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1[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/popeye_1980_movie_poster.jpeg]]
2[[caption-width-right:310:Or ''is'' he?]]
3
4''Popeye'' is a 1980 [[TheMusical Musical]] LiveActionAdaptation produced by Creator/{{Paramount}} and Creator/{{Disney}}, starring Creator/RobinWilliams as the [[ComicStrip/{{Popeye}} eponymous character]] and directed by Creator/RobertAltman, with a song score by Music/HarryNilsson, and a screenplay by Jules Feiffer.
5
6The plot is effectively the origin tale of the two-fisted sailor man. After years on the sea, Popeye arrives in the ramshackle town of Sweethaven searching for his [[LongLostRelative long-lost father]] (Creator/RayWalston) and winds up not only getting caught up in a LoveTriangle with Olive Oyl (Creator/ShelleyDuvall) and Bluto (Creator/PaulLSmith), but also becoming an adoptive father to an abandoned baby boy he names Swee'Pea...
7
8----
9!!This movie provides examples of:
10
11* NumberOneDime: One of Bluto's motivations for villainy (''other than "I'm mean if you know what I mean"'') is getting his hands on Poopdeck Pappy's treasure. When the treasure is finally revealed, it turns out to be things like an empty picture frame of Popeye (Pappy's son) as an "infant", his baby rattle, baby booties, and other sentimental mementos of childhood.
12* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the cartoons, Popeye is bald, homely, and has no teeth. Creator/RobinWilliams' Popeye has a full head of hair and a full set of teeth. He's also not nearly as homely as the cartoon Popeye.
13* AdaptationalDumbass: Downplayed with Castor. He's not stupid, but he doesn't have the sharp wit he displays in the comic strip.
14* AllThatGlitters: The treasure that everyone is hunting in the final act turns out to be...Pappy's mementos of his son, which he shows the items to Swee'Pea.
15* AlternateDVDCommentary: A Patreon subscriber bonus episode of the ''Podcast/EightiesAllOver'' podcast is this, featuring critics/hosts Drew [=McWeeny=] and Scott Weinberg -- massive fans of the film -- discussing its history and merits.
16* AmbiguouslyJewish: The entire town of Sweethaven. (You can remove the "Ambiguous" from Geezil.) It's worth noting that Bluto was played by Creator/PaulLSmith, a RealLife BadassIsraeli.[[note]]He grew up in Florida but went to Israel to fight as a volunteer in the Six-Day War, then settled there permanently after he retired from acting[[/note]]
17* AndThereWasMuchRejoicing:
18** After Popeye easily bests Oxblood during their boxing match, the townsfolk celebrates.
19** Practically the entire town rejoices again when [[spoiler:Popeye takes down the tax collector]].
20* AnnoyingYoungerSibling: Castor to Olive. This is a complete turn-around from the original ''Thimble Theater'' comic, where it was ''Olive'' who was the AnnoyingYoungerSibling to ''Castor.''
21* AntiMentor: Geezil acts as coach for both Castor and Popeye against Oxblood Oxheart. In both cases, he is absolutely no help.
22* ArrangedMarriage: Between Olive and Bluto -- initially.
23* AspectRatioSwitch: The film starts out with a small screen showing a black-and-white Popeye cartoon. When an animated Popeye notes that he's in the wrong movie, the film switches to widescreen to start the actual movie.
24* AuteurLicense: Robert Altman, best-known at the time for iconoclastic comedies and dramas like ''Film/{{MASH}}'' and ''Film/{{Nashville}}'', getting the reins to a family musical is a perfect example of this (and he replaced Hal Ashby, a similar New Hollywood talent). Because the film wasn't as profitable as hoped and reviews were so mixed, he immediately lost it and while he did a lot of film and [=TV=] work over the rest of TheEighties, none of it got mainstream attention until 1992's ''Film/ThePlayer'', which triggered a CareerResurrection.
25* BabiesMakeEverythingBetter: Swee'pea! Finding and taking care of him brings Popeye and Olive Oyl closer together. Even Poopdeck Pappy has a change of heart when he starts bonding with Swee'pea in a grandfatherly way after rescuing him and the treasure from Bluto's clutches.
26* BaitAndSwitchCredits: The film begins with his old cartoon opening, then, where the title of the short is, Popeye sticks his head up and says, "Hey, what's this? One of Bluto's tricks? I'm in the wrong movie!" and we enter live-action.
27* BelligerentSexualTension: When Popeye undercuts Olive's parental authority, Olive calls him on it in bizarre mix of irritation and flirtation. She even ends with with a "Phooey," which (maybe accidentally, maybe not) brushes her lips against his, and walks off in a huff. Even Popeye seems confused about what the hell just happened.
28* BigBad: Bluto does most of the work in running Sweethaven for the Commodore/[[spoiler:Poopdeck Pappy]], and even schemes to take Poopdeck Pappy's treasure for his own.
29* BigEater: Wimpy, as per usual.
30* BriarPatching: An unintentional example, as Popeye doesn't even ''know'' that spinach will make him strong until Bluto forces it on him out of cruelty.
31* BrokenRecord: Cole Oyl when demanding an apology.
32* CallBack: "It's Not Easy Being Me" has three: two to "He's Large", and one to "I'm Mean".
33* CardCarryingVillain: Bluto. He even gets a whole song about how mean he is as he smashes up the Oyls' residence.
34* CharacterCatchphrase:
35** "[[IAmWhatIAm I yam what I yam and that's all what I yam!]]" Even turned into a song.
36** Wimpy gets to say a few of his famous {{Catch Phrase}}s over the course of the movie, such as "I'm buying, he's paying" and of course the classic "I would gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today."
37** Geezil never misses an opportunity to tell Wimpy that he hates him -- or tell other people that he hates Wimpy.
38** Popeye's signature "Phooey!" proves to be both hereditary and contagious, as Poopdeck Pappy and Olive Oyl both use it in his presence.
39** Cole Oyl is very prone to tell people that they owe him an apology.
40** "You're not thinking of doing [random activity], are you? Because there's a xx cent [same random activity] tax."
41* ChildrenAreAWaste: {{Deconstructed}} in Poopdeck Pappy's "Kids" song that focuses on kids' brattiness, fickleness and the ingratitude of human nature:
42-->'''Poopdeck Pappy''': Bless their little hearts, if they was made out of gold, I'd like to sell 'em on the open market. I could make me a fortune. Kids! Eh, they don't know what they're doing. Kids, dadblast 'em! They're gonna lead you to ruin. That's what they're gonna do, lead you to ruin. They cry at you when they're young, they yell at you when they're older, they borrows from you when they's middle-aged and they leave you alone to die. Without even paying you back! Children, phooey. You give them everything they want, and what do you get back in return? You get nothing! Why they're just smaller versions of us you know, but I'm not so crazy about me in the first place, so why would I want one of them? I'm asking ya. Children. Ah, children. Little children. You'll pour your heart to them, you give them everything they want. Give them candy and a lot of toys, and what do you get in return? You get a lot of noise: "Nyah, nyah, nyah, nyah, nyah, nyah, my poppa's a mean old man!" I'm through with children, I'm through with kids. They ain't nothing I'm never gonna do about it!
43** Poopdeck clearly care for babies, as noted when [[PapaWolf he rescues Swee'pea from the octopus.]]
44* ChildrenAreInnocent: Poopdeck sees the pure innocence of Swee'pea, making cute baby talk noises as he bonds with him in a gentle way, becoming a grandfather figure to Swee'pea.
45* ClusterFBomb: Pappy delivers a "Cluster 'Haul Ass' " during the climactic rescue mission.
46* CompositeCharacter: Swee'pea has taken on the "fortune-telling" traits of Eugene the Jeep, who was originally going to be in the movie; see WhatCouldHaveBeen on the Trivia page.
47* ContinuityNod: A lot of them. The movie was criticized for not being very faithful to the cartoons, but it actually has a lot in common with the original ''Thimble Theater'' comic. (As discussed in film critics Drew [=McWeeny=] and Scott Weinberg's ''80s All Over'' commentary track podcast, the film is really a ''prequel'' to the cartoons.)
48* CowardlyYellow: At the end, a humiliated Bluto's clothes turn yellow as he swims away from Swee'haven.
49* CrazyJealousGuy: Bluto is less than pleased when he sees Olive with Popeye and carrying Swee'pea.
50* CreatorCameo: The Falcons, formed by Music/HarryNilsson to perform for the songs featured in the film, appear as characters in Sweethaven in the film:
51** Klaus Voorman and Doug Dillard play Von Schnitzel (the conductor) and Clem (the banjo player), two musicians at the boxing match.
52** Hoagy, a piano player for the Rough House, is played by Van Dyke Parks, who arranged and conducted Nilsson's songs as well as "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man".
53** Percussionist Ray Cooper, who would later become famous for his work with Music/EltonJohn, plays the town's preacher.
54* CreditsMedley: Harry Nilsson and Tom Pierson's instrumental medley of "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man", "I Yam What I Yam", "He Needs Me", "I'm Mean" and "The Sailor's Hornpipe" closes out the film.
55* CurbStompBattle: Several...
56** Popeye ''destroys'' the six bar toughs singlehandedly and doesn't even break a sweat.
57** Popeye initially fights Oxblood for entertainment and is obviously having no trouble. Then Oxblood tries to fight dirty, which riles Popeye - who ends the fight very decisively shortly after!
58** Bluto brutally and decisively trashes Popeye at the engagement party.
59** Before the spinach, Bluto had the upper hand for pretty much the entire duel on Scab Island.
60** The killer octopus is first pummeled silly by a spinach-powered Popeye, and then it gets hit by an [[MegatonPunch uppercut of such ridiculous power]] that it is launched not just out of the ocean, but ''several hundred feet in the sky''. It's difficult to think of another movie monster who was annihilated *that* badly in a final fight.
61* DamnedByFaintPraise: Bluto in "He's Large".
62* DamselInDistress: Olive Oyl in the final stretch.
63* DarkerAndEdgier: For a Popeye adaptation, this film has a gritty feel to match the dilapidated town of Sweethaven. Bluto imposes curfews, intimidates the entire town with his demeanor, has a tax collector who is implied to be bleeding the townspeople with little to show for it in quality of life, and despite the townspeople trying to put on a happy face, you can get the impression that they'd relish the opportunity to move somewhere else.
64* DefeatMeansFriendship: The diner toughs, after a fashion. They all are (understandably) uncomfortable when they next see Popeye (at the engagement party), but when he exiles the tax man, they jubilantly carry him aloft. Later when he goes to have it out with the commodore, they shout encouragement to him.
65* DefrostingIceQueen: Olive is rather snooty at the beginning of the film -- especially towards Popeye. She starts to mellow out and warm up to him after they find Swee'pea.
66* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: Pressed to find good things to say about Bluto, Olive keeps coming back to "He's large" while singing "He's Large"!
67--> "He's tall... good lookin'... and he's large... he's large... ''[[RuleOfThree large]]''... tall... [[OverlyLongGag large]]..."
68* DestinationDefenestration: When Popeye fights with the gang in the Rough House, a cook escapes through a window, shattering the glass in the process.
69* DidntThinkThisThrough: Bluto tells the Commodore that they can use Swee'Pea's ability to pick winners at the gambling house. The Commodore has to point out to Bluto that he ''owns'' the gambling house, and would thus be winning money from himself.
70** Castor Oyl when getting into the ring with Oxblood Oxheart.
71* DinerBrawl: Popeye first springs into action at the aptly named Rough House. As the gang taunts him in the leadup to the brawl, note that the workers are setting up gates/barracades, suggesting that this trope is a common occurrence there!
72* DisproportionateRetribution: On the mere SUSPICION that Olive has cheated on him with Popeye, Bluto singlehandedly destroys her home, manhandles several party guests, attempts to kill Popeye, and levies a ridiculous amount of trumped-up taxes on her family, nearly driving them all to financial oblivion.
73* DissonantSerenity: Almost all of the diner patrons, and even some of the staff, start to [[OhCrap freak out]] when it's obvious a brawl is imminent. However, Roughhouse doesn't even look up from his solitaire game.
74** Likewise, Bluto only glances at the carnage with passing curiosity, not even stopping his meal.
75* DoesNotLikeSpam: Popeye does not like ''spinach''. While this is a surprise to any fan, it would make sense as an origin story.
76* DrivenToSuicide: Popeye over losing Swee'Pea, in a scene that was cut because it was considered too dark.
77* TheDragon: The Taxman of Sweethaven.
78** Wimpy becomes one when he brings Swee'pea to Bluto in exchange for a big plate stacked with hamburgers, and after Olive makes him confess what he knows about where Swee'pea and Bluto are going, he makes a HeelFaceTurn and joins with Popeye's and Poopdeck Pappy's crew to rescue Swee'pea, Olive, as well as stopping Bluto from taking Poopdeck Pappy's treasure.
79* EpicFail: Spike attempts to break a chair over Popeye's head, but failed to notice the ceiling fan in the way. The chair gets harmlessly caught on a blade. Spike can only give a lame shrug and [[OhCrapSmile pathetic grin]] before Popeye clobbers him.
80* EspeciallyZoidberg: A sign on the wall at the Rough House:
81-->''Positively [=NO=] credit! Especially you, Wimpy!''
82* EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas: Oxblood Oxheart very clearly loves his mother.
83* EvilDebtCollector: The Tax Man will come up with all sorts of frivolous charges to squeeze arbitrary amounts of tax from the townspeople... and he demands exact change!
84* EvilIsPetty: Bluto, after his wedding with Olive falls apart, not only destroys her house, but also taxes her family (which had nothing to do with this turn of events) into near ruin.
85* EvilSoundsDeep: A [[SubvertedTrope subverted example]]: Bluto is played by Paul L. Smith, who also sung on the soundtrack, but his deep baritone singing voice in the film proper is provided by "Big" John Wallace, who was Music/HarryChapin's bassist. [[https://youtu.be/rqVI2DmLI2Q Bluto's "I'm Mean" song]] shows a prime example of his baritone voice.
86* FooledByTheSound: Popeye and Olive find a box and hear a rattling sound from inside. This startles Olive, who thinks it's a [[SnakesAreSinister rattlesnake]], but it's then revealed to be Swee'Pea shaking a baby's rattle.
87* FunnyBackgroundEvent: All over the place. From the first scenes we see all the extra background characters and main characters doing ''something'' at any given moment throughout, such as the hairy, bearded hobo who is seen taking a random swim in one scene, and Popeye ripping off the helm of the Commodore's boat trying to steer it.
88** When the diner toughs come into The Rough House Cafe, Mort snatches a chair up from under Ham Gravy. However, Ham remains aloft as if the chair is still under him. In the background, you see that he's ''still aloft'' like this for five or more minutes!
89*** And when the brawl goes down, Popeye lays waste to the toughs. At the edge of the frame, Spike can be seen grabbing a ketchup bottle [[GrievousBottleyHarm to use as a club]], then realizing this isn't gonna do much good against ''this'' guy, and sheepishly placing it back on the table.
90*** As Popeye is taking down the last tough, look in the far background. Slick the Milkman (whom Gozo forced to sit on a hot stove for several minutes) is being carried away to safety on his wife Rosie's shoulders, while fanning the charred seat of his pants!
91* GenerationXerox: Popeye and Pappy are practically identical save for a thirty-year age difference. They even get into two arguments that are actually the ''same'' argument with the speakers reversed.
92
93* GiantSquid: A giant octopus attacks Olive in the climax. Once Popeye gets empowered by spinach, he makes quick work of it.
94* HilariouslyAbusiveChildhood: It's clear from Popeye's stories from his childhood that his pap was ''not'' a good father, even '''before''' he abandoned him. It's all PlayedForLaughs, since Popeye seems to either be in denial or trying to make excuses for his father.
95-->"One thing I remember about me pap was that he always used to throw me up in the air. Yeah, heh heh... but he'd never be there when I come down, you know. Heh heh heh. Boy, he had a sensek'a humor, didn't he? Yeah, that was me pap. I remember the time he gave me a electric eel as a toy. Hah hah hah -- ''eep!'' Hah, yeah, that was fun. Or, or he'd rock me cradle real, real, real hard and I'd lose me formula. And then he'd say 'One day, you'll be a sailor.' Heh heh heh, that's... that's what I yam today, yeah. Hm. Yeah. Sometimes he'd bounce me on his knee. Heh heh, most o' the time he'd miss, though, 'cos he couldn't see too well with one eye.... heh heh heh, oh, me pap, yeah..."
96* HoistByHisOwnPetard: If Bluto hadn't chosen to [[spoiler:shove spinach into Popeye's throat before trying to kill him]], he'd have won the day.
97* HongKongDub: Whenever Swee'Pea talks, it's obviously not really the baby talking.
98* IAmSong: Popeye gets two of these: "I Yam What I Yam" and, for the film's finale, "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man".
99** "I'm Mean", of course, about how Bluto is so tough, [[BeyondTheImpossible he even fought himself in a dream and was choked to death, then somehow managed to break the hold afterward]].
100* IAmWhatIAm: "I Yam What I Yam" fits this trope perfectly as Popeye stands up for his principles when the others are interested in exploiting Swee'pea's abilities for profit.
101* IconicAttributeAdoptionMoment: Throughout the film, Popeye refuses to eat his spinach. It's not until the end of the film, when Bluto force-feeds him a can of spinach, that it becomes his PowerUpFood.
102* IDoNotLikeGreenEggsAndHam: Until the last scene, anyway. Seems he never really gave it a chance. This is not as farfetched as it sounds: When the character first debuted, ''way'' [[LongRunner back in 1929]] in ''Thimble Theater'', he found out about spinach the same way. By which time he'd already proven himself to be fantastically tough, in fact ''indestructible''. Comics historian Bill Blackbeard (yes, that's his real name) calls Popeye the first comic superhero.
103* IHaveNoSon: When Popeye meets his father, the latter refuses to acknowledge him as his son at first; subverted when Pappy asks Popeye to eat his spinach straight from the can, and then Pappy knows by his whiny disobedience that it can only be Popeye.
104* IOwnThisTown: The Commodore/Poopdeck Pappy pretty much owns everything important in Sweethaven. When Bluto suggests using Swee'Pea's gift to make a bundle at the gambling hall, Pappy scoffs, saying he ''owns'' the gambling hall.
105* IfYoureSoEvilEatThisKitten: Parodied when Popeye meets Poopdeck Pappy and Pappy orders his son to eat the spinach from the can. By the time Popeye starts whining about it and refuses to do it, Pappy recognizes Popeye as his disobedient son.
106* InTheStyleOf: ''Very'' reminiscent of the work of Creator/FedericoFellini, and intentionally so. The cinematography was by frequent Fellini collaborator Giuseppe Rotunni.
107* IntimidatingRevenueService: Sweethaven's Taxman, in spades. His actual legitimate authority to collect revenue is as dubious as the taxes themselves ("a nickel, question tax"), but he's undoubtedly the most feared individual in town after Bluto.
108* {{Jerkass}}: Oh yes:
109** Bluto, of course. He's not merely the blowhard bully from the cartoon... he has no problems resorting to kidnapping and murder. This is much closer to his comic strip personality.
110** "Jerkass" may be a little harsh to describe Wimpy, but he's a supremely selfish doofus who doesn't care a whit about who may be hurt by his shenanigans and shady dealings. Which perfectly captures his character from the comics.
111* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Poopdeck Pappy comes across as a genuine {{Jerkass}} at first, but towards the end proves to have had a heart all along when he starts warming up to Swee'Pea and sharing his "treasure" with him, which turns out to be an old sea chest filled not with gold or jewels, but an empty picture frame, some cans of spinach, bronze baby shoes, and a toy trumpet.
112* TheJuggernaut: Bluto actually crushes Popeye in any fight they have until the very end of the movie, where he makes the mistake of trying to rub salt in the wound by force-feeding him spinach...
113* KarmaHoudini: Wimpy causes a lot of complications for Popeye and The Oyls -- as the ''80s All Over'' podcast points out, he ''sells a baby for burgers'' -- yet he never really seems to pay for any of it. However, Olive did nearly cause him to fall to his death off a rickety bridge in the course of interrogating him about Swee'Pea's whereabouts...
114** Somewhat with Bluto, ultimately. Sure, he got a super-charged whack on the jaw... but when you consider the terrible things he did in the movie (attempted murder, kidnapping, theft, assault, vandalism, corruption, vindictive taxing, child endangerment, extortion, hijacking)... it still seems like he got off pretty easy.
115* KickTheDog: Bluto tries to pull this with Popeye at the end of the film. [[NiceJobFixingItVillain It backfires on him rather emphatically.]] The Taxman also takes Nana Oyl's big sunflower (while confiscating all the family's worldly goods) out of sheer meanness (And one sunflower, 'embarrassing a taxman tax'!)
116* LiteralMetaphor:
117** When Bluto spots Olive with Popeye and Swee'Pea, he sees red.
118** "Look at Bluto! He's gone yellow!" at the end.
119* LogoJoke: As the {{Retraux}} opening recreates the opening credits of the Fleischer Bros.-era Popeye cartoons Paramount distributed (see below), the 1930s-era Paramount logo used for those substitutes for the then-current one, seen [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evZ7FQe92X0 here]].
120* LovesMeNot: Bluto does a variation on this, going from "She loves me" to "She'll marry me". Everyone at the party is on edge, fearing his rage if he gets a "She won't marry me".
121* MassOhCrap: Most of the Sweethaven citizens are absolutely terrified when Popeye enters their village.
122* MegatonPunch: Both Bluto and the octopus are on the receiving end of one by Popeye once he's empowered by spinach, though the one Bluto receives is less powerful given how it merely blows him a feet back into the water, whereas the one Popeye uses to propel the octopus in the sky is ''winded up''.
123* MickeyMousing: All the fighting is choreographed like elaborate dance sequences, just like one of the old Popeye shorts where he'd line 'em up and knock 'em down.
124* MuggingTheMonster: When several thugs at the Rough House start harassing Popeye as he tries to talk to Wimpy. Popeye keeps his fuse in check until they physically try to attack him. Naturally, he wipes the floor with them.
125* MyCountryTisOfTheeThatISting: "Sweet, Sweethaven -- An Anthem":
126-->'''Chorus''': Sweet Sweethaven, God must love us,\
127We the people, love Sweethaven,\
128Hooray, hooray, Sweethaven...\
129Flags are wavin',\
130We're people from the sea, Safe from democracy,\
131Sweeter than a melon tree, Put here for you and me,\
132Sweet Sweethaven, God must love us,\
133We the people, of Sweethaven...\
134God must have landed here, why else would He strand us here, where the air is nice and clear?\
135Sweethaven even sounds so close to Heaven...\
136God will always bless Sweethaven...
137* MythologyGag:
138** At Olive and Bluto's engagement party a man can be heard complaining about Olive getting married. This man is Harold Hamgravy, who was Olive's fiance in the original ''Thimble Theater'' comic strip before Popeye was introduced. After Popeye became the strips BreakoutCharacter Hamgravy was DemotedToExtra.
139** Swee'pea's introduction in the movie is a big ShoutOut to the way he was introduced in the comic strip. [[note]]In the comic, he arrives in a package addressed to Popeye, and the package makes so many strange sounds that Popeye and Wimpy think it must contain a dangerous animal and are about to kill it when they discover that the package contains a baby. In the movie, Popeye picks up a basket which he mistakes for Olive's, and Olive hears the baby's rattle and is convinced that there's a rattlesnake in the basket, and Popeye opens the basket to deal with the dangerous creature before he discovers it's a baby.[[/note]]
140** When Rough House asks who's going pay for the burger Wimpy replies "I'm buying, he's paying." This was one of his {{Catch Phrase}}s in the original comic strip.
141** All the Rough House roughnecks -- Spike, Mort, Gozo, Bolo, Slug and Butch -- are all named after various thug villains Popeye encountered (and defeated) in the ''Thimble Theater'' comic strips. About half of them were henchmen for The Sea Hag.
142* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Only ''Bluto'' could be so stupid as to force Popeye to eat his spinach ([[IDoNotLikeGreenEggsAndHam even if he still didn't like it before then]]), and get the mega-knuckle sandwich he so deserves because of that.
143* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Castor Oyl vs. Oxblood Oxheart ([[RedBaron "The Dirtiest Fighter Alive"]]).
144* NoSell: During their boxing match, Popeye tanks two haymaker shots from the gigantic Oxblood Oxheart without even blinking before flattening him with two shots back, one of them being his Twister Punch.
145* NotWhatItLooksLike: Just imagine what Bluto thought when he saw Olive carrying Swee'pea and walking with Popeye.
146* OrderedApology: In the lead-up to the brawl at the Rough House's, Popeye demands an apology from the thugs who mocked his pappy. They respond by seizing the hash houses's ''other'' patrons and forcing an apology out of each. This is just for fun, as they obviously intend to throw down with Popeye one way or another.
147* OriginStory: As with many movies that have launched superhero franchises, this is a tale of how Popeye gets started, establishing all his major relationships and iconic items along the way.
148* PapaWolf: Popeye to Swee'pea, and Poopdeck Pappy to Swee'Pea when he rescues him from the octopus.
149* ParentalBonus: The town drunk is named Barnacle Bill, a reference to a BawdySong from the early 20th century. "Beware of Barnacle Bill" was even the name of an early Popeye cartoon, which contains a cleaned-up version of the song (and with Bluto in the role of Barnacle Bill). [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3cTmhG2x58w Behold!]]
150* PickyEater: Popeye ''hates'' spinach in this version. Bluto makes the mistake of {{force feeding}} him spinach in the climax, with the expected result.
151* PopStarComposer: All of the songs, save the cartoon's theme song "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man", are written by Music/HarryNilsson.
152* PowerUpFood: You guessed it, spinach. Mitigated by how Popeye hates it in this movie, and only gets his usual unstoppable power boost from it when Bluto forces him to eat a can to mock the sailor man's seeming imminent demise at the end.
153* PrecisionFStrike: There's a precision ''D'' strike in "I'm Mean". Popeye also jumps off a ship shouting "Oh, shee-yit!" near the end.
154* {{Pun}}: "A place of ill re-puke!"
155* RammingAlwaysWorks: But not in this film! After blasting Bluto's ship with a cannon, Poopdeck Pappy decides to go full-speed and uses his own ship to ram Bluto's. The collision wrecks both their ships, forcing everyone to swim the rest of the way. Incidentally, Bluto had already taken Olive and Swee'pea into Scab Island.
156* ReCut: In the North American cut, Swee'Pea says "Popeye" just before it cuts to Popeye singing "Swee'Pea's Lullaby". In the European cut, Swee'Pea's "Popeye" is moved to the IrisOut after the song.
157* RedEyesTakeWarning: When Bluto sees Olive with Popeye ''and'' the newly found Swee'Pea when she arrives late for their engagement party, he gets the wrong idea and his eyes glow red with anger, complete with a POV shot.
158* {{Retraux}}: The opening credits start with a hand-drawn throwback to the original Creator/MaxAndDaveFleischer Popeye cartoons made during UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation, albeit with the animation being outsourced to Creator/HannaBarbera (which was making new Popeye cartoons for [=TV=] at the time). The town of Sweethaven, for that matter, is a veritable AnachronismStew of driftwood buildings and {{Retraux}} artifacts.
159* RidiculousRepossession: On the orders of Bluto, the Tax Man takes literally everything from the Oyl home on trumped-up taxes - even a sunflower, as an "'embarrassing the taxman' Tax".
160* SayMyName: Bluto was waiting for Olive Oil but she didn't show up because she ran away from him. He yelled her name real loud, causing a nearby window to break.
161* SearchingForTheLostRelative: This was the titular sailor's whole reason for arriving in Sweethaven, searching for his long-lost father after two years at sea. As it turns out Poopdeck Papi is secretly the [[BigBad Commodore]] squeezing the townspeople of taxes while his minion Bluto abuses his power to get Olive Oyl to marry him. Fortunately despite his cantankerous and greedy nature, Poopdeck still harbors love for his son and undergoes a HeelFaceTurn in time to help Popeye unlock his spinach-based powers.
162* SeeYouInHell: Bluto gives Popeye the sailor equivalent after force feeding him a can of spinach and shoving him underwater to drown.
163-->'''Bluto:''' See you in Davy Jones’s Locker.
164* SettingIntroductionSong: "Sweethaven -- An Anthem".
165* SmallParentHugeChild: Mrs. Oxheart is a seemingly frail, bent old lady. Her son Oxblood Oxheart is a ''mountain'' of a man (and a MightyGlacier in the boxing ring). He's still an unabashed MommasBoy.
166* SmoochOfVictory: Olive delivers one to Popeye after he saves her in the end, complete with a “My hero!” following it.
167* SoProudOfYou: At the end, when Popeye finally gets force-fed spinach by Bluto, Popeye knocks the octopus out of the water and sends Bluto swimming for his life, and Pappy is smiling and singing "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man" with the cast and chorus as Popeye learns that spinach gives him strength to face impossible obstacles.
168* SomethingOnlyTheyWouldSay: When Popeye is trying to prove to Pappy that he's his son, Pappy tells him there's only one way he can be convinced. "Eat the spinach." Once Popeye refuses to eat it, whining like a baby, Pappy is convinced that he's his son.
169* SoundEffectBleep:
170** Pappy, during "Kids".
171** Bluto in his "I'm Mean" character song:
172-->'''Bluto''' (singing): I'm mean, I'm mean, I'm mean, you know what I mean, (he's mean, he's mean), you know what I say (he says he's mean), you know what I mean (he's mean, he's mean), mean! (he's mean, he's mean), you know what I mean (he's mean, he's mean). I'm meaner than [[LampshadeHanging *steam whistle* ]] (so true, so true), I mean what I say (he do, he do). I'm so mean, I had a dream of beating myself up; I broke my nose, I broke my hand, I wrestled myself to the ground and then I choked myself to death and broke the choke and woke up, aargh! I'm mean, you know what I mean, if you know what I mean, I'm mean! (he's mean, he's mean) meaner than *scream*, I sure am mean, yeah me!
173* SpeechImpediment: Another thing Popeye's got... is a [[FunetikAksent senske of humiligration]].
174* SpoiledBrat: When Poopdeck Pappy first sees Popeye and asks him to eat his spinach, and to a larger extent, Poopdeck Pappy's "Kids" song about ingratitude.
175* StealthPun: All the Wallfluer (i.e. "wallflower") sisters are named after flowers.
176* StrangeSalute: While the Sweethaven civic (?) anthem plays before the boxing match, the townspeople hold their hands over their heads.
177* TheStrategist: Amazingly enough, ''Bluto'' comes across this way for the first half of the movie. He keeps Popeye under scrutiny, from afar. He seems to be sizing him up before actually confronting him. Of course he takes a much more hands-on approach after he sees [[ItsPersonal his fiancee with Popeye, holding a baby]].
178* StylisticSuck: Bluto's red eyes POV shot is just Popeye, Olive and Swee'Pea dressed in red in front of a red background. A similar VisualPun comes at the end of the movie when Bluto "turns yellow" -- i.e. he's dressed in yellow as he swims away.
179* SuperMode: Popeye finally transforms into his famous Spinach Mode at the end after being force fed spinach by Bluto. However, you only get to see his enlarged arms uppercutting Bluto from underwater.
180** As per the cartoons and comics, no villain stands the slightest chance, man or beast, once he's spinach-powered.
181* TalkLikeAPirate: During his "I'm Mean" number, Bluto does a pirate growl at one point.
182* ATwinkleInTheSky: The giant octopus gets propelled in the sky this way by Popeye's MegatonPunch.
183* UngratefulTownsfolk: From the moment Popeye enters in Sweethaven, everyone, except for the Oyls, and Wimpy, either ignore him, or treat him with hostility. Once he gets rid of the tax collector however, everyone instantly loves him.
184* VictoriousChorus: At the end of the film, the main cast (including Popeye himself) and an offscreen chorus triumphantly sing Van Dyke Parks's arrangement of "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man".
185* VillainSong: Bluto has "I'm Mean" and his part of "It's Not Easy Being Me".
186* VillainousBreakdown: Bluto has one while impatiently waiting for Olive at their engagement party. He gets so angry that he destroys the house and attacks some of the guests.
187* VitriolicBestBuds: Wimpy and Geezil seem to be this by the end of the movie -- even dancing together. (In the strip, Geezil loathed Wimpy even more than shown in this movie, and Wimpy largely ignored him.)
188* WorthlessTreasureTwist: Bluto's looking for Poopdeck Pappy's buried treasure, and with Swee' Pea's help manages to find a chest. While Bluto is distracted fighting Popeye, Pappy manages to get the chest back, and shows Swee' Pea what's in it; a bunch of keepsakes and some cans of spinach.
189* YouAreNotMyFather: Briefly, when Popeye and Poopdeck Pappy bicker while chasing after Bluto's ship...
190--> '''Poopdeck Pappy:''' Is that any way to talk to your father?
191--> '''Popeye:''' You ain't my father. My father was tall, and kind, and looked like Abraham Lincoln.

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