Out to Punch (1956) Poster

(1956)

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7/10
Olive is nice here
SnoopyStyle30 August 2021
Popeye and Bluto operate neighboring opposing training camps and getting ready for their boxing match. Popeye is cheered on by Olive Oyl. Bluto is lounging around and only works to sabotage Popeye.

This is the standard Popeye trio. The color animation is not the best during this era. I'm most interested in this version of Olive Oyl. She's nice and supportive towards Popeye. I don't understand her split personality. It seems that this is the version that works.
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5/10
Popeye And Bluto Fight
boblipton18 June 2023
Popeye and Bluto are scheduled to box each other. While Popeye trains hard, Bluto puts his energy into sabotaging Popeye.

Because the end result of just about every Popeye cartoon in which Bluto appears is that they fight each other, this time they figured why bother with the preliminaries? Instead they relied on their gag construction, which is good. However, given that well over 90% of the Popeye cartoons have exactly the same construction, my reaction is the same boredom that accompanied my original viewing of them on TV when I was four or five: are the Little Rascals on WPIX now, or is Diver Dan still playing in the fish tank?
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7/10
As is the case with bowling and baseball, few if any . . .
pixrox19 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
. . . people born after the year 1964 understand the basics of boxing, let alone the fine points. That's why these three activities of varying value are commonly referred to as the "Three B's" or the "Baroque Sports." For those belonging more in the "Quick" category than the "Creeping Dead," I'll start by pointing out that OUT TO PUNCH concerns itself with the anachronistic pastime of boxing. History's first recorded slug fest was between Aristotle Plato Socrates and July August September Caesar around noon on July 4, 776 BC. Some anthropologists claim these opponents actually were Johnny-Come-Lately's to pugilism, which they contend originated in the Ethiopia\Egypt region 6,000 years earlier. If so, it probably was practiced in foreign galaxies before then. However, Popeye and Brutus do not seem to be following the official Marcus of Queen Mary Rules during their OUT TO PUNCH tussle. At this late date, who's still alive to really care?
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Funny Popeye Short
Michael_Elliott31 March 2016
Out to Punch (1956)

*** (out of 4)

Another fast and funny short has Popeye in training to box Bluto later in the night. After Bluto sees what great shape Popeye is in he plans to sabotage the training sessions.

OUT TO PUNCH is a good entry in the series, which was slowly coming to an end. These 50's shorts were never quite as good as the originals back in the 1930s but this one here is certainly one of the series highlights. There are many funny gags here including the various abuse that Popeye takes once he's in the ring. There are some rather creative fighting sequences where the poor Popeye is beaten to a pulp. Fans of the series will certainly enjoy this one since there are some nice laughs and plenty of action.
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7/10
Fisticuffs!
Hitchcoc17 June 2023
Popeye and Bluto are scheduled to box at an arena. We begin with training. Bluto does nothing while Popeye trains fiercely. Instead of becoming a better boxer, Bluto spends his time sabotaging Popeye's training. Of course, he outdoes our squinty hero...for a while. But there is a substance that evens the score. I wonder what it is. For a change, the boys are not fighting over Ms Oyl. She is clearly on Popeye's side and assists him in his training. Eventually it's off to the fights where the two adversaries face off. It's too bad, but there is no mystery or concern for the viewer in this one. This one wasn't as sparkly as some in the past.
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8/10
Best Part Was The Last 90 Seconds
ccthemovieman-118 April 2007
Bluto and Popeye apparently have a big boxing match set up.Their training headquarters are right across from each other, something, of course, you would only see in a cartoon. In one building, Bluto is in a hammock, hitting the punching bag with his feet. He's overly confident, thinking he doesn't need to train to beat Popeye.

Popeye, with Olive Oyl barking out the one-two, one-two in the exercises, is doing his jump rope work with a heavy chain of iron. Man, this guy is in shape and ready! Bluto goes to check up on "Little Muscles" and looks through the window. He sees Popeye and says to himself, "Wow, I better slow down that monster or he will murder me."

That sets up the normal Bluto-trying to sabotage-Popeye story, such as emptying his heavy bag of sand and replacing it with rocks to break our sailor hero's hands. Then he tries a few more tricks, none of which are all that funny. The real fun part is the boxing match. That last minute-and-a-half is absolutely hilarious with some of the things that happen in the ring. It's vintage Popeye humor!
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8/10
Training for boxing
TheLittleSongbird26 October 2018
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.

'Out to Punch' is another 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, 'Out to Punch' is not a bad late Popeye cartoon at all, actually really very enjoyable and one of the better cartoons in Famous Studios' late output.

As to be expected, the story is standard and formulaic, all it is basically is Popeye and Bluto fighting, while not being as repetitive as feared.

Inevitably there is the odd lack of finesse in some of the transitions and drawing.

What is fantastic about 'Out to Punch' 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 animation is also surprisingly good for late Famous Studios, colourful, nicely detailed and generally fluid on the most part, not perfect but better than most late Famous Studios Popeye cartoons.

The gags are amusing for late Famous Studios/Popeye, hilarious even, the interplay between the characters is lively and witty if in need of more variety at times and the pace is never dull. Although the fighting sequences are quite creative for this period, the highlight of the cartoon is the climactic boxing match, for me it is one of the top 3 funniest and most imaginative endings of a late Famous Studios Popeye cartoon.

The characters do a great job carrying the cartoon, Bluto being the funniest and most interesting. It is the entertaining interplay between Popeye and Bluto that really sparkles. Jack Mercer and Jackson Beck give great vocal characterisations, Beck in particular and Mercer is the voice actor that springs to mind generally for me for Popeye's voice, do like William Costello but Mercer gives the character more energy.

Concluding, very enjoyable. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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refreshing
Kirpianuscus22 April 2021
The expected confrontation because the boxing match can be the top of the rivalry between Popeye and Bluto. But the virtue remains the refreshing atmosphere of the last minutes , because the animation propose more than the ordinary chain of traps and punches but a good effect of spinach, Olive as great coach and fine trip to hospital of poor Bluto.
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