| Popeye | 
| Director: Robert Altman Actors: Robin Williams, Shelley Duvall, Ray Walston, Paul Dooley, Paul L. Smith Studio: Paramount Category: DVD
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (165 reviews) Sales Rank: 3943
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Media: DVD Running Time: 114 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: PARD011714D ISBN: 0792192907 UPC: 097360117141 EAN: 9780792192909 ASIN: B000094J63
Release Date: June 24, 2003 Theatrical Release Date: December 12, 1980 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This musical fantasy features the famous comic strip character who comes to life and tries to find his real father. Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 08/22/2006 Starring: Robin Williams Shelley Duvall Run time: 113 minutes Rating: Pg Director: Robert Altman
Amazon.com Nothing interests filmmaker Robert Altman more than a contained culture that mixes bare humanity with local eccentricity (think of his M*A*S*H and Nashville). So Altman's Popeye (1980), based on the old comic strip, works best as a portrait of a busy, cluttered, cartoonish town called Sweethaven. But it is much less successful as a comprehensible story about the famous sailor with massive forearms and a relationship with Olive Oyl (Shelley Duvall). Robin Williams plays Popeye with his usual brilliance for mimicry, Paul Dooley makes a credible Wimpy, and Paul L. Smith makes an impression as the oversized bully, Bluto. But this strange, disastrous film never becomes more than an expensive workshop airing out Altmanesque themes. --Tom Keogh
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| Customer Reviews: Read 160 more reviews...
  Great Service January 6, 2009 I ordered this video and it arrived promptly 2 days later. The movie was in excellent condition. I am very happy and would order from them again.
  Use Subtitles So You Don't Miss Any Of The Funny Lines November 23, 2008 Glad I Finally Got Around To Viewing This I had known of this film for a long time but did not realize it was a musical, nor that it was so entertaining. Most of the music was done in short segments and the songs were decent. None were excellent, but none were awful, either.
Popeye was fun to hear. Robin Williams had the famous sailor's mumbling down to a tee. I suggest you watch this with the English subtitles on so you can get all of what Popeye says, or you'll miss a lot of funny lines. The same can almost be said of Shelly Duvall's impersonation of "Olive Oyl," although you can understand her better. She, too, was fun to watch. I read somewhere that she was very depressed over her performance in this film, but she shouldn't have been. She was perfect for the role.
I didn't think the supporting characters were much, such as Bluto or Wimpy, but Popeye's dad, "Poopdeck Pappy," (Ray Walston) who appears late in the film is a real hoot. "Pappy" adds a lot of spark and energy to the film, just when it was really needed.
Overall, it's a nice, pleasing type of film. It's no award-winner, but it's a lot better than what you might have read from national critics. If you like Popeye's cartoons and comics, you should like this film, too. I would gladly watch this again.
  Brilliant November 8, 2008 I watched this as a kid and now have children of my own. We watched it again last night. I must say that this film is brilliant. In the hype of contemporary special effects, over acted and over sung musicals, this film somehow captures the flavor of the cartoons, yet builds its own characters. I was hooked as a kid, and now my own kids are asking to watch it again. It is clean, morals are taught, well acted, music is on spot for the purpose. Very much a classic - Williams and Duvall are excellent. I have been watching movies for all my life - I very much enjoy them, but I have not been so pleased after a movie in years.
  The Sailor Man with the Spinach Can! October 20, 2008 Director Robert Altman takes a playful route in the musical comedy of this famous cartoon character, his pals and adversaries.
Robin Williams - in his movie debut - is brilliantly funny as Popeye. with Olive Oyl portrayed very well by Shelley Duvall. And Popeye is a "hit" in Sweethaven; he defeats a gang of punks in J. Wellington Wimpy's (Paul Dooley) burger bar, puts a stop to the schemes of a greedy tax-man and defeats a champion - but rules-breaking -boxer. But it's the confrontations with the tough Bluto (Paul L. Smith) that will define the life of the Sailor Man.
In an animated cartoon slide to start the film, Popeye blurts out, "Hey! What is this, another one of Bluto's tricks?! I'm in the wrong movie!" No tricks here and there are plenty of treats in this vastly underrated film.
  Popeye October 9, 2008 I've loved the movie "Popeye" for a very long time and I am giving it as a present to someone that I know will love it too.
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