Popeye takes Swee' Pea to the zoo and spends most of his time rescuing the tot from the various animals.Popeye takes Swee' Pea to the zoo and spends most of his time rescuing the tot from the various animals.Popeye takes Swee' Pea to the zoo and spends most of his time rescuing the tot from the various animals.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Jack Mercer
- Popeye
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Mae Questel
- Olive Oyl
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- …
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- Writers
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Featured reviews
When this show was on I watched it every time I could! I thought that the characters were really funny and all had great personalities. The animation in My opinion was crisp, clean, and really clear. Not to mention beautiful! Most of the characters in this show are hilarious like the Looney Tunes characters that we all love. in My opinion these characters are the funnies and talented ever seen. In fact, The things that goes on in this series' cartoons are in My opinion nuts which that is what makes them hilarious! There are so many to like and laugh at and the silly things they do! If you like the original Looney Tunes then I strongly recommend that you watch this show!
This is basically a 'Baby Herman' movie: a baby keeps obliviously wandering into perilous situations, and then just as obliviously wandering out of them again ... while the frantic guardian, all too aware of the danger, keeps getting hurt. But at least this cartoon gives Popeye a change from his usual formula of trading punches with Bluto or some other menace.
Is Swee'Pea meant to be Olive Oyl's nephew, or is he her illegitimate son? Whatever he is, Olive dumps him on Popeye for the day. Popeye dumps Swee'Pea into the pram, and heads for the zoo. There's some nice multiplane animation during the trip to the zoo, and the sequence with the cartoon elephant seems to contain some rotoscoped footage of a live-action elephant.
Most of the gags are quite obvious. At one point, Swee'Pea rides bareback astride a leopard while the soundtrack plays 'Hold that Tiger'. Given that choice of music, why didn't the animators put Swee'Pea on a tiger instead of a leopard? I suspected that there was some gag coming up involving the leopard's spots, which wouldn't work as well with a tiger's stripes. Sure enough.
I dislike movies about babies, and I like cartoon babies even less. Popeye is funnier without Swee'Pea, and it's unfortunate that Olive's role in this toon is so brief that it gives her nothing to do. More for the impressive animation than anything else, I'll rate this 6 out of 10. The Fleischer Studio's cartoons were released through Paramount. After they lost Fleischer, the cartoons produced by Paramount's in-studio animation unit were consistently the worst animation output by any major Hollywood studio. Even the worst Fleischer Popeye cartoon is far better than any of the post-Fleischer Popeyes.
Is Swee'Pea meant to be Olive Oyl's nephew, or is he her illegitimate son? Whatever he is, Olive dumps him on Popeye for the day. Popeye dumps Swee'Pea into the pram, and heads for the zoo. There's some nice multiplane animation during the trip to the zoo, and the sequence with the cartoon elephant seems to contain some rotoscoped footage of a live-action elephant.
Most of the gags are quite obvious. At one point, Swee'Pea rides bareback astride a leopard while the soundtrack plays 'Hold that Tiger'. Given that choice of music, why didn't the animators put Swee'Pea on a tiger instead of a leopard? I suspected that there was some gag coming up involving the leopard's spots, which wouldn't work as well with a tiger's stripes. Sure enough.
I dislike movies about babies, and I like cartoon babies even less. Popeye is funnier without Swee'Pea, and it's unfortunate that Olive's role in this toon is so brief that it gives her nothing to do. More for the impressive animation than anything else, I'll rate this 6 out of 10. The Fleischer Studio's cartoons were released through Paramount. After they lost Fleischer, the cartoons produced by Paramount's in-studio animation unit were consistently the worst animation output by any major Hollywood studio. Even the worst Fleischer Popeye cartoon is far better than any of the post-Fleischer Popeyes.
Little Swee'pea (1936)
*** (out of 4)
Popeye asks Olive Oyl to go to the zoo with him but she's busy so she says he can take Little Swee'pea. Popeye does so and quickly regrets it as the kid keeps wondering off and getting involved with various animals.
LITTLE SWEE'PEA is another winning short from Fleischer's series where there's once again some good laughs and plenty of nice action. The real highlight here is a sequence where the baby is walking underneath the elephant, which keeps coming close to stepping on him. There's also another funny sequence where the baby keeps walking into the mouth of an alligator. The animation itself is of high quality as you'd expect and the action helps keep the film moving.
*** (out of 4)
Popeye asks Olive Oyl to go to the zoo with him but she's busy so she says he can take Little Swee'pea. Popeye does so and quickly regrets it as the kid keeps wondering off and getting involved with various animals.
LITTLE SWEE'PEA is another winning short from Fleischer's series where there's once again some good laughs and plenty of nice action. The real highlight here is a sequence where the baby is walking underneath the elephant, which keeps coming close to stepping on him. There's also another funny sequence where the baby keeps walking into the mouth of an alligator. The animation itself is of high quality as you'd expect and the action helps keep the film moving.
Popeye is taking Olive Oyl to the zoo. It turns out that she's busy and he takes Swee'Pea instead. Baby's day out becomes one big adventure. This is a classic Popeye. He keeps saving the baby from the animals. Swee'Pea with the crocodile is a classic scene. There are a few other great bits. The only thing that I don't like is Popeye's closing song where he says he'll never have a baby. It's too cynical for Popeye. Overall, this is a great classic.
I remember Little See'pea as the debut cartoon for the Segar-created baby Swee'Pea. (Sock-a-Bye Baby was not Swee'pea's debut, though I at first thought that the babe whom Popeye was baby-sitting WAS Swee'pea.) This cartoon showed what Swee'Pea was like; when Popeye took him to the zoo (because Olive Oyl was too busy with housecleaning to go with Popeye), Swee'Pea crawled in and out of mischief, with Popeye in pursuit. With the aid of spinach, he spanked the hippo and threw him into the ground, then twirled a leopard, which lost its spots. The punching of the crocodile into suitcases, seen in several other Popeyes, was absent. At the end, Popeye gave Swee'pea a toy monkey, which led him to SQUALL! Olive Oyl thought that Popeye had FRIGHTENED Swee'pea, hit him with her broom. The REAL nitty-gritty was that Swee'Pea was squalling because he did not have his way. This was seen in later Popeyes featuring Swee'Pea, like Baby Wants a Bottleship and Thrill of Fair. All in all, a fine cartoon debut for Swee'Pea.
Did you know
- TriviaThe short is in the public domain in the United States after its copyright holder neglected to renew the copyright.
- Alternate versionsAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Popeye Show: I Eats My Spinach/Little Swee'Pea/Poopdeck Pappy (2001)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Popeye the Sailor with Little Swee' Pea
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 7m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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