How Green Is My Spinach (1950) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
No Olive Oyl!
JohnHowardReid25 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Cast: Jack Mercer (Popeye, the sailor man), Jackson Beck (Bluto).

Director: SEYMOUR KNEITEL. Story: Isadore Klein. Animators: Tom Johnson, William Henning. Scenics: Lloyd Hallock, Jr. Music: Winston Sharples. Color by Technicolor. A "Popeye the Sailor" cartoon. RCA Sound System.

Copyright 27 January 1950 by Paramount Pictures Inc. A Famous Studios Production, by arrangement with King Features Syndicate, Inc. 7 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Bluto is sick and tired of being defeated time and time again by Popeye in picture after picture - in "Spinach Sockeroo" and "Strictly from Spinach", for instance. So he carries out a devilish plan to poison the world's entire crop of that particular vegetable.

COMMENT: By the humble standards of the Kneitel cartoons, this is a superior entry. True, it's not particularly funny, but it has its moments of ingenuity. I particularly like the personified gas cloud gulping up the spinach from the truck, I liked the "in" joke with Clark Kent reading a newspaper on TV, I liked the kids cheering when they heard the news that the ghastly vegie had been exterminated, and I loved the appeal to a real live cinema audience - notice Tom Ewell seated immediately behind the helpful lad - from a suddenly vociferous commentator.

If you don't find this one at least mildly diverting, better give the whole Sparber/Kneitel/Tytla lot a miss.

I mean, who but a gourmet could possibly resist a Popeye with no Olive Oyl?
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Spinach cruelty
TheLittleSongbird17 August 2020
The 1950s was not the best decade for the Popeye theatrical series or Famous Studios, the early-50s efforts being better and a little more consistent than those from the late-50s. The less polished animation quality, lower gag count and varying effectiveness of them and less fresh stories being the primary reasons for the inferior quality, compared to several of the 40s Famous Studios Popeye cartoons and Fleischer Studios' output.

'How Green is My Spinach' is in many ways one of the most interesting Popeye cartoons and certainly stands out in the series, there isn't another Popeye cartoon quite like it. It is on the most part one of the best early-50s cartoons and one of the ones that is deserving of a lot more attention. There is another Popeye cartoon that has a more vengeful Bluto and more vulnerable Popeye called 'Friend Or Phony'. For me though 'How Green is My Spinach' is by quite some way the superior cartoon, it's more inventive, it's funnier and it avoids being too mean-spirited (something that was a bit of a turn off in 'Friend Or Phony').

It is one of the shortest Popeye cartoons and part of me did feel that it was too short and that it could have ended not as abruptly as it turned out.

Not much wrong otherwise. As far as the Famous Studios Popeye cartoons go, 'How Green is My Spinach' is one of the most unique, the studio's Popeye cartoons tended to be quite formulaic but there is much less of that feel here. The differences are many. Not just that there is no Olive Oyl (which doesn't hurt the cartoon at all), but there is a live action sequence with a memorable cameo appearance and the characterisation is a change of pace. Popeye as said is more memorable and Bluto more vengeful, this was an interesting change and brought a dynamic not seen a lot before in the chemistry between Popeye and Bluto.

Bluto's treatment of Popeye is cruel but doesn't come over as overly-mean-spirited, like it did in 'Friend Or Phony' which was balanced out enough with laughs so it became quite depressing to watch. Whereas here, there were amusing and well-timed gags that were also quite clever, while what sounded like a not particularly tasteful concept on paper wasn't handled anywhere near as distastefully as it could easily have been. It goes along at a crisp pace too, if slightly rushed in places due to the short length.

Visually, 'How Green is My Spinach' is typically vibrant with the background art being especially impressive and the use of the gas cloud was an ingenious touch. The live action fit well and doesn't jar. The music is lush, dynamic and characterful. The voice acting from both Jack Mercer and Jackson Beck is very good.

Summing up, very good and one of the better early-50s Popeye cartoons. 8/10
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Breaking the fourth wall
llltdesq10 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is a cartoon in the Popeye series produced by Famous Studios. There will be spoilers ahead:

This is an unusual Popeye in a number of respects. It begins by showing several brief fights between Popeye and Bluto, where Bluto has the better of Popeye until Popeye inevitably eats his spinach and then beats Bluto soundly. At the end of the last of these introductory fight scenes, Bluto, sobbing uncontrollably, addresses the audience, pointing out that it always happens the same way in every picture, where he's winning and then Popeye eats spinach and beats him instead.

In addressing the audience, Bluto "breaks the fourth wall", or the imaginary wall between the characters and the audience. He also acknowledges that he's in a film, which is also unusual. After he unburdens himself, he gets an idea-if he gets rid of all the spinach, Popeye is finished.

Bluto sets up a lab and develops a poison-arsenic, Castor oil, DDT (there's a funny bit showing what the letters stand for in here) and finally a drop of skunk scent, which causes a chemical reaction and a mushroom cloud. Bluto tests his concoction and a spinach plant dies in dramatic fashion. Bluto then proceeds to try to wipe out spinach worldwide, with great success.

Cut to Popeye, who is unaware of events. There's a nice bit showing spinach's benefits for Popeye and then Bluto sprays a gas cloud which inhales a truckload of spinach. We now have a series of gags dealing with Popeye witnessing wanton spinach destruction and learning that spinach is being wiped out. Most of the visual gags are great.

Popeye then tries other vegetables with no luck and Bluto starts pounding on him, to the agitation of the narrator. We then see a live action shot of a movie theater audience anxiously watching events on-screen. The narrator plaintively asks, "Is there a can of spinach in the house?", at which point a small boy in the audience pulls a can of spinach out of a bag and throws it into the scene on-screen, where Popeye eats it, gains control, beats Bluto yet again and starts replanting spinach and using Bluto as a draft animal to help him. That doesn't just break the fourth wall, it shatters it! This cartoon deserves to be more widely seen. Recommended.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Interesting Popeye entry with some live-action footage
BrianDanaCamp8 September 2010
"How Green is My Spinach" (1950) opens with a montage of Popeye's spinach-fueled defeats of Bluto. Finally fed up with Popeye always beating him after eating spinach, Bluto sets out to create a lethal mixture (arsenic, Castor Oil, DDT, and "Essence of Skunk") that will poison the country's spinach crop, an act of villainy far more ambitious than usual for Bluto. He flies around in a plane marked "Spinach Killer" with a row of sharp teeth painted on it and sprays the spinach fields. Eventually poor Popeye has to try out other vegetables, all to no avail. A TV newsman (patterned after someone on the air at the time, although I'm not sure who) reports on the disaster. Eventually, the newsman's narration becomes blow-by-blow coverage of Bluto's shellacking of Popeye in a supermarket, which then becomes a color cartoon newsreel seen in a theater by a live-action audience in tinted black-and-white. When the narrator asks, "Is there a can of spinach in the house?," a well-prepared boy in the audience comes to the rescue.

All of this begs the question of just why Bluto couldn't simply eat the spinach himself in order to be on an equal playing field with Popeye.

One of the audience members in the live-action footage appears to be comic actor Tom Ewell, who was already co-starring in movies at this point (e.g. ADAM'S RIB). IMDb's Trivia note insists that it IS Tom Ewell, which leaves us wondering where this shot came from and how it got into this cartoon.

Olive Oyl is not in this. The TV print I saw had a running time of 5:30, pretty short for a studio cartoon.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Ms. Stein might have said "A rose is a rose is a rose . . . "
pixrox129 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . but Popeye learns that she never contended that "Broccoli is as good as spinach," viewers see during HOW GREEN IS MY SPINACH. America's favorite sailor man also eyes carrots and lettuce on the grocery shelves, but it is unlikely that even 10 gallons of V-8 Juice would provide a suitable substitute for his leafy power source. His nemesis B-l-u-t-o is pictured contaminating America's food chain with arsenic and D. D. T., known to cause silent springs. But fortunately a young urchin attends theatrical cartoon showings with spare cans of spinach in his pockets for when he gets the munchies.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A must see for Popeye fans, not so much for kid beginners
rscottwhite18 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
"How Green is My Spinach" (1950) ==>This review has spoilers!<==

Right off the bat, you realize that this is going to be an unusual cartoon. Bluto, showing some emotional real frustration in this cartoon for a change, takes us underground for some intense scenes (for a 40's/50's cartoon short) of poison making as he works with great intensity to once and for all remove that stupid spinach problem that has left him humiliated for almost three decades by this time.

I think this is the one "Popeye" short that you may want to watch first before you allow your child to see. The underground poison lab, the more-villainous-than usual Bluto, that purple spinach sucking cloud (along with other somewhat disturbing spinach destroying images) and a more helpless Popeye than you've ever seen before, along with no Olive Oyl could really scare a little kid. The fact that no other vegetables provide even the slightest amount of help makes things all that much worse. A newsreel providing cringe-worthy scenes of an assaulted Popeye with a helpless sounding newsman ("Is there any spinach in the house???" - Tom Ewell in a noteworthy cameo) completes the Popeye distress. In the end, a boy in the audience does have the spinach and Popeye wins again, creating a Bluto spinach planting cart and the cartoon ends with an abruptness that actually might have been planned to leave you a bit disturbed. I think one could argue that it's a cop-out - only how would YOU have ended this short? The concentrated story of this short ends so quickly (It's only 5 1/2 minutes long!) that it could actually stay with you a while after viewing. That alone makes this short one of the best ones (and certainly one of the most underrated) ever made - this despite the odd print and faded color that you see today.

You can see in some of the later 40's Popeye shorts that this one was probably inevitable; Bluto was starting to try and figure out "the spinach problem" in previous shorts. But in this one he goes all out and children should be warned.

But for the rest of you, please take a look; this is a great one.

It's interesting that after this one, the Popeye makers went back to the standard formula as if this short was never made.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Bluto turns into a supervillain
SnoopyStyle29 January 2022
Bluto is tired of constantly being beaten by Popeye. He comes up with a scheme to destroy the spinach crop. Finally, Bluto turns into a supervillain. There are some fun touches like the kids cheering on the end of spinach. It's a little bit outside the norm for a Popeye cartoon but it's still plenty fun.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Bluto steps out!!!
reisen5528 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
The character of Bluto is mostly that of a classic bad guy, mostly in black in the Fleischer films as a heavy fellow who never opens his eyes and does harm to Popeye for no good reason or to get Olive Oyl.

Not much else really until Popeye eats the Spinach and beats the hell out of Bluto to a Sousa song. So it was through much of the Fleischer years EXCEPT for Fighting Pals.

In this short, Bluto goes to Africa, Popeye misses his friend (yeap) and travels after him to find him. When they meet, Bluto is having a great time and Popeye passes out. Bluto knows the solution and pulls out HIS can of Spinach, and they greet, happy and proceed to beat the hell out of each other.

So then came the war years and Popeye and Bluto were, for the most part, friendly competitors (A Hull of a Mess) and not so much after Olive. Popeye was often going after the Navy or dear Sweet Pea (Baby wants a Bottleship) than not. Still, Bluto was not a friend per se.

Then came the split with the Fleischer studio failed and was integrated into Famous Players. Popeye and Bluto continued to beat each other up over Olive and that was that. Gone were the Fleischer visuals. Gone was Sindbad the Sailor and Ali Baba. A villain pure and simple and a mean and nasty one at that.

So in this wonderful exception, we have Bluto coming to realize (how dumb can he be) that SPINACH make short work of him. (Wow, what an amazing idea). So he goes after that and finally Popeye is saved by a kid in the theater.

This one is totally out of sync with the rest of the Popeye canon and offers us a different Bluto, even as a Mad Scientist. A delight, enjoy along with Sindbad and Alibaba and do not forget Fighting Pals either nor the delightful wartime efforts. Many Tanks among them.

Was very glad to find this gem again after so many years.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed