Porky Pig's Feat
Porky Pig's Feat
| 17 July 1943 (USA)
Porky Pig's Feat Trailers

Porky Pig and Daffy Duck owe an outrageous sum to the Broken Arms Hotel. The manager thwarts their efforts to escape without paying their bill.

Reviews
Hellen I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
GazerRise Fantastic!
filippaberry84 I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
tavm If there was one cartoon that seemed to really represent the wacky side of the Leon Schlesinger/Warner Bros. output of the '40s, it's this one-Porky Pig's Feat-in which he and Daffy Duck are trying to escape the hotel manager because they can't afford to pay the extravagant bill because of Daffy's recent gambling loss. The gags fly fast starting with the Duck's smashing the manager's face into "a Dick Tracy character, Pruneface" to when that manager falls down a very long circular flight of stairs constantly saying "ow, oo, ow" to him going through multiple rows of doors (with one saying "Montonous, isn't it") to a surprise cameo of a very popular character that provided the hilarious last line. All I'll say now is, Porky Pig's Feat is most definitely worth watching.
slymusic "Porky Pig's Feat" is one of the best Warner Bros. cartoons that Frank Tashlin directed. Porky Pig and Daffy Duck are trying to sneak out of the Broken Arms Hotel because they can't pay their bill. Usually, the Looney Tunes characters can eventually outwit their nemeses, but no matter how painfully hard Porky and Daffy try, they can never get past the hotel proprietor, a big, burly, sinisterly, moustached dog. Characteristic of Frank Tashlin, plenty of cinematic camera angles and wild sight gags abound in "Porky Pig's Feat" as Porky and Daffy try everything they can think of to escape that hotel.Highlights include: Porky and Daffy swinging on a rope; the proprietor falling ALL the way down a lengthy staircase (complete with Mel Blanc's wonderful vocal inflections); Daffy running down the hallway loaded with bags & trunks & Porky; and the popular song "Blues in the Night" accompanying Daffy's slow, slouching walk, having just lost out in a crap game."Porky Pig's Feat" can be found on Disc 3 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 3. I know it's easy to feel sorry for Porky and Daffy in this cartoon, but you gotta pay your bills!
Lee Eisenberg One of the things that I've always liked the most about the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons is their unpredictability. "Porky Pig's Feat" goes all the way, as Porky and Daffy come up with all sorts of elaborate schemes to try and escape from a hotel. You see, the effete manager has charged them for things like air (for breathing), while Daffy gambled away all the money. The whole thing escalates into full-scale war.Aside from what Porky and Daffy do to the owner - and what he does back to them - the last segment was a surprise. Then again, movie studios and executives always like to advertise themselves (Porky mentions Leon Schlesinger). Overall, a really funny cartoon.So, in conclusion, let's all help them get their "Feat" back on the ground (apologies to the Beatles).
wermuth601 This was a very funny cartoon, in which Daffy gambles the money that he was going to pay for his and Porky's stay at a hotel, so they try to escape but the manager (who kind of reminds me of Mickey Mouse's enemy Pete) keeps outsmarting them.One of my favorite scenes from this cartoon is the end, in which Daffy and Porky are locked up and call Bugs Bunny, hoping that he can save them. This scene is interesting for a few reasons: It's one of the few times that Bugs appeared with Porky Pig, the only time Bugs appeared in a black-and-white cartoon, Bugs seems to have been outsmarted as well, and, being the first time he and Daffy were in a cartoon together, Daffy actually talks positively about Bugs, even saying that Bugs was his hero.