Search

» » Shanghaied Shipmates (1936)

Short summary

Porky and some of his fellow sailors are on shore leave in a bar. A pirate captain discovers that his own crew has jumped ship and forces everyone in the bar to become his crew. The captain treats the crew badly, particularly denying them food (eating the meat off bones, then passing them only the bones). The crew mutinies after a week; the captain tries to fend them off with a cannon, but ends up sending himself into the explosives stores. They explode, and the captain ends up towing the crew on a raft.

The title refers to the act of "Shanghai"-ing someone who is kidnapped and forced into servitude usually on an ocean going vessel that is very difficult to escape from while in mid-ocean.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Dikus
    Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons.

    'Shanghaied Shipmates' shows that, as to be expected, that Porky is a likable character and he is and also amusing, cute and interesting, though to me he works better in support against a stronger in personality character, where he plays it straight, than a lead. The captain has the stronger personality and he is appropriately menacing without it being too overt. The two work very well together with some great tense conflict, particularly at the end with an inspired fight scene.

    As far as the story goes it is pretty slight and, although this is personal preference and something not everyone will share, Joe Dougherty's voice for Porky has never really done it for me. It's not just because Mel Blanc's more famous interpretation is more appealing to me and fits better but Dougherty doesn't sound anywhere near as natural or endearing, have always found that he overdid the stutter and that's true here too.

    On the other hand, the animation is characteristically great, especially in the first half, crisp, detailed and fluid throughout.

    The music is not Carl Stalling or Scott Bradley and does lack variety at times, but it is still lush and characterful and adds a good deal to the action if not quite enhancing it. Billy Bletcher, with one of the greatest and most distinctively booming villainous voices in "golden age" animation, is very good.

    While not hilarious or of a large quantity, the gags are amusing and well timed. 'Shanghaied Shipmates' goes at a lively pace.

    In short, pretty decent if not mind-blowing. 7/10 Bethany Cox
  • comment
    • Author: Pettalo
    Shanghaied Shipmates (1936)

    *** (out of 4)

    A dirty and mean Captain forces Porky Pig and several other men on board his ship where he works them too hard and at dinner time refuses to give them anything except bones. Soon Porky has had enough and stages a mutiny.

    If you're a fan of the Porky Pig shorts then you'll certainly enjoy this one. While there aren't a great number of laughs there is some terrific animation as well as some great direction. What I enjoyed the most about this film is how it all just moves along at a nice pace and it has a great musical feel to it. The film packs a nice fight scene at the end and the music score is also very good and fits the material quite well.
  • comment
    • Author: Tehn
    " . . . We want food!" chant the spoiled Millennials Warner Bros.' supremely clairvoyant Looney Tuners glimpse in the (Then) Far, Far future and represent as a mutinous sailor mob in SHANGHAIED SHIPMATES. Just today word broke that Millennials are contracting Colo-Rectal Cancer at double the rate of even the coddled Baby Boomer Generation, because American Millennials are mostly sedentary, over-weight game boys living in their parents' basements, according to the 4 PM CBS radio news. SHANGHAIED SHIPMATES blames the Millennials for the Advent of Trump, as they did not put up a fight against the USA's first Game-Show-Host-in-Chief hijacking the White House with loads of help from Red Commie KGB Czar Vlad "The Mad Russian" Putin. Tonight Putin's Prez will announce his elimination of the Departments of Labor, Interior, Education, Housing, and Health, as well as the Environmental Protection Agency. Since Millennial brains have totally atrophied since their high school days, let me spell out what this means: with Agriculture and Labor gone, no more fast food, carry-out, or even pizza deliveries, because A)there won't be any workers to GROW the grub, and B)no one will be able to afford gas on wages of a buck fifty an hour, with the so-called Minimum Wage MIA. In the absence of Education and Housing, there won't be any more trips back to college for second and third Master's Degrees on six-digit student "loans," and no hope of being able to BUY a home of your own even IF you're that one-in-a-billion Gamer actually making real money as even lazier folks watch you play. Fresh air probably is out of the question for the Future you've doomed the rest of us to, seeing as how Interior is peddling all of America's National Parks at a close-out sale. Don't worry, though, if the polluted air and foul water coming your way in the vacuum left by the EPA doesn't get you, surely the radon in your parents' basement will.
  • comment
    • Author: Chilldweller
    The early, morbidly obese Porky Pig had only existed for a little over a year (and Mel Blanc was not yet providing his voice) when he appeared in "Shanghaied Shipmates". The cartoon portrays a sadistic captain kidnapping Porky and several other sailors to use as his crew. The whole voyage is practically a torture chamber. Sure enough, they eventually rebel.

    Knowing that this came out the year after "Mutiny on the Bounty" got released, I wonder whether or not the latter gave them the idea to make it. Since they were still getting started, we should understand not to expect any of the completely wacky stuff that became their cornerstone during the '40s and '50s.

    Anyway, it's an OK cartoon. Warner Bros. returned to this topic with the Bugs Bunny-Yosemite Sam vehicle "Mutiny on the Bunny". Worth seeing, if only once. Available on YouTube.
  • Uncredited cast:
    Billy Bletcher Billy Bletcher - Ship's Captain - Shipmate (voice) (uncredited)
    Joe Dougherty Joe Dougherty - Porky Pig (voice) (uncredited)
    All rights reserved © 2017-2024 hd.thomson-multimedia.com