 4)
Porky finds himself in a Mexican town where top dollars will be given to the person who can last inside the ring with a deadly bull. Porky puts a couple friends inside a bull costume but as you'd expect the real thing gets in the ring.
PICADOR PORKY is another winning short and one that is quite creative with its images and contains some nice laughs. Director Tex Avery brings his wild and fast style to the picture and we get some wonderful site gags including one dealing with Porky running with fear out of the arena and only returning to do a nice gesture. Another fine moment is when the two are treated as if they are boxers inside the ring. As you'd expect the animation itself is quite good throughout so fans of the series should enjoy this.
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- Citazioni
[the first lines ever spoken by Mel Blanc in a Warner Bros. cartoon, playing the voice of a drunken dog at a bullfight]
Drunk: Hiccup! La-cockaroacha! La-cucaracha! Hiccup! Play it on the ol' guitar! Hiccup! La-cockarocha! Play it any place ya are! Hiccup! La-cockaroacha! Yippee! Play it on the ol' guitar! Hiccup! La-cockaroacha! Play it wherever ya happen to be! Hiccup! La-cockaroacha! Hiccup! Yahoo! La-cockaroacha! Play it on the ol' guitar! Hiccup! Yippee! Play the old cockaroacha! Hiccup! Play it any place ya are! Hiccup!
- Versioni alternativeThis cartoon was colorized in 1968 by having every other frame traced over onto a cel. Each redrawn cel was painted in color and then photographed over a colored reproduction of each original background. Needless to say, the animation quality dropped considerably from the original version with this method. The cartoon was colorized again in 1992, this time with a computer adding color to a new print of the original black and white cartoon. This preserved the quality of the original animation.
- ConnessioniFeatured in What's Up Doc? A Salute to Bugs Bunny (1990)
I più visti
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 6min
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1