IMDb RATING
7.6/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
A house painter uses blue as his color of choice, while the Pink Panther has a different selection in mind.A house painter uses blue as his color of choice, while the Pink Panther has a different selection in mind.A house painter uses blue as his color of choice, while the Pink Panther has a different selection in mind.
- Directors
- Writer
- Star
- Won 1 Oscar
- 1 win total
Jean Vander Pyl
- Pink Panther's Laughing Sound
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
'The Pink Phink' is probably the best Pink Panther short. It is also the first one and it won on Oscar. In a building the pink panther sees a man paint everything blue. The pink panther liked pink more so he changes everything to that color. Where other Pink Panther movies become dull when it is the same joke over and over again this one stays funny until the end. The simple animation makes it even funnier.
I am a fan of the movies and cartoons of the pink panther. And this is a great pink panther cartoon, this film is about the little man, who is currently a house painter, and he wants to paint the house blue, the panther comes in and decides to paint it pink.
The panther looks more like his movie design than his design that you see in the very next cartoon. Henry Mancini is good at the pink panther theme, and William Lava is good at the other music included in this film.
Overall I give it 10/10 stars for a great start to the pink panther cartoons!
-Rocky And Yipper
The panther looks more like his movie design than his design that you see in the very next cartoon. Henry Mancini is good at the pink panther theme, and William Lava is good at the other music included in this film.
Overall I give it 10/10 stars for a great start to the pink panther cartoons!
-Rocky And Yipper
This is the first in a collection of Pink Panther cartoons, where the pointy nose man is painting a house entirely blue. However, the Pink Panther has something to say to that and slyly paints the colors over with pink paint. What results is a back and forth paint duel between man and panther.
There is not much of a plot in this cartoon, just a lot of painting around. However, there are plenty of laughs and some slapstick comedy you will get out of this cartoon short. The animation look kind of dated, but unique, and there is, like almost all of the other Pink Panther cartoons, no dialog - just sound effects and a funny sounding music soundtrack.
It's fun stuff for the entire family.
Grade A
There is not much of a plot in this cartoon, just a lot of painting around. However, there are plenty of laughs and some slapstick comedy you will get out of this cartoon short. The animation look kind of dated, but unique, and there is, like almost all of the other Pink Panther cartoons, no dialog - just sound effects and a funny sounding music soundtrack.
It's fun stuff for the entire family.
Grade A
The amiable if somewhat limited cartoon character of "The Pink Panther" was introduced in the animated opening credits of Blake Edwards' 1964 classic caper comedy of the same name; in the film proper, it was the nickname taken by cat burglar David Niven but the eventual franchise revolved around the antics of his inept nemesis Inspector Clouseau (which would soon become Peter Sellers' signature role).
In the concurrent cartoon series (which I used to watch as a kid on local TV and have subsequently acquired on DVD), the silent rosy feline took centre stage, albeit usually employed in more mundane occupations, like a house painter as in this very first instance – even if it was still pitted against a bungling, moustached albino who was Clouseau in all but name. The latter wants to paint the house in question blue and the protagonist, inevitably, wants it painted pink. The ensuing confrontation is certainly pleasant if hardly providing outstanding entertainment value, but it was enough for the short under review to cop an Academy Award.
In the concurrent cartoon series (which I used to watch as a kid on local TV and have subsequently acquired on DVD), the silent rosy feline took centre stage, albeit usually employed in more mundane occupations, like a house painter as in this very first instance – even if it was still pitted against a bungling, moustached albino who was Clouseau in all but name. The latter wants to paint the house in question blue and the protagonist, inevitably, wants it painted pink. The ensuing confrontation is certainly pleasant if hardly providing outstanding entertainment value, but it was enough for the short under review to cop an Academy Award.
I didn't often love the "Pink Panther" but I always thought Henry Mancini's theme with that seedy saxophone a piece of genius. This time, the painter is trying to paint things blue but the panther is having none of it. What was grey must be blue/pink; pink/blue - it's a war of attrition. It could go on for ever, or at least until one of them runs out of paint. Narked, the painter decides to deal with his pesky nemesis once and for all. Will it work? It's a bit repetitive, we get the gist after about three minutes, but it's still quite entertaining - especially the garden sprinkler. I didn't love the end, though.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Pink Panther character, created for the animated opening credits of La Panthère rose (1963), was so popular that this pitch pilot and The Pink Panther Show were produced.
- GoofsTwo instances of inconsistency as the painter is blasting away at Pinky with the paint-filled shotgun; in both cases, a paint-splashed portion of the outside wall of the house does not correspond between close-up and wide-angle shots: the left front window is sprayed and then it is clean in the wide-angle shot (only the wall below the window is sprayed with the pink paint instead of the window, also), and then the upper right-hand corner of the roof is not sprayed in the wide-angle shot but then is shown to be painted in a close-up when Pinky points out the remaining "unpinked" blue-painted spot to the painter.
- Crazy creditsCredits appear at the end of this short as opposed to the beginning, and are "painted" on the screen.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Behind the Feline: The Cartoon Phenomenon (2003)
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- Blake Edwards' Pink Panther: The Pink Phink
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