The Pink Blueprint (1966) Poster

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8/10
Entertaining but not Pinky at his best
TheLittleSongbird29 May 2013
I do like most of the Pink Panther cartoons a good deal. And I do like The Pink Blueprint, though it is not the Pink Panther at his best. The story is not much new and is rather predictable at times, and I agree that the laughter track is both annoying and unnecessary. Despite these, The Pink Blueprint does have some very funny gags, there's a lot of them and a lot of outsmarting and it all works. The ending especially is great. They do help let the cartoon go at a good pace despite a story that could have easily make it do otherwise. The animation style is simple but clean and carefully and beautifully coloured. Both Pinky and the construction worker are well drawn too. The music is fittingly orchestrated and matches the gags and action very nicely, it is also catchy. The theme tune is still infectious even for a theme tune that is as iconic and oft-heard as it is, there are theme tunes around that are so good that they can't get annoying and that is the case with that for the Pink Panther. Pinky is cool and funny, and the construction worker works well with him without outshining him.

Overall, an entertaining Pink Panther cartoon but not one of the best or among my favourites from him. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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8/10
Very funny!
CuriosityKilledShawn11 December 2005
In this Oscar-nominated cartoon, The Pink Panther turns up a the building site of his new house and replaces the boring blueprint of the ordinary house with an exciting pinkprint of a much fancier one. The single teamster working on the house is having none of it and sticks to making the boring house.

The typical game of outsmarting and tricky follows but the gags and visual jokes that defy the laws of physics are all very imaginative and well done. For a six minute cartoon there are loads of laughs crammed into such a short running time. And the twist at the end is the funniest of them all!
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8/10
The panther in a slick construction cartoon.
OllieSuave-0076 July 2016
The pointy nose man is building a generic-looking house, while the Pink Panther wants him to build a huge, modern and slick-style house mansion. He attempts to exchange his blueprint with the man's, but his plan doesn't work. Therefore, the panther secretly uses the man's materials to build the house according to his plans.

It's a pretty slick and funny cartoon, with a good helping of slapstick humor and gags, including the part where a bed of nails lands on the man. There's a lot of back and forth of building, and tearing down and rebuilding. But, it has a good pace to it and serves us quite a bit of laughs.

Grade B+
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7/10
Health and Safety Nightmare
owen-watts28 February 2021
Pink Panther Odyssey Part XVIII

This Oscar-nommed short (and the first to be played on telly) feels like a wise doubling-down on the original Pink format a bit - going back to the template of the original and essentially just being a series of abstract obfuscations involving only the panther and the "little man". It's solid, gently surreal but the laugh track is a dated contrivance that prevents it from absolutely recapturing the original's vibe.
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7/10
A recent N.E.A. poll of high school wood shop teachers . . .
pixrox16 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . ranked THE PINK BLUEPRINT between SAW and SCREWDRIVER--the 2020 version--as the second most nefarious woodworking film of all time. PINK flouts the basics of ladder safety, and violates every precept of properly wielding power tools. Maybe there's a warped adult somewhere who would get a chuckle or two from viewing a circular saw running amok, but such depictions do a huge disservice to America's future carpenters by filling their heads with nightmarish scenarios, as outlandish and impossible as they might be in Real Life. Only a Red Commie pinko spy could be expected to honestly "enjoy" THE PINK BLUEPRINT for destroying America as we know it.
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7/10
An interesting "bonus feature" is included . . .
oscaralbert20 December 2022
. . . on the 2005 DVD release from MGM called Pink Panther, Volume Two. This "extra" itself is named "From Page to Screen: The Pink Blueprint." The aforementioned version of the animated short in question pairs storyboard-type sketches with clips from the completed cartoon. All of this is backed by Henry Mancini's iconic Pink Panther theme music. The editing of this retrospective is pleasantly slick and professional. All of the key scenes of the original theatrical release seem to be here, in a more truncated, to-the-point form. This is probably a more rewarding use of a viewer's time than endless alternative audio tracks by the self-anointed "animation historian" crowd.
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9/10
Very good but typical Pink Panther cartoon
llltdesq19 September 2001
This cartoon was nominated for a Academy Award. It's a fairly good cartoon, although it is quite similar to The Pink Phink in conception, tone and execution. Not really a terribly novel cartoon by any means, but great fun and very entertaining. Recommended.
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8/10
Amusing short Pink Panther cartoon.
Anonymous_Maxine20 April 2001
The Pink Blueprint involves the Pink Panther's efforts to replace a construction workers boring blueprints with one of his own, which would result in the construction of a crazy looking futuristic house. He and the worker get into a funny competition of sorts, each trying to use the same construction site to build totally different buildings. It's set up in a series of short scenes that each involve a run-in between the two as they work on their projects, and the Pink Panther is generally the winner of these confrontations, which usually end in some hilarious mishaps for the poor construction guy. The film is pretty dated, but it's still pretty entertaining, and it features an unexpected ending in which the Pink Panther does not exactly get the last laugh. I saw this short film on a videotape with the fourth James Bond film, Thunderball. Both were good shows.
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4/10
Didn't Get Much Of A 'Buzz' From It
ccthemovieman-127 May 2007
This cartoon story turns into a competition to see how can build a better house: the Pink Panther or his rival, The Little White Man. At first, they have the same project site but each doesn't like the other guy's designs. The Man has blueprints for a standard house while the PP's plans call for some futuristic design.

Most of the story involves the PP playing havoc with the White Man's attempts to build the house. The Panther also gets effective assistance from a runaway buzz saw.

This was "okay," nothing super, and, sad to say, marred by the always-insult laugh track, something totally uncalled-for in a cartoon. We can decide when to laugh, thank you. I wound up playing most of this with the sound off, so as not be annoyed. However, I missed hearing the sound-effects.
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5/10
Times have changed...
planktonrules10 August 2009
If an average person saw this cartoon today, they'd probably have a laugh or two and enjoy it. As a kid, I saw this and many other Pink Panther cartoons and also enjoyed them. However, looking at the cartoon today as a reviewer, I have less than enthusiastic feelings. While the film is watchable and slight, it's hard to believe that it was Oscar nominated for Best Animated Short. The fact is, however, that the 1960s was a rather dismal period for these shorts, as frame-rates (the number of cels per second) were very low (half that of films of the 1940s and 50s), backgrounds were ultra-simple and the overall look of the cartoon is very, very cheap--much cheaper than cartoons made today. To make things worse, the film has a god-awful laugh track!! Imagine putting a laugh track in a cartoon! It's like they didn't have enough faith in the material, so they are subconsciously encouraging the audience to laugh or telling them when to laugh!!

Overall, it's an inoffensive little short about the white guy (who appears as a foil for the Panther in many shorts) trying to build a house while the Pink Panther messes with him incessantly. Nothing else or earth-shattering about this one.
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5/10
My main interest in rooting around in the . . .
tadpole-596-91825611 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
. . . behind-the-scenes version of THE PINK BLUEPRINT was finding out exactly how the little man contractor could have constructed a fancy three-story facade that would collapse to reveal a poverty row hovel the first time the front door was closed. Imagine my shock, then, to discover this backgrounder configuration included a canned "laugh track" bringing to mind the sort of mirthless unfunny banal Boo Tube fare from the 1900's that can still be found by self-punishment seekers on outlets such as TV Land. This kind of grating forced mirth is equivalent to fingernails on a blackboard to most people. Shame on the outfit disrespecting viewers in this tawdry fashion. Furthermore, the PAGE TO SCREEN edition sheds no light on the original conundrum.
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