Category: News

Review: ‘Saturday Morning Cartoons 1960s Volume 1’

Back in the days after the dinosaurs died out, Saturday mornings meant all three networks would run children’s programming from as early as 7:30 until noon or so. Every fall, as we started a new school year, we eagerly anticipated what new animated fare there might be and were mesmerized by the cartoon antics of anthropomorphic animals, adventurous humans and some downright silly-looking monsters. The baby boomers born at the end of the generation were raised on this diet animated diet as it proved cheaper to produce than live-action fare.

Warner Home Video has collected a wonderful sampling of those shows in Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1960s Vol. 1
, going on sale Tuesday. There are 12 different series presented on two discs, providing me with five hours or reliving my childhood.

Back in the day, with few channels to pick from, we would watch these shows endlessly, repeated throughout the year and then when they went into syndication packages, watch them again. I certainly did with my younger siblings and it was frightening how many of these episodes felt familiar and recognizable.

Wisely, the collection heavily features Hanna-Barbera offerings since they effectively ruled Saturday morning animation. Upstarts such as Filmation, didn’t arrive until 1966 so maybe we’ll see some of those shows in subsequent volumes. Instead, we begin with the enduring figures from The Jetsons to Quick-Draw McGraw.

The earliest offering is The Flintstones, H-B’s biggest hit which actually first aired in prime time and then got recycled on Saturdays beginning in the 1960-1961 season. A year later, Top Cat, another prime time series, moved to Saturdays. Lesser known than Fred and Barney the series used cats led by a finagler, T.C., styled after Phil Silvers. It’s pretty interesting to see Silvers, who immortalized the wheeler-dealer character with his Sgt. Bilko, became the template for more than a few of the characters in these H-B series.

The vocal casts were limited and you began to recognize Don Messick, Mel Blanc, June Foray, Ted Cassidy, and others are they voiced multiple characters throughout the decade. Similarly, H-B’s cartoony style varied little so you got to see stock characters repeated, modified by the addition of a mustache or change in hair color. When the adventure characters come into the spotlight, Alex Toth’s strong design sense comes through again and again.

The shows are not organized in any order but you do get to see pop
culture trends infiltrate the shows, modified for their youthful
audiences. Secret agents followed by super-heroes slowly edged out the
animal exploits so Quick-Draw gave way to Space Ghost.
And with the wild success of Batman on ABC’s prime time schedule, the
latter half of the 1960s featured many a masked hero. Oddly, the
robotic Frankenstein Jr. wore a mask as if a 30-foot tall robot needed
an alter ego. The Herculoids is the latest series in the collection,
debuting in fall 1967 so the social trends that were reflected in
animation will have to wait for volume 2.

Each series is
included as a complete 30-minute installment so the secondary features
that were commonplace back then, are included. For example, 1965’s Atom Ant also had The Hillbilly Bears and Precious Pup, two features with entirely unconnected themes and casts of characters. Heck, I forgot about Precious until I watched.

The episodes selected are certainly some of the strongest offerings from each series such as the introduction of Rosie on The Jetsons or a confrontation with Zorak on Space Ghost
Watching these, you could feel the writers sometimes struggle to make
their simple stories stretch to fill the time allotted. Back then, each
30-minute show ran close to 25 minutes with just a few commercial
breaks. As a result, rather the plot twists or characterization, the
chase scenes got extended or you had long panning shots of space
vehicles or landscapes (such as The Herculoids). The stories
all had beginnings, middles, and ends, and while they may not have been
the strongest stories, at least made some sense.

The oddity in the set was the inclusion of Marine Boy,
a Japanese series, that aired there starting in 1966 and came to
America a few years later but never on Saturday mornings; instead, it
ran in syndication and played weekday afternoons in New York. The
series is a nice touch but the weakest in the bunch given its overly
simplistic story and animation. The classical music soundtrack really
doesn’t fit the series’ look and the character seems entirely
over-dependent on his boomerang (which shouldn’t even work underwater).

I
admit it; these were comfort shows at the advanced age of 50. I see
their flaws today but also recognize that H-B created an enduring set
of players that were unique and fresh and have reason to still be
revived in one form or another today. The two-disc set has several fun
features including bonus episodes of Quick-Draw McGraw and Snooper and
Blabber Mouse. Mini-documentaries celebrate Quick-Draw and the
Herculoids with Paul Dini, Mark Evanier, and Jerry Beck holding forth
with great delight.

The silliest aspect of the set is that, like
the Fleischer Superman cartoons, is labeled “intended for the Adult
Collector and is Not Suitable for Children”. To which I say, hogwash.
Yes, there’s violence – over-the-top, impossible to repeat bits of
business but find this reactionary warning a sad sign of how some
things have not changed for the better.

Here’s a quick preview:

The Point – May 22nd, 2009

There’s more with Broadway’s newest star, The Toxic Avenger plus which Troma star might make it on the stage next? Plus there’s a few causalities in comics and on television – we’ve got the latest list on who’s coming & going.

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Preview: ‘V’ 2.0

Like we haven’t had enough science fiction shows from the 80’s remade lately… here’s the trailer from ABC’s upfronts for V:

Yes, that’s Elizabeth Mitchell from Lost and Morena Baccarin from Firefly with the butch haircut.

Interestingly, some people are finding current political metaphor in it, such as David Sirota in Salon:

Am I crazy or does this preview make the show seem like a
not-so-subtle fringe-right-wing criticism of Obama and Obama followers?

In questioning Obama’s citizenship and heritage, conservatives
have always portrayed Obama as an alien visitor. They’ve also
constantly implied that behind Obama’s friendly veneer are sinister
motives – and they seem to believe that while most of the public are
gullible fools believing in Obama as a savior, they and their tea-party
protestors see the “real truth” of those motives.

Now, didn’t I basically just describe that preview?

And James Poniewozik from Time:

Remake of the classic alien-invasion miniseries plays in the trailer,
weirdly, like an allegory of the Obama election: aliens come to Earth,
promise “hope” and “change” (words actually used), inspire cult-like
devotion, but have creepy intent and are secretly lizards. Maybe I’m
reading too much into it. But it has potential to be Glenn Beck’s new
favorite show.

The original metaphor was the Aliens were based on the Nazis. Now it’s Obama? Terrific.

Upfronts Day Three-Point-One: CBS

Here’s what CBS is adding:

Mondays: Accidentally
On Purpose
(Jenna Elfman sitcom, surrounded by the usual sitcoms)

Tuesdays: NCIS: Los
Angeles
, (following NCIS and
starring LL Cool J), The Good Wife.

Wednesdays: Same old stuff – The New Adventures of Old Christine, Gary Unmarried, Criminal Minds and CSI: NY.

Thursdays: More of the same – Survivor, CSI and The
Mentalist
.

Fridays: Medium
(picking up what NBC no longer wants) will be between Ghost Whisperer and Numb3rs.

Saturdays: Nothing new here.

Sundays: Three
Rivers
(organ transplant donors).

x-men-forever-alpha-4401964

Interview: Chris Claremont on ‘X-Men Forever’, part 1

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This is the first part of a very long interview with Chris Claremont that started on the topic of X-Men Forever and branched into a number of other areas. We start the interview today to tie in with today’s release of X-Men Forever Alpha, and we’ll be running more as we get closer to the release of X-Men Forever #1 next month.

ComicMix: X-Men Forever Alpha is a reprint of the first three issues plus an eight page bridge to the
new series, correct? What do we need to know going in?

Chris Claremont: Essentially
nothing. Those were the issues going in, to establish all the fundamental
parameters: the X-Men are a team of heroes that are based at Xavier school for
gifted youngsters at Salem center, outside of New York City.

CM: So you’re
starting up right from where you left the book in 1991.

CC: Yes.

CM: Is this House Of C, then, as compared to House of M?

CC: No, it’s the
Marvel Universe, there’s no real change to it, other than the fact that in a
very practical sense that the subsequent sixteen, seventeen years of material
following my departure doesn’t exist.

CM: So this is a
new forked off continuity.

CC: Yes. We’re
essentially picking up where I left off and the only acknowledgment we are
making to the passage of time is that if a label needs to be placed on #1, #2,
and #3, they occurred in the opening months, weeks, whatever of 2009.

CM: Then
everything that happens since in mainline Marvel continuity has not happened
and is not going to happen?

CC: Everything
that relates to the X-Men specifically has not happened. The origins of
characters that were established after I left are not necessarily the origins
that we will encounter here. For example, the reality in this book is that
Sabretooth and Wolverine are father and son. Betsy Braddock has not been
transferred into a cloned dead Asian body.

CM: Do you find
it strange that people are looking at this series and referring back to your
original run as the time when X-Men continuity wasn’t convoluted?

(more…)

Good Miracle Monday to you!

What? How could you forget that the third Monday in May is Miracle Monday? Elliot will be very disappointed in you…

If you have no idea what I’m talking about (Ma nishtana ha-laila ha-zeh mi-kol ha-leilot) Miracle Monday is the third Monday in May. It’s from a Superman novel of the same name written by Elliot S! Maggin and published in 1981. I highly recommend reading it, if you haven’t read it before– and luckily, some folks have put it online.

On Miracle Monday the spirit of humanity soared free.  This

Miracle Monday, like the first Miracle Monday, came in the spring of

Metropolis, and for the occasion spring weather was arranged wherever

the dominion of humanity extended.  On Uranus’s satellites where the

natives held an annual fog-gliding rally through the planetary rings,

private contributions even made it possible to position orbiting

fields of gravitation for spectators in free space.  On Titan, oxygen

bubbles were loosed in complicated patterns to burst into flame with

the methane atmosphere and make fireworks that were visible as far as

the surface of saturn.  At Nix Olympica, the eight-kilometer-high

Martian volcano, underground pressures that the Olympica Resort

Corporation had artificially accumulated during the preceding year

were unleashed in a spectacular display of molten fury for tourists

who walked around the erupting crater wearing pressurized energy

shields.  At Armstrong City in the Moon’s Sea of Tranquility there was

a holographic reenactment of the founding of the city in the year

2019, when on the fiftieth anniversary of his giant leap for mankind

the first man on the Moon returned, aged and venerable, to what was

then called Tranquility Base Protectorate, carrying a state charter

signed by the President of the United States.  The prices of ski lift

tickets on Neptune inflated for the holiday.  Teleport routes to

beaches and mountains on Earth crowded up unbelievably. 

Interplanetary wilderness preserves became nearly as crowded with

people as Earth cities.  Aboard the slow-moving orbital ships that

carried ores and fossil materials on slowly decaying loops toward the

sun from the asteroids, teamsters partied until they couldn’t see.  On

worlds without names scattered throughout this corner of the Galaxy,

where Earth’s missionaries, pioneers and speculators carried their own

particular quests, it was a day for friends, family, recreation and –

if it brought happiness—reflection.

Go read the whole thing.

The Point – May 18th, 2009

This is the week where the Final Fate of many TV shows is dealt out – and there’s actually good news – in fact a LOT of it! Plus something green is singing and dancing on Broadway, and it isn’t Shreck and STAR TREK blasts forward for another big BO weekend.

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Survey results so far: How much of a discount are you getting for your comics?

Well, let’s take a look at the numbers:

How do you purchase your comics and merchandise?

1.    Comic store/comic retailer    69.23%   
   
2.    Bookstore    10.99%   
   
3.    Directly from the distributor (Diamond)    2.20%   
   
4.    Do not purchase comics    1.10%   
   
5.    Some other way (various people included buying from Amazon, borrowing from the library, receiving as gifts, or some combination of the above)    16.48%   

Key Analytics

    * 85.71% chose the following options :
          o Comic store/comic retailer
          o Some other way

If you don’t purchase your comics, how do you read them?

1.    Borrow them from friends    3    17.65%   
   
2.    Read in store    0    0.00%   
   
3.    Read on line    6    35.29%   
   
4.    Download and read    5    29.41%   
   
5.    Receive comp copies (from publishers, etc.)    3    17.65%   
   
    * 64.71% chose the following options :
          o Read on line
          o Download and read

What percentage discount of retail, on average, do you receive for your purchases?
   
Frequency Analysis

1.    None    18.06%   
   
2.    1-10%    19.44%   
   
3.    11-20%    30.56%   
   
4.    21-30%    19.44%   
   
5.    31-40%    11.11%   
   
6.    41-50%    0.00%   
   
7.    100%    1.39%   
   
Key Facts

    * 50% chose the following options :
          o 11-20%
          o 1-10%

What’s the retail value of merchandise you’re purchasing each week?
   
1.    Less than $10    13.04%   
   
2.    $10-25    31.88%   
   
3.    $25-50    27.54%   
   
4.    $50-75    14.49%   
   
5.    $75-100    5.80%   
   
6.    $100-150    2.90%   
   
7.    over $150    1.45%   
   
8.    No idea, I download everything    2.90%   
   

Key Facts

    * 59.42% chose the following options :
          o $10-25
          o $25-50

    * Least chosen option 1.45%: over $150

We’ll let the survey run a bit longer while we draw some conclusions. So please, if you haven’t already done so, take a minute and
click here to take the survey
.

And the comic, a pure example of synchronicity in action, was brought to us by John Lustig at Last Kiss Comics. Go over and tell him we said hi.

dollhouse-cast-photo-whedon-4437903

Dollhouse renewed amid Hulu audience size controversy

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First, the good news: Joss Whedon’s Dollhouse has been renewed:

The show will return for 13 episodes, with an option for more episodes
if required.  Return is seen likely for Fall.  The show budget has been
slashed, however the show is moving from 50 minutes per episode to 42
minutes per ep, which should help bring down some production costs. 
The move will also mark a shift in creative direction of the show.

Now, why was it renewed? The story is that the Fox execs were comparing Dollhouse to Firefly in terms of TV ratings
(i.e. pretty bad), but also took into account that Firefly sold a truckload of DVDs and turned into a movie that made
an okay profit, and apparently predict a similar trajectory for
Dollhouse.

But I suspect Fox is looking at other info, to wit, the numbers on Hulu. Nielsen claims that Hulu had 8.9 million unique visitors in March, but comScore estimated a drastically higher 42 million. The folks at Hulu aren’t making specific claims, but according to the New York Times, it’s unhappy with the Nielsen numbers. Fox, being a TV network, already knows how shoddy Nielsen numbers can be, and certainly has accurate numbers internally from Hulu, as Fox owns a large percentage of the company. So they know things that mere mortals don’t.

This also suggests why Fox is holding off on episode 13, “Epitath One”. They’re certainly holding it for the DVD to goose sales, but they may even hold it for Hulu just to prove a point to Nielsen.

Hat tip: Obsessable.