The Blow Out

7.2
1936 0 hr 7 min Animation , Comedy

A crazed bomber is terrorizing the city. Meanwhile, a young Porky Pig is a few cents shy of buying an ice cream soda; he starts earning it by picking up items people drop and handing them back to them.

  • Cast:
    Joe Dougherty , Lucille La Verne

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Reviews

Moustroll
1936/04/04

Good movie but grossly overrated

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Console
1936/04/05

best movie i've ever seen.

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Aneesa Wardle
1936/04/06

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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Mathilde the Guild
1936/04/07

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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Horst in Translation ([email protected])
1936/04/08

"The Blow Out" is an American black-and-white cartoon from 1936, so this one is already over 80 years old and to put it into perspective, this one is from the year that Hitler held the Olympic Games in Berlin. This shows better how old it is than just there mere numbers. It runs for 7.5 minutes, is a Schlesinger Studios production and the director here is the young Tex Avery early in his career before his 30th birthday. And while I was pretty underwhelmed today by the man's perhaps career-defining propaganda cartoon Blitz Wolf, I really enjoyed this one we have here. The Porky you see here has nothing really to do with the Warner Bros' Porky that played second fiddle all the time, but instead it is a cartoon from the era where Porky is still lead character material. The introduction to him as well as the main antagonist was as good and funny as these scenes from when their paths cross. The constant "helping hand" joke reference never gets old at all and stays hilarious from start to finish as Porky's need for money keeps resulting in the bomb guy constantly getting his explosive back against his will. Maybe it is not a title with relevant references about its time, but it doesn't need to be to be really funny and witty. It's a story and approach that really feels all by the books, but this doesn't take away any quality here in my opinion. Even without color, this is among the very best cartoons the year 1936 has to offer and it really was a great year for cartoons, so that means quite something. I highly recommend the watch here, go check it out.

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tavm
1936/04/09

The Blow Out was an early Warner Bros. cartoon that was the second made by "supervisor" Fred "Tex" Avery as director. It also starred Porky Pig in his early incarnation with original voice Joe Dougherty (who stuttered in real life). Other voices featured were Sara Berner who was later gossipy switchboard operator Mabel on "The Jack Benny Program", and Lucille La Verne who later voiced the Queen on Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. She voices the bomber here. Porky is a kid here trying to buy an ice cream soda but finds he's five pennies short. So when he accidentally picks up a misplaced item from a passerby, he gets awarded one cent. After this gets repeated a few times, the pig finds the bomb-which he thinks is just an ordinary clock-and proceeds to give it back to the one who dropped it who of course keeps running away. Soon the cops follow. You may be able to guess what happens from here on but I'm not going to tell you. Needless to say, the ending is one you've probably expected from Tex Avery if you're familiar with his subsequent cartoons for both Warner Bros. and M-G-M. On that note, I definitely recommend The Blow Out.

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Lee Eisenberg
1936/04/10

Osama bin Laden, you may consider yourself the cleverest terrorist on earth, but you've got nothing on the bomber portrayed in the early Porky Pig cartoon "The Blow Out". The thug here goes around town planting bombs, and no one can catch him. But when Porky - doing good deeds so as to get enough money to buy a milkshake - gives back the bomb, the bomber isn't a bit happy.Still listening, Osama? You've got nothing to worry about in the real world. While George W. Bush doesn't know jack about how to catch you, Porky catches the bomber without even trying.OK, I'll stop pretending that I'm talking to Osama bin Laden. But the point is that while this is a very early Porky cartoon (at this time, he looked like a walking heart attack and Mel Blanc wasn't yet providing his voice), it's still fairly entertaining. I presume that at this this point, the Termite Terrace crowd was still trying to figure out exactly what path their work would take, so we needn't expect the sorts out completely wacky gags that characterized the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons in the '40s and '50s. Worth seeing. As it's not available on video or DVD - that I know of, at least - you can find it on YouTube.

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georgeeliot
1936/04/11

Don't expect to see this one on TV. It is a perfect example that animators, especially at Warner Brothers, in the 1930's weren't afraid to use any topical subject for humor. No wonder Chris Rock cites Bugs Bunny as a major influence. It features Porky Pig before they slimmed him down. It was directed by Tex (as Fred in this case) Avery, his second directorial effort for WB. The Ha Ha subject? A terrorist bomber. It opens with a character looking like radio's The Shadow placing a bomb in front of a building and blowing it up. Next, newspaper front pages report on the further carnage and reward offered for the capture of the mad man. Porky enters the picture by trying to buy an ice cream soda. He comes up five cents short. He hits on the idea of picking up things people drop and returning them in hopes of a small reward. He sees the bomber deposit a bomb. The cartoon then kicks into high gear with Porky dogging the tale of the bomber trying to return the bomb. Now the hunter is the hunted, trying to escape his own murderous device. Porky finally chases him right into the welcoming arms of the police, earning the reward. He immediately goes back to the soda fountain and spends every penny on a mountain of ice cream sodas. If you think Tex Avery was the only animator who would make fun of terrorism, see Ali Baba Bound (Bob Clampett), oh yes, that one isn't shown any more either. Suppressing the past, doesn't it make you feel safe?

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