Porky the Gob (1938) Poster

(1938)

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7/10
Porky joins the Navy
TheLittleSongbird11 June 2018
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes, Hanna and Barbera and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons. Actually appreciate it even more now through young adult eyes, thanks to broader knowledge and taste and more interest in animation styles and various studios and directors.

Porky Pig, while with a tendency to be overshadowed by funnier and more interesting adversaries or supporting characters, is still a likable and amusing character. 'Porky the Gob' is not one of his best cartoons but is decent enough and passes the time amiably. It would have fared better with either Bob Clampett, Friz Freleng or Chuck Jones directing, even when they were not at their best their visual and humour styles were distinctive whereas the direction here is competent enough if not exceptional.

The second half is better than the first half in 'Porky the Gob'. The second half is where 'Porky the Gob' really does come to life, with the wildness, insane looniness, imagination and razor-sharp wit one expects, being hugely entertaining and thrilling. The first half is less good, the pacing doesn't have the lustre as seen later on and the song at the start is near-irrelevant. Porky is likable enough if also a bit bland.

Animation on the other hand is great. The black and white colours are lovingly done, the drawing is fluid and smooth and the backgrounds have some very nice detail. The music score by Carl Stalling is bursting with lively character, beautiful orchestration, clever instrumentation and an unmatched ability to enhance the action and elevate material to a greater level.

While stronger in the second half, 'Porky the Gob' is fun and witty enough and Mel Blanc as ever does a fantastic job with the voice work in multiple roles, all given completely different identities and voices from one another.

On the whole, not one of my favourites and somewhat uneven but still worth watching. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Warner Bros. was obsessed with all things nautical in the 1900s, offering gobs and gobs . . .
oscaralbert3 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
. . . of sea-themed fare, including this Looney Tune, PORKY THE GOB. If memory serves, Porky's turn on the Poop Deck was preceded by BOSKO THE GOB and BUDDY THE GOB. I believe PORKY THE GOB was followed by EGGHEAD THE GOB, ELMER THE GOB, DAFFY THE GOB, and MICHIGAN J. FROG THE GOB (though I could be getting that last title confused with something else). The U.S. Navy Flattop featured in PORKY THE GOB is manned by a mixed crew of canines and lower-order primates, with Porky apparently serving as the lone swine. America's favorite ham plays his tulip-in-the-onion-patch part to perfection, winding up as the hero of this story when he captures a thinly-veiled Nazi U-Boat single-handed. PORKY THE GOB is just one in a series of Looney Tunes, live-action shorts, and feature films churned out by Warner Bros. in the 1930s to Warn America of Hitler's Coming Storm. Though Warner's clairvoyant prognosticators patriotically tried to give all of Der Fuhrer's U.S. Senator buddies from the Rich People's Party hot feet with these repeated cinematic omens, Fascism proved to be too entrenched in our Real Life Congress--Then as Now--to save America from Disaster (back then, of course, that would be Pearl Harbor, but Today? Who knows what Troubles Lurk?).
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7/10
A 'gob' is slang for a sailor in the Navy.
planktonrules26 December 2021
The title refers to the fact that Porky is in the Navy when the story begins. Now it takes a long time for the plot to begin....which is odd. However, it ends well and is worth seeing.

This black & white cartoon is well animated and begins with the battleship heading off to sea. The idiot captain is to search for a pirate submarine and he and most of the crew head off in airplanes to look for it. But during their absence the pirate attacks...and it's up to Porky to defend his ship.

Overall, this is a pleasant film...far from great but enjoyable. Nothing outstanding here....just decent 1938-style entertainment.
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