Popeye's nephews would rather have hamburgers than spinach, so Popeye recounts some of his past exploits where spinach saved the day.Popeye's nephews would rather have hamburgers than spinach, so Popeye recounts some of his past exploits where spinach saved the day.Popeye's nephews would rather have hamburgers than spinach, so Popeye recounts some of his past exploits where spinach saved the day.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Jackson Beck
- Bluto
- (voice)
Jack Mercer
- Popeye
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- …
Mae Questel
- Olive Oyl
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFirst Popeye cartoon since 1943 to feature Popeye's nephews.
- GoofsThe second poster Popeye shows his nephews is titled "Popeye A La Mode"; however, the actual title is Pop-Pie a la Mode (1945).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Så er der tegnefilm: Episode #13.15 (1989)
Featured review
Have always liked the Popeye series, loved even quite a lot of the cartoons from namely Fleischer Studios' late-30s period. Also like the character of Popeye very much especially his mumblings and asides and chemistry with Bluto (the latter of which being a huge part of the series' appeal, apart from the cartoons where Bluto doesn't appear). Am less of a fan of the cartoons, and cartoons in general actually, that are basically clips of previous cartoons with a framing story that isn't as interesting.
Despite really liking two of the three cartoons that are featured in clip form, especially 'The Anvil Chorus Girl', 'Spinach vs Hamburgers' as an overall doesn't do it for me. The clips are better than the rest of the cartoon itself, but the framing story is nowhere near as interesting or entertaining, and like many other "cheater" cartoons it was hard to not question the point of it or find it a little on the lazy side of things. Not a waste of time but not a must see. Of the hit and miss 1948 Popeye cartoons go, 'Spinach vs Hamburgers' is down there among the weakest in my view.
As said, two of the three cartoons featured are very enjoyable. The exception is 'Pop-Pie a La Mode' which actually stuck out like a sore thumb within the context of the cartoon and also because of the stereotypes, also not a particularly good cartoon as an overall whole.
The animation in the framing story, with Popeye and the nephews, and the clips is great, loved the use of colour in the framing story while the meticulousness in the backgrounds and the animation for Popeye's expressions and body language throughout the whole of 'Spinach vs. Hamburgers' are particularly admirable. The music is the outstanding element in the clips and the Popeye/nephews segments, the energy is right on point and the orchestration is typically lush and clever.
In terms of gags and memorable moments in the clips, they are generally amusing, with some of the particularly imaginative and clever material included. It may be formulaic Popeye, but it is enormously entertaining, nostalgic and clever Popeye in 2/3s of the clips. Love the chemistry between Popeye and Bluto, both on top form, and the voice work from some of the studio's finest (re-dubbed here in this cartoon so Bluto is voiced by Jackson Beck here) is reliably strong.
Unfortunately, the Popeye/nephews portions are not near as interesting or entertaining, the huge difference in quality from them and the clips was quite distracting. Apart from Popeye himself and some of his dialogue, the story doesn't have the same amount of energy or invention (very standard, routine stuff here that is not a new concept and little new is done with it, giving it a blandness).
Not much of the material is particularly inspired and didn't care much for the characters of the nephews here, pretty annoying and with not an awful lot of charm either. The chemistry between them and Popeye never really ignites somehow.
Altogether, rather average and to be seen for completest sake. 5/10
Despite really liking two of the three cartoons that are featured in clip form, especially 'The Anvil Chorus Girl', 'Spinach vs Hamburgers' as an overall doesn't do it for me. The clips are better than the rest of the cartoon itself, but the framing story is nowhere near as interesting or entertaining, and like many other "cheater" cartoons it was hard to not question the point of it or find it a little on the lazy side of things. Not a waste of time but not a must see. Of the hit and miss 1948 Popeye cartoons go, 'Spinach vs Hamburgers' is down there among the weakest in my view.
As said, two of the three cartoons featured are very enjoyable. The exception is 'Pop-Pie a La Mode' which actually stuck out like a sore thumb within the context of the cartoon and also because of the stereotypes, also not a particularly good cartoon as an overall whole.
The animation in the framing story, with Popeye and the nephews, and the clips is great, loved the use of colour in the framing story while the meticulousness in the backgrounds and the animation for Popeye's expressions and body language throughout the whole of 'Spinach vs. Hamburgers' are particularly admirable. The music is the outstanding element in the clips and the Popeye/nephews segments, the energy is right on point and the orchestration is typically lush and clever.
In terms of gags and memorable moments in the clips, they are generally amusing, with some of the particularly imaginative and clever material included. It may be formulaic Popeye, but it is enormously entertaining, nostalgic and clever Popeye in 2/3s of the clips. Love the chemistry between Popeye and Bluto, both on top form, and the voice work from some of the studio's finest (re-dubbed here in this cartoon so Bluto is voiced by Jackson Beck here) is reliably strong.
Unfortunately, the Popeye/nephews portions are not near as interesting or entertaining, the huge difference in quality from them and the clips was quite distracting. Apart from Popeye himself and some of his dialogue, the story doesn't have the same amount of energy or invention (very standard, routine stuff here that is not a new concept and little new is done with it, giving it a blandness).
Not much of the material is particularly inspired and didn't care much for the characters of the nephews here, pretty annoying and with not an awful lot of charm either. The chemistry between them and Popeye never really ignites somehow.
Altogether, rather average and to be seen for completest sake. 5/10
- TheLittleSongbird
- Dec 13, 2020
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Szpinak kontra hamburgery
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime6 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Spinach vs Hamburgers (1948) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer