Porky in Egypt | |
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Directed by | Robert Clampett |
Story by | Ernest Gee |
Produced by | Leon Schlesinger |
Starring | Mel Blanc Danny Webb |
Music by | Carl W. Stalling |
Animation by | Norman McCabe Robert Cannon I. Ellis John Carey Vive Risto [1] |
Layouts by | Elmer Plummer |
Color process | Black and White |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures The Vitaphone Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 6:56 |
Language | English |
Porky in Egypt is a 1938 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Bob Clampett. [2] The short was released on November 5, 1938, and stars Porky Pig. [3]
The film is set in Egypt, with Porky depicted as a tourist. Having missed his caravan by mistake, Porky and his camel Humpty Bumpty (named after Humpty Dumpty) wander into the Egyptian desert on their own. They are lost in the desert, they start suffering from dehydration, and they experience hallucinations. Porky eventually returns from the desert, but he has lost his mind. He is firmly convinced that he is Napoleon.
An offer for a trip to see the pyramids in Egypt is shown. The tour then proceeds to leave with a large caravan of camels being used as transportation. Porky then comes running out and chases after the caravan; but he is too late and ends up not being able to catch up to them. He sees an available camel called Humpty Bumpty however, and takes it with the intent of seeing the pyramids.
Porky ends up lost in the desert and eventually he, and weirdly enough, the camel, start to suffer from dehydration. They start seeing various mirages that cause them to go into a dreamlike sequence where Porky and the camel both hallucinate and hear strange voices. The camel then starts acting weird and Porky tries to calm him down, but fails, and the camel grows more and more insane.
Eventually, they run screaming from the desert and back into the town, whereupon they lock themselves inside a safehouse. Humpty believes that they are safe, but Porky is then shown to have similarly lost his mind as he begins laughing hysterically, puts on an oversized bicorne hat with the letter N on it (an obvious allusion to Napoleon as well an obvious reference to his invasion in Egypt) as starts dancing in an exaggerated, chaotic fashion as the cartoon irises out.
Porky in Egypt was computer colorized in 1995 to be aired on television.
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