Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaConrad Cat's attempts to keep the battleship decks swabbed are frustrated by Daffy's tricks, like putting paint in his bucket, and by unexpected appearances of the pint-sized Admiral.Conrad Cat's attempts to keep the battleship decks swabbed are frustrated by Daffy's tricks, like putting paint in his bucket, and by unexpected appearances of the pint-sized Admiral.Conrad Cat's attempts to keep the battleship decks swabbed are frustrated by Daffy's tricks, like putting paint in his bucket, and by unexpected appearances of the pint-sized Admiral.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Mel Blanc
- Daffy Duck
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Pinto Colvig
- Conrad Cat
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
The Sportsmen Quartet
- Vocalists
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
When I put: "An interesting episode", I'm talking more about how and when and why the episode was made instead of just what happens in it. It is interesting because it was made just before the Americans entered the Second World War, it has a song that was later partly used in "Duck Amuck" ("Over the sea, let's go men" etc) and the actor for the cat Conrad is the same person who voiced Goofy - Pinto Colvig! It is easy of course to recognise his voice - but I was very surprised when I heard it!
As for the episode, I like it. The farce may be overdone somewhat (for me anyway), but luckily it makes up with good jokes and the theme of the episode. There is good singing, good quotes from Daffy and Conrad, though he is horrible to Daffy, is quite a likable character anyway (guess in the same way we feel about Yosemite Sam and Wile Coyote, eh?).
On a Navy ship, there is a cat sailor called Conrad, who is merrily swabbing the deck (easily with our "modern" mop). He sees strange muddy footprints and then the little black duck and is very angry with Daffy that he has wandered on board with muddy duck feet. Hyper antics follow when Daffy decides that he does not like Conrad...
Mainly for people who prefer the older Daffy Duck and farce, enjoy "Conrad the Sailor"! :-)
As for the episode, I like it. The farce may be overdone somewhat (for me anyway), but luckily it makes up with good jokes and the theme of the episode. There is good singing, good quotes from Daffy and Conrad, though he is horrible to Daffy, is quite a likable character anyway (guess in the same way we feel about Yosemite Sam and Wile Coyote, eh?).
On a Navy ship, there is a cat sailor called Conrad, who is merrily swabbing the deck (easily with our "modern" mop). He sees strange muddy footprints and then the little black duck and is very angry with Daffy that he has wandered on board with muddy duck feet. Hyper antics follow when Daffy decides that he does not like Conrad...
Mainly for people who prefer the older Daffy Duck and farce, enjoy "Conrad the Sailor"! :-)
"Conrad the Sailor" is a WWII-era cartoon from Looney Tunes. And, like some other shorts by the studio, it has strong propaganda themes and I assumed they were trying to create a likable recurring character in Conrad, though he really WASN'T very likable or interesting. The only interesting aspect of him is that he sounds just like Disney's Goofy...as the same voice actor did Conrad's voice.
As far as the plot goes, for some inexplicable reason, Daffy Duck is trying to annoy Conrad and seemingly undermine America's war effort. Perhaps Daffy was a member of the Axis. All I do know is that the short was watchable but substandard.
As far as the plot goes, for some inexplicable reason, Daffy Duck is trying to annoy Conrad and seemingly undermine America's war effort. Perhaps Daffy was a member of the Axis. All I do know is that the short was watchable but substandard.
10Mister-6
When Daffy Duck (Blanc) feels ornery, others suffer the consequences.
And no one suffers more that Conrad (Colvig) in "Conrad the Sailor", who is simply trying to keep a battleship clean by swabbing the deck, polishing the rails and such. But with Daffy around, nothing stays clean (or sane) for long.
Director Jones and writer Monahan make rotten antics good clean fun as Daffy thwarts Conrad at every turn by switching his mop water with paint, planting a mop on Conrad's head, belittling his cleaning abilities ("You're a slovenly housekeeper!"), besting him in patty-cake and outsmarting a freshly-launched bomb, pausing only long enough to snap a salute to the passing Admiral.
That's Daffy and we wouldn't want him any other way.
Of course, I can't speak for Conrad.
Ten stars for "Conrad the Sailor"; high seas hijinx with a felonious fowl!
And no one suffers more that Conrad (Colvig) in "Conrad the Sailor", who is simply trying to keep a battleship clean by swabbing the deck, polishing the rails and such. But with Daffy around, nothing stays clean (or sane) for long.
Director Jones and writer Monahan make rotten antics good clean fun as Daffy thwarts Conrad at every turn by switching his mop water with paint, planting a mop on Conrad's head, belittling his cleaning abilities ("You're a slovenly housekeeper!"), besting him in patty-cake and outsmarting a freshly-launched bomb, pausing only long enough to snap a salute to the passing Admiral.
That's Daffy and we wouldn't want him any other way.
Of course, I can't speak for Conrad.
Ten stars for "Conrad the Sailor"; high seas hijinx with a felonious fowl!
There are some good things to Conrad the Sailor, primarily the excellent voice acting of Mel Blanc and Pinto Colvig(original voice of Goofy). The music was very nice, Conrad singing Shoving Right Off From Home Again was a nice touch. One or two of the visual gags are funny, namely the chase around the deck and when Conrad fires the deck gun with Daffy in it. However, what didn't impress is that the other jokes don't work, they are either unfunny or repetitive and the dialogue is lame on the most part. Also the animation isn't up the usual standard, instead of being colourful and solid, it looks somewhat dull, and Conrad especially is drawn poorly. Speaking of Conrad, the only exceptional element to him was Colvig's voicing, other than that he is a very dull foil for Daffy. As for Daffy, we all know he has a wacky, manic and outrageous persona, though he can be cruel as well, but the poor dialogue does not put him to good use. Finally, the pacing, there are some cartoons that suffer slightly from being a little too quick, though others are perfect, but the pacing if anything was too slow here. Overall, it had its moments but sorry I didn't think it was that great, that was furthermore spoilt by an abrupt ending. 4/10 Bethany Cox
One of the things that I notice about Chuck Jones's "Conrad the Sailor" is that it got released about two months after the United States entered WWII. I suspect that Chuck filmed it (at least most of it) before we entered, so he didn't realize his perfect timing! But that's just speculation. The cartoon itself is a riot, as Daffy Duck teases Conrad, a deck-cleaner looking like a cross between a cat and a dog (although I think that he's supposed to be a cat) and having a face like the humans chasing Bugs Bunny in "Wackiki Wabbit" and "Hare Conditioned". Daffy makes a complete mess of everything that Conrad does. It's a true representation of Daffy back when his name really described his personality: acting totally silly for no discernible reason. Beyond that, it shows something else: during Chuck Jones's first few years as director, his cartoons were more like Disney cartoons (if you've seen any Sniffles cartoons, you'll know what I mean); but once Chuck's work took a turn for the outright zany, he went all out! Anyway, a timeless classic.
PS: Pinto Colvig, who provided Conrad's voice, also voiced Goofy in the Disney cartoons.
PS: Pinto Colvig, who provided Conrad's voice, also voiced Goofy in the Disney cartoons.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizPinto Colvig, who voices the titular character Conrad the Cat, was the original voice of Goofy in the Walt Disney shorts.
- BlooperWhile the sailor is mopping the deck with water, Daffy swaps the pail of water with a pail of red paint. The sailor inadvertently paints a lot of the deck red. He ends up standing in the paint, and even doing a little dance in the paint. As he leaves, he drags the mop, saturated with red paint, across a part of the deck not painted red, leaving a red trail (from the mop). However, even though he had been standing the red paint, he leaves only the red trail from the mop and NO footprints.
- Citazioni
Daffy Duck: Very sloppy, Roscoe. You're a slovenly housekeeper.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Tiswas: Episodio #6.18 (1980)
- Colonne sonoreThe Song of the Marines
(uncredited)
Music by Harry Warren
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Performed by Pinto Colvig and the chorus
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione7 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Conrad the Sailor (1942) officially released in Canada in English?
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