Popeye, resentful of Olive hiring Bluto to help her move, gets into a competition with the mover.Popeye, resentful of Olive hiring Bluto to help her move, gets into a competition with the mover.Popeye, resentful of Olive hiring Bluto to help her move, gets into a competition with the mover.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
Jack Mercer
- Popeye
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Mae Questel
- Olive Oyl
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Dave Fleischer
- Willard Bowsky(uncredited)
- Writers
- Joe Stultz(uncredited)
- Bill Turner(uncredited)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis cartoon makes use of Fleischer's Tabletop process, which animates the cels vertically between multi-plane set pieces in order to create the feeling of depth. It is used here for the city street in the last scene. The effect is lost in the color version, as the backgrounds is a flat redraw.
- Alternate versionsAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Customers Wanted (1939)
Featured review
The Strongest Man Wins
Let's Get Movin' (1936)
*** (out of 4)
Olive is moving out of her apartment so Popeye shows up to help her but she turns him away saying she needs a real strong man to do the job. In walks Bluto and before long him and Popeye are going back and forth on who is the strongest.
Fans of the series will enjoy this fast-paced short, which once again has some of the best animation that you're going to see from a film of this era. Once again the animation is extremely impressive and especially all the details in it. Another big reason for the success is the non-stop fighting between Popeye and Bluto as they try to show which one is the strongest. There are several funny gags but the highlight is a scene where Popeye tosses a piano out the window and then races down several stairs in order to catch it.
*** (out of 4)
Olive is moving out of her apartment so Popeye shows up to help her but she turns him away saying she needs a real strong man to do the job. In walks Bluto and before long him and Popeye are going back and forth on who is the strongest.
Fans of the series will enjoy this fast-paced short, which once again has some of the best animation that you're going to see from a film of this era. Once again the animation is extremely impressive and especially all the details in it. Another big reason for the success is the non-stop fighting between Popeye and Bluto as they try to show which one is the strongest. There are several funny gags but the highlight is a scene where Popeye tosses a piano out the window and then races down several stairs in order to catch it.
helpful•20
- Michael_Elliott
- Mar 31, 2016
Details
- Runtime6 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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