Sinbad the Sailor, sailing the Bounding Main* - With Salty the Parrot on his shoulder, He'll come home again. So shiver me timbers, hoist the sail, And take* the ship, we're off Over the bounding main! Sinbad the Sailor, a special belt has he; Whenever he gets in trouble, It's got magic, you will see. So shiver me timbers, he will be As strong as a hurricane, Over the Bounding Main! (Shiver me timbers, hoist the sail, And take* the ship, we're off!)
That's the original version of Sinbad,Jr. from 1963, which has a different theme and was done by Sam Singer. In 1965, Hanna Barbera redid these short cartoons, with another theme by Hoyt Curtin plus "Johnny Quest"s Tim Mathieson as the voice as the title character and Mel Blanc (the voice of Bugs Bunny and Barney Rubble) as the voice of Salty the Parrot.
Just a repackaging of Popeye with strength derived from a magic belt instead of spinach. I seem to remember the villain was called Blubbo which was somewhat reminiscent of Bluto.
The sound effects and some of the background music remind me of the mid to late 1960s Gumbys (the "flying effects" used here are Gumby's gal pal mermaid Goo's)--and even the skipping flute "Gumby theme" would be used in some like "Wind Geni".1:48 W.C.Fields or Joe E.Brown impression(?).
always thought of this blasted cartoon whenever i had to tighten my belt when it was loose (LOL)thanks Fgrandinetti for the memories , havent seen this cartoon in 40 yrs
Sinbad seems very effeminate, here. It really is not too much of a stretch to imagine Sinbad as a female. What if they did a live action feature film adaptation of the cartoon with...Mila Kunis in the role?
Fgrandinetti YOU'RE AWESOME Man! This show was a staple in my Cartoon up-bring! Thanks FOR the MEMORIES....
Sinbad the Sailor, sailing the Bounding Main* -
With Salty the Parrot on his shoulder,
He'll come home again.
So shiver me timbers, hoist the sail,
And take* the ship, we're off
Over the bounding main!
Sinbad the Sailor, a special belt has he;
Whenever he gets in trouble,
It's got magic, you will see.
So shiver me timbers, he will be
As strong as a hurricane,
Over the Bounding Main!
(Shiver me timbers, hoist the sail,
And take* the ship, we're off!)
That's the original version of Sinbad,Jr. from 1963, which has a different theme and was done by Sam Singer. In 1965, Hanna Barbera redid these short cartoons, with another theme by Hoyt Curtin plus
"Johnny Quest"s Tim Mathieson as the voice as the title character
and Mel Blanc (the voice of Bugs Bunny and Barney Rubble) as
the voice of Salty the Parrot.
Just a repackaging of Popeye with strength derived from a magic belt instead of spinach. I seem to remember the villain was called Blubbo which was somewhat reminiscent of Bluto.
BTW, yes, that is Jack Mercer voicing Popeye at the end. It was shown as part of Hanna-Barbera's "The All-New Popeye Hour".
The sound effects and some of the background music remind me of the mid to late 1960s Gumbys (the "flying effects" used here are Gumby's gal pal mermaid Goo's)--and even the skipping flute "Gumby theme" would be used in some like "Wind Geni".1:48 W.C.Fields or Joe E.Brown impression(?).
always thought of this blasted cartoon whenever i had to tighten my belt when it was loose (LOL)thanks Fgrandinetti for the memories , havent seen this cartoon in 40 yrs
why isn't this guy on dvd or you tube?
Blubbo did not appear until after the new intro in 1965.
i wish someday this HB cartoons will come as dvd release) warner bros should do this!!!!!
It will be nice to have the sam singer hanna barbera package . Please will you give the details on how to order them?
Sinbad is,cool badman
Why wasn't his belt just tightened at the start? I know....then we wouldn't have a plot. :) Cartoon logic.
I Liked the Sam Singer Version Better than Hanna-Barbera.
Sinbad seems very effeminate, here. It really is not too much of a stretch to imagine Sinbad as a female. What if they did a live action feature film adaptation of the cartoon with...Mila Kunis in the role?
Different from the Hana Varvera verson........not bad...but Hanna barbera was better....
&@the end it's (c)1964 in Arabic numerals.