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Jumpin' Jupiter

Jumpin' Jupiter (1955)

August. 06,1955
|
7.4
| Animation Comedy Science Fiction

A strange alien captures Porky Pig and Sylvester's entire campsite as a sample to take back to its planet, but only Sylvester figures out what is really going on.

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Reviews

Steineded
1955/08/06

How sad is this?

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Konterr
1955/08/07

Brilliant and touching

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Lollivan
1955/08/08

It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.

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Robert Joyner
1955/08/09

The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one

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Edgar Allan Pooh
1955/08/10

. . . is explored by Warner Bros.' Looney Tuners in this Porky Pig\Sylvester Cat vehicle, JUMPIN' JUPITER. Aliens have been profusely preying particularly upon Americans since our Colonial Days. From the Roanoke Village to Judge Crater, from Ambrose Bierce to Jimmy Hoffa, U.S. Citizens have been vanishing left and right. While many currently wish Donald J. Trump or Hillary R. Clinton--preferably, BOTH--are kidnapped to Another Dimension soon, JUMPIN' JUPITER teaches us that being TAKEN is no laughing matter. Porky and pet are transported to that Big Bully of a Planet with just the fur (or pork rinds) on their backs. Not speaking a word of Jupidity or possessing any assets beyond their Juju Rover vehicle, the outlook for the purloined pair seems grim. Plucky Porky seems to be as clueless as an American Olympic Swimmer in a Brazilian Bathroom, while Sylvester wonders how long it will take America to crack down on Felonious Illegal Aliens, such as the ones always trying to molest Sigourney Weaver.

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TheLittleSongbird
1955/08/11

Chuck Jones and Looney Tunes always promise much, and Jumpin' Jupiter with its unique premise did so too. As a cartoon, it lives up to the promise it had. The ending is rather abrupt and didn't seem as though it had much of a pay-off. However, Jumpin' Jupiter is really beautifully-designed, the backgrounds and vibrant yet atmospheric colours are very Chuck Jones. Carl Stalling's music is also splendid, there's his distinctive jaunty and sumptuous orchestration and it is also very mysterious-sounding, great for something set in space. The writing is witty and clever, and while the gags are somewhat familiar they are still funny. It's the expressions of the characters though where most of the humour works so well with Sylvester's horror and Porky's increased annoyance. Porky and Sylvester work very well together, though their rapport was even stronger in Scaredy Cat, which I slightly preferred as a cartoon too. Sylvester is a character I've always preferred over Porky, and here he is very likable with material that plays to his strengths, it is very easy to feel sorry for him too. Porky varies with me, with characters like Daffy and Sylvester he works well but he can be a little bland on his own. He is fine here though and I do love how he calmly says "Sylvester, get off of me, or I shall kill you". The alien, which I recognised from Hare-Way to the Stars(I know that was made later, I just saw it before this), is a good foil. Mel Blanc continues to give bravura vocal characterisations. To conclude, really great and close to perfection if the ending was better rounded off. 9/10 Bethany Cox

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Lee Eisenberg
1955/08/12

Watching the Chuck Jones short "Jumpin' Jupiter", I get the sense that it's sort of a midpoint between two different genres of Looney Tunes cartoons. It portrays Porky and Sylvester going camping out in the desert, when a spaceship flies in and the birdlike creature flying it decides to take them back to his planet. Sylvester sees the spaceship and the pilot and frequently runs into Porky's tent, but Porky is always oblivious to the danger that lurks around, and just thinks that Sylvester is just being stupid. And that's just the first half of the cartoon! It probably requires some explaining what I mean about the different genres of cartoons. The idea of Porky and Sylvester being out somewhere and Sylvester repeatedly saving Porky from danger while Porky has no idea what's going on: that was the premise of the earlier cartoons "Scaredy Cat" and "Claws for Alarm". The birdlike creature piloting the spaceship looks like the just-add-water martians whom Marvin sent after Bugs Bunny in "Hare-way to the Stars". And the zero-gravity scene looks a little bit like the flooded rabbit hole scene in "Water Water Every Hare".And of course, we shouldn't forget that this was during the Cold War, so there were lots of movies about alien invasions. Because those movies were so hokey is no doubt why the Looney Tunes cartoons "Haredevil Hare", "The Hasty Hare", "Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2 Century", "Jumpin' Jupiter" and "Hare-way to the Stars" spoofed them. And if absolutely nothing else, those movies featured a lot of hot babes! Hubba, hubba...Anyway, this cartoon is a real classic. A lot of fun.Albuquerque. Maybe they can catch Bugs missing that left turn (or so they think).

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Kalaman
1955/08/13

This is one of Chuck Jones' best cartoons. Porky and Sylvester find themselves abducted by a giant bird from Jupiter. The bird has been sent to planet Earth to obtain animal life and accidentally takes Porky and Sylvester while asleep on its space ship. Very funny stuff.

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