Olive writes a letter to Popeye: she's through with sailors; it's cowboys for her. Popeye immediately sails off to the West, where he finds, who else, Bluto as the head of the ranch where Ol... Read allOlive writes a letter to Popeye: she's through with sailors; it's cowboys for her. Popeye immediately sails off to the West, where he finds, who else, Bluto as the head of the ranch where Olive is enthralled. Bluto gives Popeye a wild horse to ride, and, after a few humiliating d... Read allOlive writes a letter to Popeye: she's through with sailors; it's cowboys for her. Popeye immediately sails off to the West, where he finds, who else, Bluto as the head of the ranch where Olive is enthralled. Bluto gives Popeye a wild horse to ride, and, after a few humiliating defeats, Popeye conquers it (and wins back Olive's heart). Bluto punches Popeye out, and in... Read all
- Directors
- Writer
- Stars
- Bluto
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Olive Oyl
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Popeye
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Lots of pretty good gags hide the fact that this is pretty much the plot of most of the Popeye cartoons that would turn up during the remainder of the Sailor Man's remaining theatrical career: Popeye and Bluto fight over Olive Oyl. Of course, we're still in the Fleischer days, when director Dave would insist on a lot of gags, big and small like Popeye having a rural-style post box at the dock, but by and large the formula was set.
'Me Feelins is Hurt' may not one of the best Popeye cartoons overall though or one of the best of the 1940 output. Considering that Fleischer Studios' pre-40s output was mostly decent to brilliant, it is a little disappointing. At the same time though, despite a couple of major problems there are a lot of well done things and 'Me Feelins is Hurt' actually compares favourably amongst the 40s Fleischer Studios output in general.
Yes it is nothing new in terms of story and material, which does take away from any freshness or surprises somewhat. There has been a little more energy in other Popeye cartoons before and even since, coming from someone who consider the earlier Popeye cartoons generally better than the later ones.
And sorry to say it again, but despite Jack Mercer as always being brilliant as Popeye (the only Popeye voice actor for me), Margie Hines and Pinto Colvig never really gelled as Olive, who has little to do here again, and Bluto. Of Bluto's voice actors especially, Colvig is easily the least sinister, robust or formidable and he didn't seem to have as much fun as the others, also couldn't get Goofy (Colvig being Goofy's original voice actor and he was still voicing him when also voicing Bluto) out of my head somehow.
However, the animation is neatly and expressively drawn (especially with Popeye) and still very much like the work that goes into the backgrounds. The music, appropriately like its own character, is as beautifully orchestrated and characterful as ever.
The gags are also a lot of fun despite the lack of originality, the rattlesnake sequence is a highlight. The story is not much new but still a lot of energy, with a wonderfully wild final third that is the case for most Popeye cartoons. Both Popeye and Bluto's characters are handled very well, especially Popeye, Bluto is also a suitably formidable adversary.
In conclusion, good but falls short of being great. 7/10
*** (out of 4)
Popeye is working on his ship when he receives a telegram from Olive who says she is leaving him for a cowboy out West. Popeye heads out there and soon enough he's trying to be a cowboy and battling Bluto.
ME FEELINS IS HURT isn't a masterpiece but if you're a fan of these early Popeye shorts then there are enough laughs here to make it worth viewing. The highlight is a sequence where he ends up getting into a fight with a rattlesnake. There's some great laughs here as well as a nice pay-off. The animation is as great as always and there's certainly a nice flow to the picture.
Did you know
- TriviaA rare breaking of the fourth wall by Popeye in this short. And the horse has a turn as well.
- GoofsPopeye has a rattlesnake coiled around him, which squeezes him so hard that his can of spinach pops out of his clothes. But rattlesnakes are not constrictors; they are vipers that kill not by squeezing their prey to death, but by injecting venom into their prey.
- Alternate versionsAlso in a colorized version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Popeye Show: Hospitaliky/Me Feelins is Hurt/The Mighty Navy (2002)
- SoundtracksI'm an Old Cowhand
(uncredited)
Music and Lyrics by Johnny Mercer
Played when Popeye looks through his telescope
Details
- Runtime
- 6m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1