A Jolly Good Furlough
A Jolly Good Furlough
| 23 April 1943 (USA)
A Jolly Good Furlough Trailers

Popeye is doing a great job of sinking Japanese ships (complete with toilet-flush sound effect). A carrier pigeon brings him notice that he's been granted a month furlough, which he plans to spend with Olive and his nephews. But on arrival, he's run over by Olive, who immediately leaves him alone with his nephews, who are practicing home defense.

Reviews
GrimPrecise

I'll tell you why so serious

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UnowPriceless

hyped garbage

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Freaktana

A Major Disappointment

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Brainsbell

The story-telling is good with flashbacks.The film is both funny and heartbreaking. You smile in a scene and get a soulcrushing revelation in the next.

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Michael_Elliott

A Jolly Good Furlough (1943) ** 1/2 (out of 4)Popeye does his time during WWII and returns home where his nephews want to show him the special training they've been doing.A JOLLY GOOD FURLOUGH is yet another mildly entertaining entry from 1943. I say that because a lot of the shorts from this year weren't all that memorable. They were at least entertaining while you watched them but they weren't nearly good enough to where you'd revisit them very often. There are some funny moments here including the invisible paint that the kids created and the ending has a nice laugh as well. The animation is good as you'd expect but there's nothing overly great here.

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MartinHafer

This wartime Popeye cartoon begins with Popeye taking on a fort full of Japanese soldiers and single-handedly wiping them out! As a result of this and other great acts of heroism, Popeye is granted leave--and he goes home. However, Olive is too busy with the war effort and the boys (Peepeye, Pipeye, Poopeye and Pupeye) entertain him by showing off what they've learned about home defense, camouflage and the like. In the process they end up beating the snot out of Popeye--and so he rushes back to the war in order to get some peace and quiet.Overall, this is a good WWII propaganda film--clever and able to make some good points about the war effort at home. My only complaint is the oddly drawn messenger bird. It looks like it was made by another studio and is oddly animated. But, it's a minor quibble.

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ccthemovieman-1

Popeye discovers it's more relaxing fighting WWII than being home with his nephews. That twisted message should tell you something about this lame Popeye effort.The poor sailor is anxious to see Olive and the little ones, but all they do is run over him (Olive, with a car) and torment him (the kids, with their Home Defense Program tests - with Popeye as the victim.)Generally, the artwork was poor and the jokes lame. I miss the days when the Fleischer Brothers did these cartoons; they were far better. Popeye even gets a little mean-spirited at the end, when he shoots the messenger. No wonder a popular expression over the last half century is, "Hey, I'm only the messenger."

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rbverhoef

This cartoon with Popeye the Sailor is another cartoon made when the United States were in a war with Japan. It is a racist cartoon, but you can not really judge it that way since it was made back then. Even today people make fun of people when they are in war with them.Popeye is fighting the war against the Japanese but he gets a furlough. When he gets home all he wants to do is rest a little but that seems impossible. First Olive hits him a couple of times with the car and then his nephews show him their own "Home Defense Program". They show him and also test it on him making sure he will not rest very much.The racist part is in the middle where the nephews ask Popeye whether he killed some Japanese people (Japs). The nephews impersonate the Japanese in a racist way, but I have to say it is also a very funny part. Other parts are pretty nice as well since Popeye is the biggest victim here. This time spinach can not save him. Entertaining enough.

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