
Nurse to Meet Ya

Nurse to Meet Ya
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What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This Popeye short has a light, comic, highly slapstick tone, centered on a crying baby and two rivals competing for Olive's attention. The main sensitive elements are cartoon scuffles between Popeye and Bluto, repeated attempts to sabotage each other, and a few exaggerated physical gags that could briefly unsettle very young viewers, including heavy objects used in absurd ways and a snake charmer routine. The intensity stays low throughout, with no realistic injuries, no lasting danger, and no sexual, substance related, or strong language content. For most children, this is suitable from the later preschool years, especially if they already enjoy older cartoons where characters quarrel noisily and bounce back immediately. Parents may want to watch alongside more sensitive children and explain that the conflict is played for laughs and does not reflect acceptable real life behavior.
Synopsis
Olive is playing nanny in the park as Popeye and Bluto bicycle past. They fight over her, waking the baby. Then they take turns trying to stop the baby crying or sabotaging the other's efforts. Popeye does impressions of a dog and an airplane and juggles cannonballs; Bluto does some rope twirling and a snake-charmer act.
Difficult scenes
Popeye and Bluto argue over Olive in the park, leading to a classic cartoon fight with exaggerated hits, rivalry, and noisy physical comedy. The sequence stays light and unrealistic, but some young children may still react to the commotion or to seeing grown characters fight near the baby. Much of the short involves the two characters taking turns trying to soothe the baby while secretly ruining each other's efforts. The repeated crying and constant noise may be tiring or irritating for sensitive viewers, even though the overall tone remains playful and there is no lasting distress. Among the acts meant to entertain the baby, Popeye juggles cannonballs and Bluto performs a snake charmer routine. These moments are fully fanciful, yet they briefly introduce heavy objects and an animal image that could unsettle a very young child who does not yet read old fashioned cartoon exaggeration easily.
Where to watch
No verified platform for the US market yet. We keep this section updated as availability changes.
Availability checked on Apr 01, 2026
About this title
- Format
- Short film
- Year
- 1955
- Runtime
- 6m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- Izzy Sparber
- Studios
- Famous Studios
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This Popeye short has a light, comic, highly slapstick tone, centered on a crying baby and two rivals competing for Olive's attention. The main sensitive elements are cartoon scuffles between Popeye and Bluto, repeated attempts to sabotage each other, and a few exaggerated physical gags that could briefly unsettle very young viewers, including heavy objects used in absurd ways and a snake charmer routine. The intensity stays low throughout, with no realistic injuries, no lasting danger, and no sexual, substance related, or strong language content. For most children, this is suitable from the later preschool years, especially if they already enjoy older cartoons where characters quarrel noisily and bounce back immediately. Parents may want to watch alongside more sensitive children and explain that the conflict is played for laughs and does not reflect acceptable real life behavior.
Synopsis
Olive is playing nanny in the park as Popeye and Bluto bicycle past. They fight over her, waking the baby. Then they take turns trying to stop the baby crying or sabotaging the other's efforts. Popeye does impressions of a dog and an airplane and juggles cannonballs; Bluto does some rope twirling and a snake-charmer act.
Difficult scenes
Popeye and Bluto argue over Olive in the park, leading to a classic cartoon fight with exaggerated hits, rivalry, and noisy physical comedy. The sequence stays light and unrealistic, but some young children may still react to the commotion or to seeing grown characters fight near the baby. Much of the short involves the two characters taking turns trying to soothe the baby while secretly ruining each other's efforts. The repeated crying and constant noise may be tiring or irritating for sensitive viewers, even though the overall tone remains playful and there is no lasting distress. Among the acts meant to entertain the baby, Popeye juggles cannonballs and Bluto performs a snake charmer routine. These moments are fully fanciful, yet they briefly introduce heavy objects and an animal image that could unsettle a very young child who does not yet read old fashioned cartoon exaggeration easily.