Popeye and Bluto stop by to see Olive and fix her leaky faucet. Popeye does it better, and Bluto gets jealous, so he starts rerouting Olive's plumbing and causing all sorts of leaks. Popeye ... Read allPopeye and Bluto stop by to see Olive and fix her leaky faucet. Popeye does it better, and Bluto gets jealous, so he starts rerouting Olive's plumbing and causing all sorts of leaks. Popeye needs some help from the goldfish to get to his spinach.Popeye and Bluto stop by to see Olive and fix her leaky faucet. Popeye does it better, and Bluto gets jealous, so he starts rerouting Olive's plumbing and causing all sorts of leaks. Popeye needs some help from the goldfish to get to his spinach.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Jackson Beck
- Bluto
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Jack Mercer
- Popeye
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Mae Questel
- Olive Oyl
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Olive Oyl's kitchen sink develops a drip. Bluto tries to fix it to no avail. When Popeye is successful, his derby-wearing rival settles on some hydraulic revenge on the Sailor Man in this decent but uninspiring entry into the cartoon series.
It's a partial remake of 1938's PLUMBING IS A 'PIPE'. While this is a decent enough Popeye cartoon for the 1950s, its standard plot and comparatively low rate of gags are two of more important reasons why I rate the Famous Studios Popeye cartoons as less than good, despite the consistent competence of everyone involved. When you've seen the two fight over Olive seventy times, the seventy-first holds little interest.
It's a partial remake of 1938's PLUMBING IS A 'PIPE'. While this is a decent enough Popeye cartoon for the 1950s, its standard plot and comparatively low rate of gags are two of more important reasons why I rate the Famous Studios Popeye cartoons as less than good, despite the consistent competence of everyone involved. When you've seen the two fight over Olive seventy times, the seventy-first holds little interest.
"I gave Bluto a whippin.' and stopped all the drippin,' I'm Popeye The Plumber Man!"
That ending song about summed up this very fast-moving and entertaining Popeye cartoon, which seems to have a new sight gag every few seconds as Bluto sabotages Olive's house and little goldfish have to help Popeye save the place.
It all starts with a leaky faucet and leads to total chaos as Popeye and Bluto pay a visit, try to play plumber and Bluto then gets nasty when Popeye proves to be the better helper. To say Bluto was a sore loser is a big understatement.
This is a lot of fun and looks good, too. A restored version would look excellent.
That ending song about summed up this very fast-moving and entertaining Popeye cartoon, which seems to have a new sight gag every few seconds as Bluto sabotages Olive's house and little goldfish have to help Popeye save the place.
It all starts with a leaky faucet and leads to total chaos as Popeye and Bluto pay a visit, try to play plumber and Bluto then gets nasty when Popeye proves to be the better helper. To say Bluto was a sore loser is a big understatement.
This is a lot of fun and looks good, too. A restored version would look excellent.
Really like to love a good deal of Popeye cartoons and like the character of Popeye. Love Bluto more and his chemistry with Popeye has always driven their cartoons. Will admit though to preferring the Popeye cartoons from the Dave Fleischer era, the cartoons tend to be funnier and there is more originality and more risk taking in some of them.
'Floor Flusher' is a relatively late Popeye cartoon and made in Famous Studios' roughest and most variable period, where budgets were much smaller in particularly the animation and deadlines and time constraints were shorter and tighter. All things considered, while there are infinitely better Popeye cartoons (especially during the Fleischer era) and there are signs of what made this period an inferior one for Famous Studios, 'Floor Flusher' is not a bad late Popeye cartoon at all and one of the better cartoons in Famous Studios' relatively late output.
As to be expected, the story is standard and formulaic, all it is basically is Popeye and Bluto battling for Olive Oyl's affections with not as much variety as many other Popeye cartoons. There could have been more gags too, the ones here are amusing and timed reasonably well, but they are not always hilarious and it's not laugh-a-minute, occasionally also on the repetitive side.
Similarly the animation quality is uneven, never terrible but never fantastic. The colours are fine and there is smoothness and nice detail on the most part but there are some moments where the backgrounds are sparse and the drawing rough.
What is fantastic about 'Floor Flusher' is the music score, the best thing for me. It's beautifully orchestrated, rhythmically it's full of energy and there is so much character and atmosphere, it's also brilliant at adding to the action and enhancing it. The gags are executed well, everything with the leak getting bigger all the time was creatively done, the interplay between the characters is lively and witty if in need of more variety and the pace is never dull.
The three main characters do a great job carrying the cartoon, Bluto being the funniest and most interesting. Olive Oyl is a good charming character where you can totally see what Popeye sees in her, but it's the entertaining interplay between Popeye and Bluto that really sparkles. Jack Mercer, Mae Questel and Jackson Beck give great vocal characterisations, Beck in particular and Mercer and Questel are the voice actors that spring to mind generally for me for Popeye and Olive's voices.
Concluding, decent if nothing mind-blowing. 7/10 Bethany Cox
'Floor Flusher' is a relatively late Popeye cartoon and made in Famous Studios' roughest and most variable period, where budgets were much smaller in particularly the animation and deadlines and time constraints were shorter and tighter. All things considered, while there are infinitely better Popeye cartoons (especially during the Fleischer era) and there are signs of what made this period an inferior one for Famous Studios, 'Floor Flusher' is not a bad late Popeye cartoon at all and one of the better cartoons in Famous Studios' relatively late output.
As to be expected, the story is standard and formulaic, all it is basically is Popeye and Bluto battling for Olive Oyl's affections with not as much variety as many other Popeye cartoons. There could have been more gags too, the ones here are amusing and timed reasonably well, but they are not always hilarious and it's not laugh-a-minute, occasionally also on the repetitive side.
Similarly the animation quality is uneven, never terrible but never fantastic. The colours are fine and there is smoothness and nice detail on the most part but there are some moments where the backgrounds are sparse and the drawing rough.
What is fantastic about 'Floor Flusher' is the music score, the best thing for me. It's beautifully orchestrated, rhythmically it's full of energy and there is so much character and atmosphere, it's also brilliant at adding to the action and enhancing it. The gags are executed well, everything with the leak getting bigger all the time was creatively done, the interplay between the characters is lively and witty if in need of more variety and the pace is never dull.
The three main characters do a great job carrying the cartoon, Bluto being the funniest and most interesting. Olive Oyl is a good charming character where you can totally see what Popeye sees in her, but it's the entertaining interplay between Popeye and Bluto that really sparkles. Jack Mercer, Mae Questel and Jackson Beck give great vocal characterisations, Beck in particular and Mercer and Questel are the voice actors that spring to mind generally for me for Popeye and Olive's voices.
Concluding, decent if nothing mind-blowing. 7/10 Bethany Cox
The old rivalry for the heart of Olive Oy . A different frame of fight. And a lot of water in a game of plumbs. Familiar things, great atmosphere.
The faucet is dripping. Olive Oyl makes it worst. Both Popeye and Bluto arrive at the same time. Popeye tries to help while Bluto sabotages him to stop him from fixing the problem.
This is a standard Popeye trio short. Everything cartoon and the Three Stooges have done the plumbing slapstick. Popeye in this era has done worst. I still don't like this era's animation but this story is fine.
This is a standard Popeye trio short. Everything cartoon and the Three Stooges have done the plumbing slapstick. Popeye in this era has done worst. I still don't like this era's animation but this story is fine.
Did you know
- TriviaSemi-remake of the Fleischer short Plumbin is a 'Pipe'
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Darkness (2007)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Karl-Alfred som rörmokare
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 6m
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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