Bardlerx
Strictly average movie
Fairaher
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Murphy Howard
I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.
Jenni Devyn
Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.
Shawn Watson
This short is mildly tolerable in that the set-up allows for the random nature of the pratfalls to be just slightly appropriate. Pinky is wandering along a "street" (though it is so sparsely animated it's hard for me to tell) and decides to enter a weird book shop. Inside a lot of strange and bizarre things happen...and that's it.For some reason there is a laugh track included on this one, like they needed to remind the actual viewing audience that they ought to be laughing at this bore, but not even the fake laugh track is enjoying it.You know you're in trouble when canned laughter is finding your comedy short boring.
TheLittleSongbird
Not one of the Pink Panther's greatest cartoons, but thoroughly entertaining still. The only real annoyance is the laughter track, which is not just distracting but unnecessary. The animation though is just wonderful, the images seen are fascinating and psychedelic personified and the colours are some of the most striking of any Pink Panther cartoon. It's drawn beautifully as well as you'd expect. The music is jazzy and upbeat, also very easy to remember and well matched with Pinky's antics. The theme tune was a classic and still is now. The gags are very clever, are imaginatively timed and are more importantly funny. The ending rounds things off nicely, and the story is a classic Pinky vs. the little white guy story and done with much humour, energy and heart. Pinky is a character full of charisma and natural comic timing and is likable and cool, those can all be seen in a cartoon that plays to his strengths. The little white guy is a great supporting character, he's funny too and often in his outings with Pinky is one we feel sympathy for. The two work with and against one another wonderfully. All in all, apart from the laughter track, Psychedelic Pink is a very good entry in the Pink Panther cartoon series. 8/10 Bethany Cox
Atreyu_II
This isn't one of Pink Panther's most original and creative cartoons, but still has imagination enough. Yet, despite this, behind it there is a "classic" story of the Pink Panther and the "Little White Man". Pinky, of course, drives him crazy. The little white guy is known for his short temper.In this cartoon, Pinky visits the most unusual library ever. A strange library that looks like a cinema room with eccentric colors all around it. The librarian is, of course, the little white guy. Many things happen during the cartoon and these things are as funny as they are weird. Even the "Bizarre Book" has a word to say.Generally speaking, the cartoon is funny and okay, but I don't see it as one of Pink Panther's best. It is, however, one of the very few which we can hear the public's laughters, giving the idea that people are actually very close watching it - like in classic TV shows such as 'Family Ties' and 'Mr. Bean', for example.
ccthemovieman-1
So far, in watching some of these Pink Panther cartoons for the first time in 40 years I have yet to find a lemon.....until now. This is just not funny. What's really bad is there is a "laugh track" inserted in here, one of the most annoying things I've ever heard in a cartoon. Whose idea was that? Even the laugh track didn't have much to laugh about because the jokes simply were low-grade slapstick stuff.The story involves our hero going to the "Bizarre Book" club during the psychedelic days of the late '60s. It was fun to see some of the art work of the period, something I recall with fondness. My hopes for a nostalgic and funny cartoon, however, were dashed when very little happened.The only part I thought was clever was near the end with the Pink Panther and "the little white guy" get into a fight and brawl in front of several posters promoting "love," which was the popular "in" word of the psychedelic years. It was a jab at the hypocrisy of the naive hippies of the late '60s.