AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
427
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaPopeye and Bluto compete in their penny arcades for Wimpy's business.Popeye and Bluto compete in their penny arcades for Wimpy's business.Popeye and Bluto compete in their penny arcades for Wimpy's business.
Pinto Colvig
- Bluto
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Margie Hines
- Olive Oyl
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Jack Mercer
- Popeye
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Despite liking Popeye and most of his cartoons very much, if more Fleischer Studios than Famous Studios, part of me was expecting not to care for 1939's 'Customers Wanted'. It may have been made in one of Fleischer's stronger periods, before their overall decline in the early 40s, and had Popeye and Bluto's ever timeless rivalry and a welcome appearance from Wimpy, but it was also one of the (what people call, and am going to try and be a little kinder) "cheater" cartoons.
Where a framing story is featured with healthy use of clips from previous cartoons, and more often than not they strike me as not being particularly necessary or inspired and the vast difference in quality (the clips tending to be infinitely better) is difficult to ignore. A lot of cartoon series did it at least once and that for Popeye was not an exception. 'Customers Wanted' however is one of the better examples of that type of cartoon in the Popeye series, and actually in any cartoon series overall, being surprisingly very well done and not as lazy as too many are.
Usually when a cartoon uses clips from previous cartoons from 15 plus years before, the clips' quality is much better and sees a difference in the style of animation and writing. 'Customers Wanted' is one of the few examples where the clips and the actual cartoon's story is equally good, as although the animation quality had advanced since the clips used from 'Lets Get Movin' and 'The Twisker Pitcher', both very good (as well as references to others), the spirit of 'Customers Wanted's' story and the humour was very true to that of those two. So didn't find myself worried or distracted as much as in other "cheaters", also because the clips were relevant to the cartoon's story instead of being random or where one questions why "why this particular cartoon?".
The animation never seemed too cluttered or static, with some nice meticulousness and fluidity as well a very nice job done with the expressions (for particularly Popeye, like with the eyes and arm movements). The music is suitably characterful and lush, even in the weakest Popeye cartoons this was the component that was consistently good and often the best thing about the Famous Studios cartoons. Although the gags in 'Lets Get Movin' and 'The Twisker Pitcher' are a little more inventive and funnier, the gags here are more than present and are crisply timed and amusing though never perhaps hilarious. The pace never felt dull despite the basic story being fairly predictable and the increasing wildness is great.
'Customers Wanted' is successful in the characterisation too. Again Popeye and Bluto are well realised characters that contrast well, their rivalry a lot of fun and tense and carrying the cartoon beautifully. Wimpy is one of two things that steals the show, he is on top form, very funny and it is one of his best appearances. The other is Jack Mercer's voice work, which is nothing short of marvellous and quite a power-house for him and for me because of the dynamic range and seamless comic timing (oh he sounded like he was having a whale of a time with those asides and ad-libs, which were entertaining in themselves) it was some of his best work for the studio.
Not an awful lot wrong here. It was interesting to hear Pinto Colvig voice Bluto, in his first outing voicing the character, and he does do admirably. Am just more familiar with Gus Wickie and Jackson Beck and feel that their voices fit the character design and personality better and had more menace.
In conclusion, very well done and especially for this type of cartoon. 8/10
Where a framing story is featured with healthy use of clips from previous cartoons, and more often than not they strike me as not being particularly necessary or inspired and the vast difference in quality (the clips tending to be infinitely better) is difficult to ignore. A lot of cartoon series did it at least once and that for Popeye was not an exception. 'Customers Wanted' however is one of the better examples of that type of cartoon in the Popeye series, and actually in any cartoon series overall, being surprisingly very well done and not as lazy as too many are.
Usually when a cartoon uses clips from previous cartoons from 15 plus years before, the clips' quality is much better and sees a difference in the style of animation and writing. 'Customers Wanted' is one of the few examples where the clips and the actual cartoon's story is equally good, as although the animation quality had advanced since the clips used from 'Lets Get Movin' and 'The Twisker Pitcher', both very good (as well as references to others), the spirit of 'Customers Wanted's' story and the humour was very true to that of those two. So didn't find myself worried or distracted as much as in other "cheaters", also because the clips were relevant to the cartoon's story instead of being random or where one questions why "why this particular cartoon?".
The animation never seemed too cluttered or static, with some nice meticulousness and fluidity as well a very nice job done with the expressions (for particularly Popeye, like with the eyes and arm movements). The music is suitably characterful and lush, even in the weakest Popeye cartoons this was the component that was consistently good and often the best thing about the Famous Studios cartoons. Although the gags in 'Lets Get Movin' and 'The Twisker Pitcher' are a little more inventive and funnier, the gags here are more than present and are crisply timed and amusing though never perhaps hilarious. The pace never felt dull despite the basic story being fairly predictable and the increasing wildness is great.
'Customers Wanted' is successful in the characterisation too. Again Popeye and Bluto are well realised characters that contrast well, their rivalry a lot of fun and tense and carrying the cartoon beautifully. Wimpy is one of two things that steals the show, he is on top form, very funny and it is one of his best appearances. The other is Jack Mercer's voice work, which is nothing short of marvellous and quite a power-house for him and for me because of the dynamic range and seamless comic timing (oh he sounded like he was having a whale of a time with those asides and ad-libs, which were entertaining in themselves) it was some of his best work for the studio.
Not an awful lot wrong here. It was interesting to hear Pinto Colvig voice Bluto, in his first outing voicing the character, and he does do admirably. Am just more familiar with Gus Wickie and Jackson Beck and feel that their voices fit the character design and personality better and had more menace.
In conclusion, very well done and especially for this type of cartoon. 8/10
Customers Wanted (1939)
** (out of 4)
This Popeye short is fairly lazy as it features footage from LET'S GET MOVING and THE TWISKER PITCHER. Basically the "story" here is that Popeye and Bluto are working rival movie houses at a carnival. Soon the two of them are fighting over Wimpy and whose movies he will be watching.
Of course, the movies that he watches are the two titles that I mentioned so basically you've got a short that shows several clips from those two movies with a few scenes worth of new material. The two shorts are very good on their own but just watching the clips here is rather pointless and on the whole this isn't a very good short. It certainly doesn't help that the new footage doesn't contain any laughs.
** (out of 4)
This Popeye short is fairly lazy as it features footage from LET'S GET MOVING and THE TWISKER PITCHER. Basically the "story" here is that Popeye and Bluto are working rival movie houses at a carnival. Soon the two of them are fighting over Wimpy and whose movies he will be watching.
Of course, the movies that he watches are the two titles that I mentioned so basically you've got a short that shows several clips from those two movies with a few scenes worth of new material. The two shorts are very good on their own but just watching the clips here is rather pointless and on the whole this isn't a very good short. It certainly doesn't help that the new footage doesn't contain any laughs.
Not surprising , Wimpy is the star of this short animation. Poor arcade machines and welcome to the good American business man , beginning with 10 cents the fight show.
10llltdesq
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the right honorable J. Wellington Wimpy, raconteur, bon vivant and noted consumer of that delicacy known as the hamburger. This is one of Wimpy's shining hours. This is truly his cartoon. He walks away with this one without breaking a sweat. I have a soft spot for Wimpy-some would argue that soft spot is in my head, but I digress-because he is obviously a man aware of the value of leisure and thus the possessor of great wisdom. He was all too rarely used.
This short is the best cheater I've seen. The use of old clips is minimal-at most two minutes or so from a seven minute cartoon-with a framing device that makes the use of clips integral to the plot. It's also one of the better showcases for Jack Mercer, the most familiar and successful voice behind Popeye, because not only the framing device, but the clips as well, have Mercer making remarks as Popeye sort of half-muttered, almost as asides, that are hilarious. A large part of the charm of the Fleischer Studios Popeyes arises out of Mercer's work at the microphone and he fleshed out the character's personality with his often ad-libbed remarks. Well worth seeking out. Most highly recommended.
This short is the best cheater I've seen. The use of old clips is minimal-at most two minutes or so from a seven minute cartoon-with a framing device that makes the use of clips integral to the plot. It's also one of the better showcases for Jack Mercer, the most familiar and successful voice behind Popeye, because not only the framing device, but the clips as well, have Mercer making remarks as Popeye sort of half-muttered, almost as asides, that are hilarious. A large part of the charm of the Fleischer Studios Popeyes arises out of Mercer's work at the microphone and he fleshed out the character's personality with his often ad-libbed remarks. Well worth seeking out. Most highly recommended.
Popeye and Bluto are barkers desperate to lure customers to their neighboring penny arcades. Nobody is coming in. Wimpy walks by and the boys battle to get him. The arcades play clips of other Popeye shorts. When the boys' battle turns physical, Wimpy is able to collect a hatful for customers rushing in to see them fight. This is essentially a clip show. The premise is better than most clip shows. Turning into a fight is brilliant but it is nevertheless a clip show.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis cartoon marks the first time Pinto Colvig performs the voice of Bluto, a role which he continued for nine more episodes until 1940.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn Bluto's arcade, the Mutoscope at the end of the row says: "Bluto in Never Kick a Woman (1936)." Bluto does not appear in that short.
- Versões alternativasAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConexõesFeatured in The Popeye Show: The Dance Contest/Customers Wanted/Out to Punch (2002)
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração7 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Popeye e o Limpador de Janelas (1939) officially released in Canada in English?
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