Limerculer
A waste of 90 minutes of my life
Dynamixor
The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
Sameer Callahan
It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
Juana
what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
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.
TheLittleSongbird
I think this is one of my personal favourite Daffy and Porky cartoons. It is gorgeous to look at, it is fast paced and it is hilarious. It is the first black and white Looney Tunes cartoon I have seen, but I didn't mind that at all. As a matter of fact, I loved it. The animation is amazingly detailed and the black and white is like looking at a gorgeously shot film noir. The music as always is wonderful and playful, and the short is very fast paced with some truly hilarious gags delivered at breakneck speed. Daffy and Porky both do a great job, Porky is a great foil for Daffy but Daffy almost steals the show from under Porky. Not to mention brilliant vocal characterisations from the one and only Mel Blanc. Overall, gorgeous and hilarious, a must see for fans of Porky or Daffy or both. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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!
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.