Director: Earl Hurd
Release date: December 4, 1918
Stars: Bobby Bumps and Fido
Rating: ★★★½
Review:

In ‘Bobby Bumps Puts a Beanery on the Bum’ Bobby Bumps and Fido answer to an ad ‘boy wanted in to help in kitchen’ from the ‘Quick Lunch Beanery’.
What follows is a rather aimless string of gags, most remarkable of which is one in which Fido makes a cat eat its words by rolling up the cat’s speech balloon and shovel it down its throat. The cartoon ends all too abruptly, when Bobby pours ink over the cook who chased him out of the beanery.
More interesting than anything of this, however, is the opening scene in which a hand draws Bobby Bumps lying down in perfect perspective. Bobby Bumps helps the hand coloring him, only then follows Fido and the scenery. The Bobby Bumps cartoons were drawn elegantly anyhow, making them stand out of the 1910s crowd, and even though ‘Bobby Bumps puts a Beanery on the Bum’ isn’t the best entry in the series, in this respect it’s now exception.
Watch ‘Bobby Bumps Puts a Beanery on the Bum’ yourself and tell me what you think:
‘Bobby Bumps Puts a Beanery on the Bum’ is available on the DVD-set ‘Popeye the Sailor 1933-1938’
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3 comments
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April 19, 2026 at 01:03
Black Cow
Bobby Bumps was undoubtedly the best animated series of the 1910s: despite the jerky animation, the timing of the gags, their pacing, and their execution were perfectly mastered. In comparison, animated series produced by competitors, such as Colonel Heeza Liar and Krazy Kat, are rather clumsy in their execution of gags, with the pacing often being far too slow. I think it is this quality of gag execution that gives the Bobby Bumps series a certain modernity that contemporary cartoons lacked.
April 22, 2026 at 09:47
Gijs Grob
I can’t agree more!
July 9, 2025 at 10:46
alice.grob@home.nl
Grappig!
Je moedertje