| 1. | Her Honor the Mare | 1943 |
| 2. | The Marry-Go-Round | 1943 |
| 3. | W'ere on Our Way to Rio | 1944 |
| 4. | The Anvil Chorus Girl | 1944 |
| 5. | Spinach Packin' Popeye | 1944 |
| 6. | Puppet Love | 1944 |
| 7. | Pitchin' Woo at the Zoo | 1944 |
| 8. | Moving Aweigh | 1944 |
| 9. | She-Sick Sailors | 1944 |
| 10. | Pop-Pie a la Mode | 1945 |
| 11. | Tops in the Big Top | 1945 |
| 12. | Shape Ahoy | 1945 |
| 13. | For Better or Nurse | 1945 |
| 14. | Mess Production | 1945 |
The boys see lovely nurse Olive pass by and follow her to her hospital. She throws them out, so they scheme to hurt themselves enough to get hospitalized, with no luck. Bluto gets a wall to fall on him, but stands in the window. Popeye tries to get run over by a steam-roller, but a street cleaner saves him. Bluto dives off a skyscraper - into a huge pile of mattresses. Popeye stands in a naval gunnery range, but the gunners miss the target. Bluto taunts a bull, but stands next to a billboard of an attractive cow, which distracts the bull. Popeye crashes a plane, but the ambulance crew rescues the plane. The boys compete to get run over by a train, but punch each other off the tracks just as the train arrives. Finally, Popeye forces a can of spinach down Bluto's throat and gets a pounding. That lands him in the hospital but not Olive's; they failed to notice the sign: "Cat and Dog Hospital." They start fighting like cats and dogs, and get hauled off to the looney bin.
|
Floyd Buckley | Popeye |
|
Jackson Beck | Bluto |
|
Mae Questel | Olive Oyl |
|
Harry Welch | Popeye |
| Director | Izzy Sparber |
|
| Dave Tendlar |
|
|
| Writer | Joe Stultz, Irving Dressler | |
| Producer | Sam Buchwald, Seymour Kneitel, Izzy Sparber | |
| Musician | Winston Sharples | |
| Nr Discs | 1 |
|---|---|
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Index | 7416 |
|---|---|
| Added Date | Jul 25, 2020 03:46:55 |
| Modified Date | Sep 06, 2024 18:20:20 |