| RETURN TO CARTOONS MENU | Current Category: CARTOONS |
![]() |
Popeye: Abusement Park* (1947) | Popeye and Bluto battle over Olive in an amusement park. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Ancient Fistory (1952) | A Cinderella-like tale in which Olive is the princess and Popeye is the prince. Bluto is the shopowner brute who bullies Olive. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Assault And Flattery* (1956) | Bluto is suing Popeye for assault. They both show the judge some scenes from some of their cartoon to prove their case. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Big Bad Sinbad (1952) | Popeye takes nephews to the Nautical Museum and tells them a story about how he knocked the tar out of Sinbad, the greatest sailor in the world. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Bride And Gloom* (1954) | Popeye and Olive are finally planning to get married. The plans change, though, after Olive has a dream where she sees their future kids and all the mischief they get into. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Cooking With Gags* (1954) | Bluto plays all sorts of gags on Popeye and Olive on April Fool's Day. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Customers Wanted (1939) | Popeye and Bluto are running competing penny arcades, trying to bring in customer Wimpy. Of course, he would gladly pay Tuesday for a penny today. And of course, their competing arcades show clips featuring each of them, with well over half this short thus recycled. | |
![]() |
Popeye: A Date To Skate* (1938) | Popeye decides to take Olive Oyl on a date to the local roller skating rink. But she's a total dork - and Popeye has to make a spinach request from the audience to save the day. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Dizzy Divers* (1935) | Popeye and Bluto are deep sea divers. Popeye has a treasure map; for some reason he cuts Bluto in on the deal, but of course, Bluto doesn't exactly play fair. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Floor Flusher* (1954) | Olive has a leaky faucet and Popeye does what he can to fix it while Bluto wreaks havoc on the basement pipes. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Goonland* (1938) | Popeye sails to Goon Island in search of his Pappy. He finds the place populated by the imposing, but ugly, goons, and a no humans sign. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Gopher Spinach* (1954) | Popeye tries to rid his garden of a gopher, in the end the gopher saves Popeye from a bull. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Greek Mirthology* (1954) | Popeye tells his four nephews the story of his great Uncle Hercules in order to get them to eat spinach. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Greek Mirthology (Sign Language)* (1954) | PDH presents our first sign language cartoon! Popeye tells his four nephews the story of his great Uncle Hercules in order to get them to eat spinach. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Happy Birthdaze* (1943) | Olive invites Popeye over for his birthday. Popeye takes Shorty too and that's when the trouble begins! | |
![]() |
Popeye: A Haul In One (1956) | Popeye and Bluto are partners in a moving company and Olive has made the mistake of hiring them. | |
![]() |
Popeye: I Don't Scare* (1956) | Bluto bullies Popeye and attempts to sabotage Popeye's date with Olive. | |
![]() |
Popeye: I Never Changes My Altitude* (1937) | Popeye is sitting outside Olive's lunchroom at the airport, distraught. She's closed the business to fly away with aBluto, the aviator. | |
![]() |
Popeye: I Yam What I Yam* (1933) | Popeye, Olive, and Wimpy arrive in America by rowboat but have some trouble with the indians. | |
![]() |
Popeye: I'm In The Army Now (1936) | Olive tells the boys she loves a man in a uniform, so they try to sign up at the recruiting station, but they can only take one. There follows a duel of clips from previous shorts as they attempt to prove who is the winner. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Insect To Injury (1956) | Popeye has just finished his house when a band of termites attacks. | |
![]() |
Popeye: A Jolly Good Furlough* (1943) | Popeye is doing a great job of sinking ships when a carrier pigeon brings him notice that he's been granted a month furlough, which he plans to spend with Olive and his nephews. WARNING: CONTAINS RACIAL STEREOTYPES. It is offered only for historical value. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Let's Sing With Popeye* (1934) | An early Popeye cartoon where we meet him on deck singing his song. Then we are invited to sing the Popeye song along with lyrics and a ball bouncing from word to word. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Little Swee' Pea* (1936) | Popeye takes Swee' Pea to the zoo and spends most of his time rescuing the tot from the various animals. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Nearlyweds* (1956) | Popeye and Olive have finally decided to get married. But that doesn't mean that Bluto is through trying to stop them. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Never Sock A Baby* (1939) | Popeye spanks Swee'pea and sends him to bed without supper. He wrestles with his conscience over this, while Swee'pea packs a bundle and runs away from home. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Out To Punch (1956) | Popeye meets Bluto for the Championship fight. Bluto decides to sabotage Popeye's training to give himself the edge in the big fight. Will it work? | |
![]() |
Popeye: The Paneless Window Washer* (1937) | Popeye and Bluto are again competing against one another. Only this time, it's not for Olive Oyl's love, but for the privilege of being able to wash her windows. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Parlez Vous Woo* (1956) | Olive is so captived by The International, a radio personality with a French accent, that she'd rather stay home than go out on a date with Popeye. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Patriotic Popeye (1957) | Popeye's nephews want to play with fireworks on July 4th, but Popeye tries to dissuade them. They manage to light some off and get into trouble. Popeye saves the day. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Popeye For President (1956) | Popeye and Bluto are both running for president. They are tied with exactly the same number of votes, but Miss Olive Oyl has yet to cast her ballot. Which candidate will be able to impress her the most and earn her precious vote? | |
![]() |
Popeye: Popeye Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves (1937) | Popeye and friends hear of Hassan's attack on a town in Arabia and fly there to capture him but their plane crashes as they enter a desert in Arabia. After getting lost, the group happens upon the town where the Forty Thieves attack. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Popeye's Junior Headache* (1960) | Popeye babysits his little niece while Olive goes to the beauty parlor. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Private Eye Popeye (1954) | Olive Oyl is the femme fatale with a valuable, green, glowing jewel in need of protection. Popeye plays private eye and saves the day. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Scrap The Japs* (1942) | Popeye, punished with tedious chores on an aircraft carrier, leaps into action when a Japanese bomber, hiding behind a fake cloud, attacks the ship. WARNING: Contains racial stereotypes. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Seein Red, White And Blue* (1943) | Bluto the blacksmith gets a draft notice. Popeye is in charge of the local draft board. Bluto gives a sob story about his ailments to avoid the draft. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Shiver Me Timbers* (1934) | As the cat tries to get the mouse out of the swinging chandelier, an unseen voice tells us to follow the Bouncing Ball to sing the title song. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Shuteye Popeye (1952) | Popeye the Sailor snores while he sleeps, which disturbs Mouse, who is also trying to sleep. A war breaks out between Popeye and Mouse which Mouse eventually wins. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Sock-A-Bye Baby* (1934) | Popeye is babysitting and is trying hard to put the little one to sleep but is met with all sorts of distractions. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Spree Lunch (1957) | This Cold War-era cartoon uses humor to tout the dangers of Communism and the benefits of capitalism. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Taxi-Turvy (1954) | Popeye and Bluto both run a taxi service. Bluto bullies Popeye and gets him to turn over all of his cab fares. Popeye eventually gets the better of Bluto. Animation by Tom Johnson and Frank Endres. Music by Winston Sharples. | |
![]() |
Popeye: Wild Elephinks* (1933) | Popeye and Olive, marooned on a raft, land on what apparently is Africa, and are immediately battling elephants and gorillas. And a moose(!). Popeye eventually battles an entire menagerie at once, after his spinach, of course. | |
![]() |
Popeye: You're A Sap* (1942) | Popeye's sailing out in the Pacific, spoiling for a fight with the Japanese. He comes across what looks like a Japanese fishing boat, but, just before Popeye lets loose with the old fists, the enemy offers him a peace treaty. WARNING: May contain racial stereotypes. |
| RETURN TO CARTOONS MENU | Current Category: CARTOONS |