In the hope of recreating Noah's Ark, an eccentric man builds an ark and fills it with specimens of all animals - except for a pink panther, which he sets out to hunt.In the hope of recreating Noah's Ark, an eccentric man builds an ark and fills it with specimens of all animals - except for a pink panther, which he sets out to hunt.In the hope of recreating Noah's Ark, an eccentric man builds an ark and fills it with specimens of all animals - except for a pink panther, which he sets out to hunt.
- Directors
- Writer
- Stars
Paul Frees
- Hunter
- (voice)
- …
Rich Little
- The Pink Panther
- (voice)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
What a shock to hear someone talk right away in this cartoon! That almost never happens as these Pink Panther cartoons are 99 percent dialog-less.
Nonetheless, we hear a "Big White Hunter" type guy traveling with his guide in a jeep along the Africa plain mention about "a story about some guy who cornered all the animals in the thing called the Ark. If it can be done once, it can be done again." He builds the boat and names it after his girlfriend: "Nora's Ark."
The twist is that, unlike God producing all the rain, this guy sends fliers out to the animals, warning of a big flood and telling them to come to his ark! Pretty clever (with a few holes in the theory, but, hey, it's a cartoon).
Anyway, it works and two of all the animals trot into the boat....except the (one and only) Pink Panther. Where is he? The hunter goes after him, despite warnings that the PP is "taboo."
Overall, despite the ludicrous (and elitist) stereotyping of a big-game hunter and of a Texan, it's a fun cartoon with some nice artwork. The rain effect, and the ark and animals are all drawn really well.
The very last scene has the Panther utter a sentence, and we discover he's British!
Nonetheless, we hear a "Big White Hunter" type guy traveling with his guide in a jeep along the Africa plain mention about "a story about some guy who cornered all the animals in the thing called the Ark. If it can be done once, it can be done again." He builds the boat and names it after his girlfriend: "Nora's Ark."
The twist is that, unlike God producing all the rain, this guy sends fliers out to the animals, warning of a big flood and telling them to come to his ark! Pretty clever (with a few holes in the theory, but, hey, it's a cartoon).
Anyway, it works and two of all the animals trot into the boat....except the (one and only) Pink Panther. Where is he? The hunter goes after him, despite warnings that the PP is "taboo."
Overall, despite the ludicrous (and elitist) stereotyping of a big-game hunter and of a Texan, it's a fun cartoon with some nice artwork. The rain effect, and the ark and animals are all drawn really well.
The very last scene has the Panther utter a sentence, and we discover he's British!
A western-accented hunter builds an ark to hold his collection of an assortment of animals. The only species missing that he wants in his ark is the Pink Panther. So, he sets out on a mission to hunt him down. But, the Pink Panther, in his classic, wise and crafty self, outsmarts the hunter on every turn, from sending a swarm of bees after him to making him drop down the mountain after drawing the bridge to the ark.
It's a very funny cartoon, and one of the very few Pink Panther cartoons with dialog in it, which I thought was a tad distracting, but nonetheless entertaining. It's always great seeing the panther outsmart people, sending up lots of laughs and chuckles.
Grade A
It's a very funny cartoon, and one of the very few Pink Panther cartoons with dialog in it, which I thought was a tad distracting, but nonetheless entertaining. It's always great seeing the panther outsmart people, sending up lots of laughs and chuckles.
Grade A
The Pink Panther cartoons are always entertaining, and Sink Pink is no exception. While stereotyping is not always a problem, it can be if it's unsubtle, exaggerated and unneeded. Sink Pink with the hunter and Texan for me does fit into that category. It isn't problematic enough to make the rest of Sink Pink any less enjoyable. The story is Noah's Ark with a twist and told so in a very entertaining way, while the gags are funny and delivered at a good pace. Sink Pink also marks one of few times where Pinky speaks, his lines fit his fun, cool persona and didn't feel out of place at all. There is definitely a Looney Tunes feel to the humour, almost like a homage, and it worked. The animation is simple, but colourful and never too rough or simplistic. The music is still very catchy and memorable, the way it sticks in your head is in an infectious in alternative to annoying way. Pinky always has been a strong character, and he is still the same cool and likable character that we know him for. Overall, very good and fun, Pink Panther fans will not be disappointed. 8/10 Bethany Cox
A Texan big game hunter has a bright idea to capture all the animals: build an ark and then claim that there is a flood coming. Sure enough, the animals come marching in two by two, except for one - the Pink Panther. Grabbing his gun, the hunter goes looking for the elusive cat, but he is no match for the panther that is pink.
The Pink Panther shorts are some of the ugliest cartoons this side of a Gene Deitch Tom & Jerry short, and Sink Pink is no exception - the drawings are scrappy, the colours are horrible and the animation is crude. Perhaps if the gags were exceptional, this mightn't be so much of an issue, but they're not - basic slapstick comedy inspired by the likes of Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote, only executed with very little style.
3.5/10, rounded down to 3 for when The Pink Panther talks - he speaks like Terry Thomas on Ketamine.
The Pink Panther shorts are some of the ugliest cartoons this side of a Gene Deitch Tom & Jerry short, and Sink Pink is no exception - the drawings are scrappy, the colours are horrible and the animation is crude. Perhaps if the gags were exceptional, this mightn't be so much of an issue, but they're not - basic slapstick comedy inspired by the likes of Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote, only executed with very little style.
3.5/10, rounded down to 3 for when The Pink Panther talks - he speaks like Terry Thomas on Ketamine.
A bit more like Looney Tunes than usual for old Pinky here. But that's to be expected when most of the Pink Panther cartoons are from Freleng and Depatie.
This time round a Texan Big Game hunter is rounding up animals for his 'ark' so he can just go about shooting fish in a barrel. Kind of takes the sport out of it but...hey ho. The last on his list is a Pink Panther and he goes after our favorite cat like Wile E. Coyote would go after the Roadrunner.
Of course Pinky outsmarts him at every turn, even causes him to go plummeting from cliffs Coyote style. And in the end, of course, he wins and talks for one of those very few times. I love the Pink Panther.
This time round a Texan Big Game hunter is rounding up animals for his 'ark' so he can just go about shooting fish in a barrel. Kind of takes the sport out of it but...hey ho. The last on his list is a Pink Panther and he goes after our favorite cat like Wile E. Coyote would go after the Roadrunner.
Of course Pinky outsmarts him at every turn, even causes him to go plummeting from cliffs Coyote style. And in the end, of course, he wins and talks for one of those very few times. I love the Pink Panther.
Did you know
- TriviaThe first of only two original "Pink Panther" cartoons in which the Pink Panther talks; the second is Pink Ice (1965).
- Quotes
The Pink Panther: Why can't man be more like animals?
- ConnectionsFeatured in Behind the Feline: The Cartoon Phenomenon (2003)
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content