Films & Shows from Famous Studios
You’re now browsing page 3, where we continue to showcase even more remarkable titles produced by Famous Studios. If you’ve already discovered some standout works on previous pages, now’s the perfect time to delve deeper and find your next favorite. Keep exploring and enjoy the journey!
Pop-Pie a la Mode (1945)
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Popeye, adrift at sea on a raft, eventually comes to an island which, it turns out, is inhabited by cannibals.
Mess Production (1945)
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Olive Oyl, a regular Rosie the Riveter, receives a blow to the head from a swinging grappling hook, sending her into a sleepwalking state. Popeye and Bluto, two rival factory workers, fight each other for privilege of saving her life.
Tops in the Big Top (1945)
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Bluto is the ringmaster; Popeye is the star attraction. Bluto covets Popeye's assistant Olive. Popeye sticks his head in a lion's mouth, but Bluto has put a steak on Popeye's head. When he gets out of that, he does his high wire act: carrying a piano, and Olive, blindfolded. Bluto sabotages this with a banana peel and tosses Popeye to the monkey cage, while he has his way with Olive - until Popeye eats his spinach.
The Friendly Ghost (1945)
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Casper struggles to find friends who won't run away scared when they meet him.
Lucky Lulu (1944)
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Lulu decides to get her hands on a horseshoe for good luck to avoid another spanking.
Moving Aweigh (1944)
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Popeye and Shorty help Olive move. Unfortunately, they start by running into a police car, and keep running afoul of the officer.
Puppet Love (1944)
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Bluto builds a Popeye puppet and manipulates it to treat Olive rudely. Then he comes in and takes Olive away. When Popeye discovers the ruse, knocks Bluto out and ties puppet strings to him.
Pitchin' Woo at the Zoo (1944)
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Popeye takes Olive to the zoo, where she's spotted by zookeeper Bluto, who tries various stunts to impress her and/or get rid of Popeye.
Spinach Packin' Popeye (1944)
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Popeye donates blood, then dashes off to a boxing match with Bluto. He loses. Olive, who heard this on the radio, rejects him as no longer strong enough for her, and is preparing to join the army (where Bluto apparently is). Popeye stops her at the door, and insists on showing her sequences from two earlier two-reelers to prove his strength, but she's unimpressed. Fortunately, this was all a dream; he awakens in the blood bank, and dashes over to see Olive, who reaffirms her love.
She-Sick Sailors (1944)
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Bluto disguises himself as Superman in order to impress the comic book hero's biggest fan, Olive Oyl. A jealous Popeye becomes a real superhero by eating his spinach.
The Anvil Chorus Girl (1944)
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Popeye and Bluto pass by Olive's blacksmith shop and are smitten. Olive needs help, and of course both of the boys offer, and demonstrate their prowess at blacksmithing.
W'ere on our way to Rio (1944)
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Actually, Popeye and Bluto are already there. They visit a nightclub, where the featured singer/dancer is, of course, Olive Oyl.
Her Honor, the Mare (1943)
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Popeye's nephews happen by just as the glue factory is rejecting a sorry looking horse and decide to take it home. They want to treat it as a house pet, despite the obvious problems; Popeye says no. They try to hide it, including painting a Hitler face on its rear and calling it a painter, but keep making mistakes like feeding it horseradish (great reaction shots). Finally, they hide the horse in the closet; Popeye comes out and says that they'll have to keep it now. We see why when she's sitting at the table with her four new foals.
The Marry-Go-Round (1943)
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Popeye wants to propose to Olive, but can't work up the nerve. His fellow sailor, Shorty, helps him.
Secret Agent (1943)
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A double agent trying to deliver information to Washington, D.C. is chased by Nazi operatives.
The Mummy Strikes (1943)
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Egyptologists are attacked by mummies, drawing the attention of Superman.
The Underground World (1943)
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Superman has to save Lois Lane from a cult of hawk-people in an homage to Edgar Rice Burroughs's "At the Earth's Core".