Be Kind to 'Aminals' (1935) Poster

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7/10
good message for Popeye cartoon
SnoopyStyle2 December 2023
Popeye and Olive Oyl are feeding the birds at the park. Bluto is whipping his struggling horse to haul a wagon overfilled with produce. He doesn't even allow the horse a drink of water. Both Popeye and Olive Oyl are infuriated. Popeye gets on the horse to take the whipping instead of the horse. Bluto is beating up the horse until Popeye finds a crate of spinach in the back of the wagon.

This is a fine Popeye cartoon and it has a nice animal-friendly message. I don't particularly like Floyd Buckley as the voice of Popeye although he did it from radio. It doesn't have the familiar sounds. It just sounds odd. Nevertheless, one should listen to Popeye. Be Kind to 'Aminals'.
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7/10
And Horsies, Too
boblipton3 December 2023
Popeye and Olive Oyl are feeding pigeons in the park when Bluto comes by with his overloaded vegetable cart. He whips his horse and doesn't let him have any water until Popeye and Olive Oyl fight him.

It's Floyd Buckley's first time voicing Popeye in the cartoons. He played Popeye on the radio, which is probably why he got the gig. He played the Sailor Man four more times in the 1940s when Jack Mercer was in the armed forces. The other regular voices are absent, probably over salary disputes.

Although the number of gags, big and small, seems to be down here, it's still clear that the Fleischers knew Popeye was their biggest star, and put the usual attention to detail into this "message" cartoon.
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9/10
A Unique Popeye Cartoon In Several Areas
ccthemovieman-114 September 2007
This Popeye cartoon is unusual in that Bluto not only doesn't know Olive Oyl but insults her when he first sees her, calling her a "long-legged scarecrow!" In addition, he tells her to mind her own business. This Bluto is a mean guy, a guy who is mistreating the horse that is pulling he and an over-sized load of produce. The horse is ready to drop but Bluto won't even let the animal get a drink of water, taking a nearby tub of water and drinking it all himself and then constantly whipping the horse and punching him in the face! Wow, this sort of thing wouldn't be shown today, even in jest. This guy is worse than Michael Vick with dogs!

After insulting Olive, Popeye confronts the big lug when he himself gets whipped. Bluto then throws a big bunch of bananas and hits Olive in the head. Wow, this is really different from the norm. In a way, I kind of liked it as Olive could be a pain.

Animal lovers will really enjoy the "justice" at the end of this cartoon!

Note: This was not the voice I have ever heard doing Popeye. It sounded weird. I looked it up here and it's Floyd Buckley, who only voiced one Popeye cartoon - this one.
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2/10
An Absolute shocker
guyburns29 March 2014
An absolute shocker of a short. My partner just said: "I'm sick to the stomach watching it." She doesn't want to continue (we've only seen half), and I have interrupted the playing to start this review.

There is a warning at the start of these Popeye shorts (Popeye the Sailor 1933-1938) about how attitudes have changed:

"The animated shorts you are about to see are a product of their times. They may depict some of the ethnic, sexist and racial prejudices that were common place in American society. These depictions were wrong then and are wrong today."

The writer of that note forgot to mention another prejudice: the prejudice that tolerated violence. Apart from the opening minute, the rest is sadistic and cruel. The only features of this cartoon that raised it above 1-star were the title, the "be kind to animals' attitude of Popeye and Olive, and the window it gives into the mindset of a typical 1930's audience: that it was okay to throw punches for no reason and be violently cruel to animals, and that those behaviours can be a source of humour.

Steven Pinker (The Better Angels of our Nature) has documented the fall in violence in society and this short is evidence of same. Brutality such as this, masquerading as humour, wouldn't be acceptable today.

I purchased the DVD and will be keeping it. I'm not suggesting it should be censored or kept from the public, but I certainly won't be showing it to friends in our home-theatre evenings, except as an example of the depravity of 1930's audiences (assuming audiences back then found this type of cartoon funny). I think they would have. After all, blood sports in the Colosseum were considered great entertainment, and bull-fights still operate in Spain.

Aside from my low rating, this cartoon is worth watching as a reminder of how far we have come, and the long way we still have to go regarding violence.
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8/10
Animal justice prevails
TheLittleSongbird5 September 2018
Dave Fleischer was responsible for many gems. Ones that were amusing and charming, though over-cuteness did come through in some efforts and the stories were always pretty thin, with appealing characters, outstanding music and visuals that were inventive and with innovative animation techniques.

'Be Kind to Aminals' is not quite classic Popeye the Sailor. It is still very well done and never less than very funny if not quite hilarious. Have always enjoyed many of the Popeye cartoons a good deal and like Popeye very much, Fleischer's efforts were always well animated and scored with lots of entertainment value and great chemistry between Popeye, Olive Oyl and Bluto. 'Be Kind to Aminals' has much of makes the Popeye series so appealing in its prime era and does nothing to waste the three main characters or make them less interesting.

The story is an interesting and beautifully paced one, never being dull, if formulaic (not uncommon with the Popeye cartoons). The humour and gags make it even more entertaining, 'Be Kind to Aminals' may not handle its subject subtly, getting slightly too brutal at times, and sure times have definitely changed, but it doesn't fall into too much distaste and manages to be entertaining and provoke some thought.

All three characters are great, though Olive Oyl's material is not quite as great as Popeye and Bluto's, though her and Popeye's roles are enjoyable and make them and their cause relatable, with a message that's important and timely. The three are spot on and their chemistry drives 'Be Kind to Aminals' and has so much energy. Popeye is always amusing and likeable enough but for me Bluto is here the funnier and more interesting character.

Furthermore, the animation is beautifully drawn and with enough visual detail to not make it cluttered or static and lively and smooth movement. The music is also outstanding, lots of merry energy and lush orchestration, adding a lot to the action and making the impact even better without being too cartoonish. Fleischer's direction is always accomplished and his style is all over it.

Voice acting is dynamic and of very good quality on the whole, Mae Questel is a good fit for Olive Oyl, the voice that most sticks in my mind for the character and who voiced her the best, but Gus Wickie is even better and gives Bluto so much life. The voice for Popeye does sound very odd though.

Overall, very well done if not for all tastebuds. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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4/10
A good message does not make a good movie
Horst_In_Translation13 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Be Kind to 'Aminals'" (with the obligatory spelling mistake of course) is an American cartoon from 1935, so almost 85 years old now, and here we have another Popeye film, one of the shortest as this Fleischer Studios production barely makes it past the 5.5-minute mark. The title is fairly telling already. Popeye and Olive enjoy a day in the park feeding birds (some people may criticize that today) until Bluto quickly arrives and he acts very violent towards the horse that pulls his carriage. Also emotionally as he refuses the mare his well-deserved fair share drink of water and takes it all for himself. Lets not ask why Bluto would drink out of something that is supposed to carry water for horses and that horses probably drank out of before. Maybe that is the reason why he is so strong. Anyway, the moment our two "heroes" see this kind of animal torture, they immediately intervene. Well sort of. Popeye takes some heat for the horse, but Olive is really more busy slipping on banana peels. This was supposed to be one of the more funny moments, especially when Popeye joins her in slipping. Or when we see the breast hair coming out of Popeye indication that spinach makes him far more muscular and manly. But it is not that funny just like the play on words in the title. No idea why this recurring joke was not abolished by then, it was seriously unfunny and repetitive. There is also one moment early on when we see Olive end up with the holster around her and the way she looked there was very bizarre. I am not sure if it was bad animation or just a bad joke. Probably somewhere in-between. Still I was obviously cheering for Popeye here as I hate violence against animals and this subject for once was enough that I did not like Bluto more than Popeye the way I do in many other Popeye cartoons. But this film is also an example of how a honorable subject is simply not enough if the plot delivery lacks from so many perspectives. And lets not forget the other Popeye cartoons where Popeye is not entirely animal friendly either, for example randomly beats up jungle animals that do not pose the slightest danger to Olive. All in all, this Fleischer cartoon is clearly inferior to what Disney (and WB too I guess) released around the same time and that is not only due to the lack of color. Watch something else instead.
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Very Good
Michael_Elliott14 July 2008
Be Kind to 'Anminals' (1935)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Popeye and Olive Oyl are in the park feeding birds when they witness Bluto beating up on his over worked horse. This here is another high mark for the series, although I'm sure PETA members would throw a fit about the abuse the horse takes here even though the film is animated. There are plenty of laughs throughout the film including a terrific sequence where Olive is feeding birds with her feet. There's plenty of action as well as we see Bluto beating the horse before finally getting the tables turned. One strange thing I noticed here is that the voice of Popeye was a lot different than in previous shorts and I didn't care for the change too much.
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8/10
We come from a mining town where EVERY wedding reception . . .
oscaralbert4 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . includes "Harry C.'s" famous "Banana Dance" (which is conducted like a hybrid of a weepy ballad and a country fair egg toss). Doubtless Bluto's 15-ton cart-load of bananas featured in BE KIND TO 'AMINALS' inspired Mr. C.'s hit song. During a traditional marriage shindig in our neck of the woods, the deejay cues up the Banana Dance at the point when Bluto's opening line to "Olive" in BE KIND TO 'AMINALS' seems appropriate: "Mind your own business, you long-legged scarecrow!!" Such a juncture often is reached when the bride begins voicing objections to the chefs as they prepare the homing doves released during the nuptial ceremony earlier in the day as a nightcap entrée for the inevitable wedding crashers who skipped the exchange of solemn vows entirely, and thus have no more qualms against frying up the doves than they would to gobbling down some "Dove Bars." But in another example of Life imitating Art, the floor of our local banquet hall looks like an exact replica of the BE KIND TO 'AMINALS' alley where Bluto, Olive, and "Popeye" slip around on 30,000 pounds of banana peels AFTER one of our gala wedding reception Banana Dances concludes.
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