Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaOlive is reading ghost stories to the boys. Popeye scoffs; Bluto decides to take advantage of this by staging various pranks (a headless man, an animated skeleton, and a sheet-over-balloon g... Leggi tuttoOlive is reading ghost stories to the boys. Popeye scoffs; Bluto decides to take advantage of this by staging various pranks (a headless man, an animated skeleton, and a sheet-over-balloon ghost). He pins the blame on Popeye and then goes to comfort Olive. Popeye retaliates by tu... Leggi tuttoOlive is reading ghost stories to the boys. Popeye scoffs; Bluto decides to take advantage of this by staging various pranks (a headless man, an animated skeleton, and a sheet-over-balloon ghost). He pins the blame on Popeye and then goes to comfort Olive. Popeye retaliates by turning invisible, thanks to a jar of vanishing cream.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Bluto
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- Popeye
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- Olive Oyl
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Recensioni in evidenza
Anyway, Olive reads aloud about ghosts and goblins and Popeye said, "Olive, there ain't no such things. They're just figa-mentations of your imagine-agativeations." That gives Bluto an idea. He pretends to be sleepy and leaves.
Popeye thinks he has Olive all to himself, but Bluto is back dressed as a goblin and sounding like Vincent Price. It's hilarious! Olive jumps right out of her stockings! Bluto laughs his butt off.
Bluto plays one gag after another....and they are good! This is one time I could laugh at the big oaf, and think what he was doing was cool.Finally, it looks like Bluto has won the battle as Olive thinks Popeye is behind all the scare tactics....but you who will get the last laugh!
This was an entertaining slapstick-type Popeye cartoon.
Could be. As usual with the Popeye cartoons, there isn't much on offer, despite the usual collection of well executed gags. Issues linger, like how come Olive doesn't realize that her vanishing cream -- think Noxzema for those of you old enough to remember it -- turns people invisible. I imagine if anyone brought it up at a meeting, it would be pointed out that it was for kids, and they're stupid.
The story, for a Popeye cartoon and for cartoons in general, is pretty standard and ordinary stuff and it does get a little predictable, as funny as the vanishing cream gag is it has been done many times before and much more imaginatively. Thankfully though it does not fall into the trap of getting too repetitive, which was a major problem with some of Famous Studios' output, such as with some of the Herman and Katnip cartoons.
Fright to the Finish's animation is very good however. It's lush and colourful and everything looks smooth and detailed. Some of Famous Studios' late output had rushed-looking animation, but not in Fright to the Finish. The music of Winston Sharples was always one of the best things about the Herman and Katnip cartoons, and it continues to be one of the best things here. So outstanding it is in fact that it gets my vote as the component that makes the cartoon, it is so lively and characterful in rhythm and who can't help love the rich, vibrant orchestration that adds so much to the gags.
Speaking of the gags, they are slapstick in nature and revolve around Popeye and Bluto trying to convince Olive Oyl that the other is the one scaring her. The good news is that the gags are very well-timed and most importantly they are also very funny indeed. Hard to pick a favourite as they are about equal in how effective they are. Fright to the Finish even manages to evoke a spooky atmosphere without being too much, which was wholly appropriate for a Halloween cartoon. The three main characters do a great job carrying the cartoon, with some interesting touches like not showing Popeye eating spinach and making Bluto funnier than usual. Olive Oyl is a good charming character where you can totally see what Popeye sees in her, but it's the entertaining interplay between Popeye and Bluto that really sparkles. Jack Mercer, Mae Questel and Jackson Beck give great vocal characterisations.
In summary, enormous fun if not quite spooktacular. 8/10 Bethany Cox
This is a good Halloween episode. Old Popeye doesn't do that much holiday specials. Olive is a high maintenance girlie girl and that's fine. Bluto is funny as the prankster. This works.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizReuses several plot elements from the black-and-white Fleischer Popeye short, Ghosks Is the Bunk (1939).
- BlooperIn the very last scene, when Olive is kissing Popeye (after he chases Bluto off), Olive isn't wearing lipstick, but in the closeup, she is.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Fright Night Theater: The Driller Killer (2011)
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