Philbert (Three's a Crowd) (1963) Poster

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3/10
Might have been an okay series . . .
GunsmokeRocks27 October 2005
. . .if they had fixed some things.

I just watched this. They put it on the fourth disk of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 3 DVD.

It had a lot of familiar names like William Shallert, Friz Freleng (WB animator) and Richard Donner (now, big-time Hollywood director), but they just could not seem to make it work.

"Philbert" was just too much like a person and the whole premise was "gee, look what we can make this cartoon do in a real world." Unfortunately, there was really nothing extraordinary about Philbert himself. That translated into nothing extraordinary about the show. Now, if someone like Tex Avery had animated Philbert, it could have been quite a show for it's time.

About the only thing that set it apart from the better extraordinary buddy type shows of that era was that there was no laugh track. Ironically, it was one that needed it.
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Philbert isn't nutty enough
Inspired by the success of Hanna-Barbera's "Flintstones", the Warner Brothers animation studio tried to come up with their own prime-time TV cartoon series ... this time combining animation with live-action. "Philbert" gets credit for an unusual idea, but it's poorly executed and fails to be funny. Only one episode of "Philbert" was ever produced: a black-and-white pilot titled "Three's a Crowd". This was shown to potential sponsors who, wisely, decided not to underwrite the project.

William Schallert plays Griff, a successful cartoonist whose studio is in the living room of his very nice house. At some point in the past, Griff drew a cartoon of a wise-cracking little man about six inches high, named Philbert (voice credited to somebody named Trust Howard). Somehow, Philbert developed a mind of his own, and a life independent of the easel. Philbert considers himself Griff's partner and buddy, running all over Griff's house and doing just as he pleases. (The entire show is live-action except for Philbert.) Griff doesn't seem surprised that one of his creations is alive, and we never find out HOW Philbert came to life ... or if Griff can repeat the trick by making other drawings come alive too. Griff and Philbert are already living together before the show starts. Nobody else knows that Philbert exists, even though Philbert is a natural "ham" who would probably enjoy attracting other people's attention.

In the pilot episode "Three's a Crowd", Griff's neighbour Angela (played by Joanna Barnes) shows some romantic interest in Griff. This makes Philbert panic, fearing that his own existence will be threatened if Griff develops any interest in a "dame". Philbert makes every effort to break up the friendship between Griff and Angela without revealing his own existence. (Would Angela have become an ongoing character if "Philbert" became a series? Who knows or cares?)

Based on this pilot episode, "Philbert" is one more tired rehash of the old "buddy" plot, in which one guy decides he must "save" another guy from female entanglements. Even worse, if "Philbert" had been picked up as a TV series, it would have been just one more variation of the "nobody knows my secret" sitcom, depicting the travails of some suburban schlub who spends all his time trying to conceal the fact that his room-mate is a Martian, or his wife is a witch, or his horse can talk, or his car is his mother.

As drawn by under-rated animator Isidore "Fritz" Freleng, Philbert looks and acts like a cartoon version of Johnny Carson. He's a slim, well-dressed guy who seems a little too pleased with his own cleverness. Except for a brief scene underwater, the cartoon character Philbert doesn't do anything which couldn't have been done better by a live-action actor shrunk to miniature size in a matte screen effect. Unlike Roger Rabbit, Philbert doesn't have any of the "toony" talents of a living cartoon character. Philbert's animation is unimpressive, except for the opening credit sequence in which he does a snappy dance. William Schallert has a long and interesting acting career: back in the 1950s he was appearing in stage plays directed by Charlie Chaplin, and he eventually became president of the Screen Actors Guild. But Schallert probably keeps "Philbert" off his CV. This one-off TV show isn't worth your time.
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7/10
If there's one thing better for Baby Boomers . . .
oscaralbert3 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . than reliving all their stupid TV shows from the 1960s (MR. ED--a talking horse!--I DREAM OF JEANIE, GREEN ACRES, DOBIE GILLIS, HOGAN'S HEROES, F-TROOP, McHALE'S NAVY, THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES, GILLIGAN'S ISLAND, CAR 54, MY MOTHER THE 1926 PORTER) it's probably watching pilots for shows that never aired because they were even Stupider. Warner Bros.' Looney Tunes animation was on its last legs when they tried to foist PHILBERT into America's diet of Mixed Nuts. By this time the Looney Tuners had gotten "minimalist" (which means "fat and lazy" in cartooning). Though they tried to market their snide attitude as being "ironic," it came of more as a case of intellectual bankruptcy. If Donald J. Trump IS the anti-Christ, boozy chain-smoking PHILBERT would qualify as the anti-Bugs Bunny. Vulgar where Bugs was suave, cruel where Bugs was sensitive, PHILBERT was more of a Wally than a Dilbert. But if a top-rated PHILBERT could have enticed a teenager Trumplestiltskin or Hilloration into an Alternate Universe career of cartooning, the difference to Life in Today's Millennial Lane could have been HUGE!
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