Big Bad Sindbad (1952) Poster

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7/10
A most unusual "cheater", indeed!
llltdesq18 December 2002
"Cheaters", cartoons that use stock footage and clips from previous cartoons to form the bulk of a "new" cartoon, usually with new footage as a framing device to incorporate the re-used clips, are not all that unusual. What makes this one of the strangest compilation cartoons is the fact that Paramount Famous Studios uses clips from Popeye Meets Sinbad the Sailor, which was made by Fleischer Studios (!) in 1936! Fleischer Studios made three color Popeye two-reel "Specials" in the mid-to-late 1930s. Paramount Famous Studios made three "cheaters" using footage from those three Fleischer shorts. The truly sad thing is, using the older footage makes it crystal clear how much better the old Fleischers were in terms of animations, backgrounds and plotting compared to the 1950s Paramount Famous Studios product. To be fair, cost had a lot to do with the disparity-it was a lot more expensive in the 1950s to make cartoons. But mostly, the 1950s Popeyes were remakes of old Fleischer shorts done in color with a few changes. Here, the framing footage is nice, but 75% of the cartoon is older material and they re-looped some of the dialogue and changed it, losing some of the charm. This is the saddest of the cheaters, because Sinbad was the best of the two-reel Specials. Big Bad Sinbad isn't that bad a cartoon, actually. It simply isn't that good, either. For completeists only, or people who just like Popeye, period.
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5/10
New soundtrack on old footage
steelbeard14 April 2008
One thing to note about the old Fleischer footage is that it has a new soundtrack recorded by Jack Mercer, Mae Questel, Jackson Beck and music director Winston Sharples.

I would have been nice if the late Willard Bowsky got animation credit for the old footage. In case you didn't know, Bowsky was the head animator for the original "Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor" footage. Bowsky joined the U.S. Army after Pearl Harbor and was killed in action in France.

Besides the number of nephews reduced to three (which one fell victim to budget cuts?), it's noteworthy that this cartoon features Popeye in his original sailor outfit before he joined the U.S. Navy at the end of the Fleischer era.
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6/10
Sindbad in retrospect
TheLittleSongbird9 March 2020
Have always liked the Popeye series, loved even quite a lot of the cartoons from namely Fleischer Studios' late-30s period. Also like the character of Popeye very much especially his mumblings and asides and chemistry with Bluto (the latter of which being a huge part of the series' appeal, apart from the cartoons where Bluto doesn't appear). Am less of a fan of the cartoons, and cartoons in general actually, that are basically clips of previous cartoons with a framing story that isn't as interesting.

'Big Bad Sindbad' is one of these types of cartoons and personally wasn't completely sold on it. Despite being based around and having a healthy dose of 1936's 'Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor', one of the three Arabian Nights Popeye cartoons and one of the best of the series, a big part of me just questioned its necessity when it was basically that cartoon (or some of it) told in retrospect via a story linking the clips together. Especially since the difference in quality between the clips and framing story, so everything with Popeye and his nephews, is so vast.

The 'Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor' clips are a joy and make 'Big Bad Sindbad' watchable. The animation consists of drawing clearly done with precision and care and meticulous background detail and landscapes that never came over as too cluttered or static. The music is the outstanding element in the clips and the Popeye/nephews segments, the energy is right on point and the orchestration is typically lush and clever.

In terms of gags and memorable moments in the clips, they are all never less than amusing, with some of the particularly imaginative and clever material included, and the wildness increases wonderfully. It may be formulaic Popeye, but it is enormously entertaining, nostalgic and clever Popeye. Love the chemistry between Popeye and Bluto, both on top form, and the voice work from some of the studio's finest (re-dubbed here in this cartoon so Bluto is voiced by Jackson Beck here) is reliably strong.

Unfortunately, the Popeye/nephews portions are not near as interesting or entertaining, the huge difference in quality from them and the clips was quite distracting. Apart from Popeye himself and some of his dialogue, the story doesn't have the same amount of energy or invention (very standard, routine stuff here that is not a new concept and little new is done with it, giving it a blandness). The difference in animation quality between the these parts and the 'Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor' parts is very obvious too, great in the latter, uneven in the former (never terrible but seldom great, nice colours but the drawing and characters aren't as careful or as expressive).

Not much of the material is particularly inspired and didn't care much for the characters of the nephews here, pretty annoying and with not an awful lot of charm either. The chemistry between them and Popeye never really ignites somehow.

Concluding, certainly not bad but felt unnecessary. 6/10
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6/10
recycling Popeye
SnoopyStyle25 June 2022
Popeye takes his nephews to the Nautical Museum. They come upon a statue of Sindbad. Popeye tells them a story. It's the Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor (1936). Recycling happens a lot back in the day. This is not worst example. At least, it makes sense to do the flashback. I would recommend watching the original.
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3/10
A Cop-out, Most Of It Being Old Footage
ccthemovieman-13 March 2007
The producers of this particularly Popeye cartoon got lazy and decided to spend much of the time using footage of a past episode. "Cheaters," I guess, is what they call that kind of practice. Anyway, I think it's a cop-out and lazy way to present a "new" animated short.

It begins with Popeye bringing three nephews into the "Nautical Hall Of Fame." There, he shows them "Washington Crossing the Delaware" in which the kids then start rowing the boat across the room. Then, it's "Noah's Ark," where Popeye notes that Noah was "the world's first sailor." Then the shows the kids a big statue of "Sindbad, the Greatest Sailor In History.

The kids ask Popeye, "We thought YOU were the greatest sailor in the world." Popeye answers, "I am," and then relates the story of his adventures with Sinbad - in which we get footage of the earlier cartoon "Popeye Meets Sindbad The Sailor."

There is a cute ending when the story is over and the nephews are convinced Popeye is still number one.
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5/10
Reusing old Footage
boblipton26 June 2022
Popeye takes the nephews to the sailing museum, and tells them about the time he whupped Sindbad the Sailor. At this point, we leave the 1952 footage and enter an edited version of 1936's POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINDBAD THE SAILOR, back when the Fleischers were in charge of the studio.

And in so doing, this cartoon shows how budgets shrank over the sixteen years between.... or at least how inflation had knocked them to pieces. Although there is a lot to say in favor of the character design of Popeye int he 1950s, there's little comparison terms of the lush background art, Technicolor, or sheer number of gags.
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5/10
Big Bad Sindbad
Prismark107 March 2021
Popeye takes his three nephews to Nautical museum and tells them how he once met Sindbad the greatest sailors in history.

It is an excuse to show clips from an earlier Popeye cartoon when he and Sindbad fought over Olive Oyl.

Popeye even turns two chained up fierce lions into pussycats.

There was some good animation from the earlier cartoon but it just shows how low budget it got for some of these 1950s cartoons.

This one is for the kids and nephews.
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9/10
Use of "Sindbad the Sailor" footage helps
Popeye-82 October 2001
Often, animation companies would pillage their vaults and make compilation films that were short on new ideas but long on recycled film. BIG BAD SINDBAD takes a wide array of scenes from POPEYE MEETS SINDBAD THE SAILOR, but cannot match the animation brilliance. However the story line weaves fairly seemlessly throughout, and the addition of Popeye's nephews as a plot device works well. An above-average 1950's POPEYE production, mostly because of the old film use.
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8/10
The controversial title character's name . . .
pixrox119 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
. . . of this picture is usually spelled with a single "D," as in BIG BAD SINBAD. This wayward dude was an apocryphal afterthought tacked onto the epic ONE THOUSAND AND ONE NIGHTS. The original Sinbad story is terribly convoluted, as one would expect from a writer who has not had the benefit of being taught how to author proper sentences, paragraphs, essays, term papers and stories during a collegiate English 101 class. The clueless rube concocts a mess involving one Sinbad eavesdropping on the prayer of ANOTHER Sinbad malingering on a park bench outside his mansion. Of course, one of the earliest lessons taught in English 101 is that you NEVER have two Sinbad's in one story--or a pair of Tom's, Jim's or Harry's. Such redundancy simply serves to gratuitously confuse readers or viewers, which is about the last thing a successful entertainer wants to do. Fortunately for us, BIG BAD SINBAD contents itself with featuring just one single solitary Sinbad.
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Fun for What It Is
Michael_Elliott30 March 2016
Big Bad Sinbad (1952)

*** (out of 4)

Popeye takes his three nephews to a museum that shows off the greatest sailors in history. They come across Sinbad and Popeye tells the story of how the two of them had a major fight over Olive Oyl.

If you're a fan of the Popeye series then you'll certainly enjoy this entry because there are plenty of nice laughs as well as some great violence (action). Obviously Sinbad is played by Bluto and there's no doubt that he and Popeye get to have a really good fight here that includes all sorts of punches. There are some good laughs and especially during a sequence where Popeye scares a couple lions that are chained up. The animation is good as you'd expect and this is certainly one of the better films in the series.
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at museum
Kirpianuscus20 April 2021
Remembering, too much, Popeye meeting Sindbad , it has the only two virtues - the naughty nephews in the visit to the naval museum and the statue of their uncle , conclusion of story, hommage to their hero.
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