A dog named Rover explains to a black, down-on-his-luck shaggy dog named Andy how he got his master. He went into a hotel room and bothered someone taking a bath--Porky Pig. Porky doesn't wa... Read allA dog named Rover explains to a black, down-on-his-luck shaggy dog named Andy how he got his master. He went into a hotel room and bothered someone taking a bath--Porky Pig. Porky doesn't want Rover as a pet, no matter how many times Rover tries to make Porky adopt him.A dog named Rover explains to a black, down-on-his-luck shaggy dog named Andy how he got his master. He went into a hotel room and bothered someone taking a bath--Porky Pig. Porky doesn't want Rover as a pet, no matter how many times Rover tries to make Porky adopt him.
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Worth seeing just for the very unusual style of the artwork!
"Porky's Pooch" is a very unusual cartoon from Looney Tunes. This is because instead of the normal backgrounds, they are sometimes black & white photographs OR drawn to look just like them. It's a most unusual look...and you wish the studio had made a few more like it.
The cartoon is also a bit unusual because it was later remade by the studio as "Little Orphan Airedale".
The story begins with a hungry Scotty coming upon a dog waiting in Porky's car. Apparently, Porky didn't want a dog but the dog was persistent...VERY persistent!
This is a cute and clever cartoon...well worth seeing and very well made despite being one of the last black & white cartoons made by Looney Tunes.
By the way, the final line "I'm a bad boy" is taken from Lou Costello....from rival Universal Studios.
The cartoon is also a bit unusual because it was later remade by the studio as "Little Orphan Airedale".
The story begins with a hungry Scotty coming upon a dog waiting in Porky's car. Apparently, Porky didn't want a dog but the dog was persistent...VERY persistent!
This is a cute and clever cartoon...well worth seeing and very well made despite being one of the last black & white cartoons made by Looney Tunes.
By the way, the final line "I'm a bad boy" is taken from Lou Costello....from rival Universal Studios.
Loved Mel's Scottish Impression
Basically, this is a tale in flashback of one dog, who now is well-fed and happy, telling a hungry, lonesome dog how he got a master to take care of him.
I wish we had more of him (the hungry dog) in this cartoon. Mel Blanc is just awesome with his different voices in this one: First, he's that lonesome mutt: a Scottish dog "Rover," who Mel exaggerates the way Scot's roll their "r's." Then he's another dog: "Sandy," the now-fed dog who tells the story. He has a strong NYC accent which is right up Mel's alley. And, of course, he's Porky Pig. I laughed at the Scot more than anything and wish his role had been bigger.
The artwork with the New York city buildings, inside and out, the sidewalks and streets is fantastic. Note: Porky's residence is "Termite Terrace," the place the Looney Tunes creators called their place of work.
I wish we had more of him (the hungry dog) in this cartoon. Mel Blanc is just awesome with his different voices in this one: First, he's that lonesome mutt: a Scottish dog "Rover," who Mel exaggerates the way Scot's roll their "r's." Then he's another dog: "Sandy," the now-fed dog who tells the story. He has a strong NYC accent which is right up Mel's alley. And, of course, he's Porky Pig. I laughed at the Scot more than anything and wish his role had been bigger.
The artwork with the New York city buildings, inside and out, the sidewalks and streets is fantastic. Note: Porky's residence is "Termite Terrace," the place the Looney Tunes creators called their place of work.
A Dog With a Mission
After a conversation with a down and out Scotty dog, Rover tells how he went about seeking a master. This starts out with his insufferable pursuit of Porky Pig. I guess pigs are higher on the food chain (but there is a dog running a restaurant at the beginning). Anyway, the dog becomes such a pest that Porky eventually succumbs to his shenanigans. Not a great cartoon, but some decent action sequences. The dog is utterly obnoxious.
While Porky and Bob Clampett have done better, 'Porky's Pooch' is still good fun
Bob Clampett's cartoons often were high in energy and fun and displayed a uniquely wacky visual style that one can recognise immediately. At his best, he was responsible for some of the best and most unique cartoons around.
Porky Pig is always watchable and is a very likable character, even though there are funnier and more interesting Looney Tunes characters around and he can get outshone when partnered with a stronger personality (Daffy Duck being a primary example).
'Porky's Pooch' doesn't see either at their best, due to them having cartoons with more laughs and ones where the laughs are funnier and sharper, but even lesser efforts or cartoons that are around the middle of their output (the latter applies here) by both are still worth the look. 'Porky's Pooch' is one of those cartoons.
It is more amusing than it is hilarious, and the laughs could have been more frequent. Rover is an acquired taste, and admittedly there are times where he is a little annoying and even obnoxious though also a couple of the cartoon's best moments are with him, and the ending is rather abrupt and paced a bit too hastily.
However, the animation is deliciously wacky, eye-popping, rich in detail and high in imagination, with the black and white colours being beautifully shaded and crisp. Porky's reaction shots are very imaginative here and provide some of the cartoon's best moments. Carl Stalling still proves himself to be a compositional genius with his energetically high-voltage, luscious, rousing, dynamic and action-enhancing music score.
Witty and sometimes suitably wild scripting helps too, while there are some highly amusing moments, especially the reaction shots, Rover's mumbled praying and Rover's Carmen Miranda impression. There's nothing bland about Porky here, Rover does have his fun moments though he is a marmite character and for me he didn't always work and Sandy is a memorable if underused character. Mel Blanc's vocals once again shows an unparalleled ingenious talent, the Scottish accent for example is exaggerated but for comic effect and actually enhances the humour, though he shines in all his roles in what is essentially a one-man show.
All in all, good fun if not the best of Clampett or Porky. 7/10 Bethany Cox
Porky Pig is always watchable and is a very likable character, even though there are funnier and more interesting Looney Tunes characters around and he can get outshone when partnered with a stronger personality (Daffy Duck being a primary example).
'Porky's Pooch' doesn't see either at their best, due to them having cartoons with more laughs and ones where the laughs are funnier and sharper, but even lesser efforts or cartoons that are around the middle of their output (the latter applies here) by both are still worth the look. 'Porky's Pooch' is one of those cartoons.
It is more amusing than it is hilarious, and the laughs could have been more frequent. Rover is an acquired taste, and admittedly there are times where he is a little annoying and even obnoxious though also a couple of the cartoon's best moments are with him, and the ending is rather abrupt and paced a bit too hastily.
However, the animation is deliciously wacky, eye-popping, rich in detail and high in imagination, with the black and white colours being beautifully shaded and crisp. Porky's reaction shots are very imaginative here and provide some of the cartoon's best moments. Carl Stalling still proves himself to be a compositional genius with his energetically high-voltage, luscious, rousing, dynamic and action-enhancing music score.
Witty and sometimes suitably wild scripting helps too, while there are some highly amusing moments, especially the reaction shots, Rover's mumbled praying and Rover's Carmen Miranda impression. There's nothing bland about Porky here, Rover does have his fun moments though he is a marmite character and for me he didn't always work and Sandy is a memorable if underused character. Mel Blanc's vocals once again shows an unparalleled ingenious talent, the Scottish accent for example is exaggerated but for comic effect and actually enhances the humour, though he shines in all his roles in what is essentially a one-man show.
All in all, good fun if not the best of Clampett or Porky. 7/10 Bethany Cox
a Scots dog, a smart dog, and our Porky friend
One of the better Porky cartoons, this one centres on Rover, a smart dog from the street who decides to find himself a master and fixes on our favourite pig, disturbing his bathtime and making himself a general nuisance.
Porky of course is eventually taken in after some riotous behaviour and manipulation by Rover, as the dog explains to down on his luck Scots dog Andy - Andy has just been hypnotised by the sight of fresh meat being cooked before his eyes but not offered as food.
Like Mickey Mouse with Pluto, it seems preposterous that a pig would own a dog, but that's animation for you! This Looney Tune is fun, snappy, and clever.
Porky of course is eventually taken in after some riotous behaviour and manipulation by Rover, as the dog explains to down on his luck Scots dog Andy - Andy has just been hypnotised by the sight of fresh meat being cooked before his eyes but not offered as food.
Like Mickey Mouse with Pluto, it seems preposterous that a pig would own a dog, but that's animation for you! This Looney Tune is fun, snappy, and clever.
Did you know
- TriviaThe apartment Porky lives in is named "Termite Terrace" after the nickname the Warner Bros. animators gave to their run-down animation facility.
- Alternate versionsThis cartoon was colorized in 1968 by having every other frame traced over onto a cel. Each redrawn cel was painted in color and then photographed over a colored reproduction of each original background. Needless to say, the animation quality dropped considerably from the original version with this method. The cartoon was colorized again in 1990, this time with a computer adding color to a new print of the original black and white cartoon. This preserved the quality of the original animation.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Bob Clampett Show: Wagon Heels/Farm Frolics/Porky's Pooch (2001)
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- El perro de Porky
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- 7m
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- 1.37 : 1
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