Watching a restored version in full Technicolor is a real treat. The background artists outdid themselves with the various colours. Here’s a great example, with a rock-skull and gnarled tree with a face.
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This is part of a gag that I remember liking 60-some-odd years ago. Sindbad punches Popeye upward. Sindbad’s huge rokh grabs him, circles once (the animators had to draw the bird’s underside as the shot looks up) and flies into a distant volcano to finish him off.
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Notice how the background the same setting is different than the one in the first frame. The Fleischers spared no expense.
Popeye's a goner. Or is he? A tornado whisks its way from the volcano to the foreground and provides the answer.
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Here’s the background painting under the first set of titles. What a shame none of the background artists got credit.
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Willard Bowsky led the animation crew on this, with Ed Nolan and George Germanetti getting screen credit.
Note the face in the tree--a truly Disney-worthy detail. How could there not have been an actual feature-length "Popeye Color Feature"? All the ingredients were there--great quirky characters that audiences already loved, humor, action, adventure, music, fun--and the daily Segar strips had lengthy storylines.
ReplyDeleteAgreed. Wholeheartedly. Popeye was someone that capable of expanding to feature-length. I don't know the circumstances, but perhaps Paramount wanted a feature where it wouldn't have to split profits with King Features.
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