4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
#201
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I've been taking a break from animation to finish that Buck Rogers in the 25th Century S1 set I picked up a few weeks back (just watched a *horrible* "disco" episode) and Django Unchained a friend loaned me (very good overall). After the last 2 eps. of Buck Rogers... I think I'll finish off that Popeye V1 set since I'm on the last disk.
I finished Danger Mouse yesterday AM. I'd only seen a few eps. on TV *years* back and picked up the set a couple of years back as a mostly blind buy. I really enjoyed it. Good spy spoof stuff with lots and lots of puns mixed in with dry British humor. My grandson came in while I was on the *last* disk and said "I didn't know you had Danger Mouse! We need to do a marathon and watch the entire series!" He couldn't have come in a few days earlier when I was on the 2nd disk, eh?
It didn't register that the voice of Danger Mouse is David Jason (Del Boy on Only Fools and Horses and a few other popular British series) until I finished the series. Then I discover he also voices Count Duckula.
I finished Danger Mouse yesterday AM. I'd only seen a few eps. on TV *years* back and picked up the set a couple of years back as a mostly blind buy. I really enjoyed it. Good spy spoof stuff with lots and lots of puns mixed in with dry British humor. My grandson came in while I was on the *last* disk and said "I didn't know you had Danger Mouse! We need to do a marathon and watch the entire series!" He couldn't have come in a few days earlier when I was on the 2nd disk, eh?

It didn't register that the voice of Danger Mouse is David Jason (Del Boy on Only Fools and Horses and a few other popular British series) until I finished the series. Then I discover he also voices Count Duckula.
#202
DVD Talk Special Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
Just watched Waking Life by Richard Linkletter.
Whoa. I don't even know what to say. 25 minutes in I thought I was not going to able to finish watching this. But now, do I view the world differently? Yes. I think I do.
Whoa. I don't even know what to say. 25 minutes in I thought I was not going to able to finish watching this. But now, do I view the world differently? Yes. I think I do.
#203
DVD Talk Special Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I finished Danger Mouse yesterday AM. I'd only seen a few eps. on TV *years* back and picked up the set a couple of years back as a mostly blind buy. I really enjoyed it. Good spy spoof stuff with lots and lots of puns mixed in with dry British humor. My grandson came in while I was on the *last* disk and said "I didn't know you had Danger Mouse! We need to do a marathon and watch the entire series!" He couldn't have come in a few days earlier when I was on the 2nd disk, eh? 

I finished up Sealab 2021, and the last two seasons were not as bad as I remember. In the third season, the death of Harry Goz obliged the creators to replace Captain Murphy with Captain Tornado Shanks. Unfortunately, Murphy was the catalyst for most of the episodes and Shanks is not used in that capacity. Thus, many of the later episodes are rudderless and meander. The best episodes of the last few seasons feature Shanks taking on the Murphy role, such as "Let 'Em Eat Corn" in which Shanks' antics cause Sealab to split into multiple, dueling nations and "Neptunati" in which Shanks secret life gives the denizens of Sealab an all-powerful trident.
While some of the episodes are not as funny as I once thought ("Vacation" had younger me rolling with laughter and older me sitting in silence), most hold up quite well.
#204
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
Yesterday, I re-watched The Lion King, the first time on Blu-ray. From my Letterboxd diary:
***SPOILER ALERT FOR ANYONE READING EMAIL***
The Lion King
-X- Disney
-X- Watch 2 films from Filmspotting Top 100 Animated Films
-X- Watch 2 Annie Awards Best Animated Feature winners
-X- 1990 (1994)
-X- Watch an animated movie that spawned a TV spin-off OR an animated movie that was based on an animated TV show
-X- G
I'm not really sure offhand what genre(s) it is.
***SPOILER ALERT FOR ANYONE READING EMAIL***
Spoiler:
The Lion King
-X- Disney
-X- Watch 2 films from Filmspotting Top 100 Animated Films
-X- Watch 2 Annie Awards Best Animated Feature winners
-X- 1990 (1994)
-X- Watch an animated movie that spawned a TV spin-off OR an animated movie that was based on an animated TV show
-X- G
I'm not really sure offhand what genre(s) it is.
#205
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I’ve had a VHS copy of STARCHASER: THE LEGEND OF ORIN (1985) in my collection since the 1990s and I finally watched it for this. It’s quite a spectacular animated space sci-fi adventure and I was surprised to learn it had a $15 million budget and was originally shot and released in 3-D! It’s a U.S.-Korean co-production and it compares very well with anime space sci-fi movies from that period. The animation is very fluid and the backgrounds quite detailed. I understand that a lot of rotoscoping was involved.


It takes place a few thousand years in the future when humans are oppressed by robot masters and forced to work the mines miles below ground without even knowing what’s on the surface. One young man, Orin, finds a sword hilt which transmits a message from an elder from 1200 years ago and he escapes to go find the blade which goes with the hilt, which gives powers that only he can use. On the surface, he connects with a human smuggler named Dagg who teaches him how to negotiate his way through a cutthroat universe occupied by all manner of alien riffraff, occasional pockets of humans and a powerful robot force.
It got some theatrical release in the U.S. in 1985, but I don’t remember it playing in New York at all. I would love to have seen this on the big screen, at least in 2-D. My VHS copy is pan-and-scan, so when I learned that a DVD copy is still in print and available on Amazon (one copy left in stock), I ordered it.
Watching this reminded me that I still haven’t seen either HEAVY METAL or HEAVY METAL 2000, both of which I own (one on DVD and one on VHS). Hopefully, I can get to those for this challenge.


It takes place a few thousand years in the future when humans are oppressed by robot masters and forced to work the mines miles below ground without even knowing what’s on the surface. One young man, Orin, finds a sword hilt which transmits a message from an elder from 1200 years ago and he escapes to go find the blade which goes with the hilt, which gives powers that only he can use. On the surface, he connects with a human smuggler named Dagg who teaches him how to negotiate his way through a cutthroat universe occupied by all manner of alien riffraff, occasional pockets of humans and a powerful robot force.
It got some theatrical release in the U.S. in 1985, but I don’t remember it playing in New York at all. I would love to have seen this on the big screen, at least in 2-D. My VHS copy is pan-and-scan, so when I learned that a DVD copy is still in print and available on Amazon (one copy left in stock), I ordered it.
Watching this reminded me that I still haven’t seen either HEAVY METAL or HEAVY METAL 2000, both of which I own (one on DVD and one on VHS). Hopefully, I can get to those for this challenge.
#206
DVD Talk Platinum Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I've slowed down my watching a bit, but have caught one or two here and there. Been watching "Alf: The Animated Adventures." I bought a disc of them somewhere cheap and just now watching them. They haven't held up. They are pretty bad and not in a good way. I remember liking them a lot when I originally watched it. Oh well.
#207
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I've slowed down my watching a bit, but have caught one or two here and there. Been watching "Alf: The Animated Adventures." I bought a disc of them somewhere cheap and just now watching them. They haven't held up. They are pretty bad and not in a good way. I remember liking them a lot when I originally watched it. Oh well.
#208
DVD Talk Platinum Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
The show starts with a 2-3 min. blurb with the puppet ALF and then goes into the show. I don't know, I just feel it's not funny? good? anymore. Your way of not revisiting may have been the wiser choice!
#209
Thread Starter
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
Maybe that's why I'm having trouble getting into the challenge this year. Realizing that a lot of my childhood cartoons didn't hold up over time.
#210
DVD Talk Special Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
Yesterday, I re-watched The Lion King, the first time on Blu-ray. From my Letterboxd diary:
***SPOILER ALERT FOR ANYONE READING EMAIL***
The Lion King
-X- Disney
-X- Watch 2 films from Filmspotting Top 100 Animated Films
-X- Watch 2 Annie Awards Best Animated Feature winners
-X- 1990 (1994)
-X- Watch an animated movie that spawned a TV spin-off OR an animated movie that was based on an animated TV show
-X- G
I'm not really sure offhand what genre(s) it is.
***SPOILER ALERT FOR ANYONE READING EMAIL***
The Lion King
-X- Disney
-X- Watch 2 films from Filmspotting Top 100 Animated Films
-X- Watch 2 Annie Awards Best Animated Feature winners
-X- 1990 (1994)
-X- Watch an animated movie that spawned a TV spin-off OR an animated movie that was based on an animated TV show
-X- G
I'm not really sure offhand what genre(s) it is.
I’ve had a VHS copy of STARCHASER: THE LEGEND OF ORIN (1985) in my collection since the 1990s and I finally watched it for this. It’s quite a spectacular animated space sci-fi adventure and I was surprised to learn it had a $15 million budget and was originally shot and released in 3-D! It’s a U.S.-Korean co-production and it compares very well with anime space sci-fi movies from that period. The animation is very fluid and the backgrounds quite detailed. I understand that a lot of rotoscoping was involved.
#211
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
There's also all the great claymation and/or stop-motion shows - Postman Pat, Charlie Chalk, Bertha, MORPH - and things like The Magic Roundabout, which while obviously French originally took on a whole new life thanks to Eric Thompson. Bagpuss and The Clangers are before my time but very popular stop-motion shows, too.

Yesterday, I re-watched The Lion King, the first time on Blu-ray... I didn't realize that Rowan Atkinson was the voice of Zazu until I noticed his name in the end credits today. I've seen the movie probably a dozen times or more, mostly back in the VHS era, but I was oblivious to that.

I'm always happy when my childhood favorites DO hold up - and almost all of them do. I assume there's no conclusion to be drawn from that regarding UK and US shows, despite the above (perhaps slightly spurious!) claim...
#212
DVD Talk Platinum Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I don't know. I've had a few where they're not quite as good as I remember, but didn't disappoint me. Most have held up quite well. I still love me some "Gummi Bears!" And I still watch the "Smurfs."
#213
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
Last night, I revisited The Lion King II: Simba's Pride. It did not go well. From my Letterboxd diary:
The Lion King II: Simba's Pride
-X- Disney
-X- Watch 2 films from The Animated Movie Guide: Top 60 Animated Features Never Theatrically Released in the United States
-X- 1990 (1998)
-X- G
Spoiler:
The Lion King II: Simba's Pride
-X- Disney
-X- Watch 2 films from The Animated Movie Guide: Top 60 Animated Features Never Theatrically Released in the United States
-X- 1990 (1998)
-X- G
#214
DVD Talk Special Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I've slowed down my watching a bit, but have caught one or two here and there. Been watching "Alf: The Animated Adventures." I bought a disc of them somewhere cheap and just now watching them. They haven't held up. They are pretty bad and not in a good way. I remember liking them a lot when I originally watched it. Oh well.
#215
DVD Talk Limited Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
Watched Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker last night and I continue to be amazed at how awesome this film is. Seriously, before The Dark Knight was released ROTJ was my favorite Batman film (just slightly edging out Mask of the Phantasm. I think one of the reasons why ROTJ works is because you really get a sense of just how evil The Joker really is. The character walks a very thin line between goofy and sociopath and many times he leans more toward goofy. In ROTJ you see the sociopath side with what happens to Tim Drake and Mark Hamill as always nails the voice acting.
I'm going to take a step back and revisit Sub Zero which I haven't seen in quite some time. I wasn't fond of it the first time I saw it but maybe my opinion will change. After that, it's more Clone Wars and then off to The Boondocks!
I'm going to take a step back and revisit Sub Zero which I haven't seen in quite some time. I wasn't fond of it the first time I saw it but maybe my opinion will change. After that, it's more Clone Wars and then off to The Boondocks!
#216
Thread Starter
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I don't know if ALF was a man in a costume or was a puppet, if a puppet, I'd say yes.
#217
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I think one of the reasons why ROTJ works is because you really get a sense of just how evil The Joker really is. The character walks a very thin line between goofy and sociopath and many times he leans more toward goofy. In ROTJ you see the sociopath side with what happens to Tim Drake and Mark Hamill as always nails the voice acting.
I'm going to take a step back and revisit Sub Zero which I haven't seen in quite some time. I wasn't fond of it the first time I saw it but maybe my opinion will change.
After that, it's more Clone Wars and then off to The Boondocks!
Which reminds me, in case anyone cares, I'm on Facebook here.
#218
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
#219
Moderator
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
I’ve had a VHS copy of STARCHASER: THE LEGEND OF ORIN (1985) in my collection since the 1990s and I finally watched it for this. It’s quite a spectacular animated space sci-fi adventure and I was surprised to learn it had a $15 million budget and was originally shot and released in 3-D! It’s a U.S.-Korean co-production and it compares very well with anime space sci-fi movies from that period. The animation is very fluid and the backgrounds quite detailed. I understand that a lot of rotoscoping was involved.


It takes place a few thousand years in the future when humans are oppressed by robot masters and forced to work the mines miles below ground without even knowing what’s on the surface. One young man, Orin, finds a sword hilt which transmits a message from an elder from 1200 years ago and he escapes to go find the blade which goes with the hilt, which gives powers that only he can use. On the surface, he connects with a human smuggler named Dagg who teaches him how to negotiate his way through a cutthroat universe occupied by all manner of alien riffraff, occasional pockets of humans and a powerful robot force.
It got some theatrical release in the U.S. in 1985, but I don’t remember it playing in New York at all. I would love to have seen this on the big screen, at least in 2-D. My VHS copy is pan-and-scan, so when I learned that a DVD copy is still in print and available on Amazon (one copy left in stock), I ordered it.
Watching this reminded me that I still haven’t seen either HEAVY METAL or HEAVY METAL 2000, both of which I own (one on DVD and one on VHS). Hopefully, I can get to those for this challenge.


It takes place a few thousand years in the future when humans are oppressed by robot masters and forced to work the mines miles below ground without even knowing what’s on the surface. One young man, Orin, finds a sword hilt which transmits a message from an elder from 1200 years ago and he escapes to go find the blade which goes with the hilt, which gives powers that only he can use. On the surface, he connects with a human smuggler named Dagg who teaches him how to negotiate his way through a cutthroat universe occupied by all manner of alien riffraff, occasional pockets of humans and a powerful robot force.
It got some theatrical release in the U.S. in 1985, but I don’t remember it playing in New York at all. I would love to have seen this on the big screen, at least in 2-D. My VHS copy is pan-and-scan, so when I learned that a DVD copy is still in print and available on Amazon (one copy left in stock), I ordered it.
Watching this reminded me that I still haven’t seen either HEAVY METAL or HEAVY METAL 2000, both of which I own (one on DVD and one on VHS). Hopefully, I can get to those for this challenge.
#220
#221
Moderator
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread

I saw 'The Last Unicorn' yesterday at the AFI Silver and even though seeing it a second time, I've grown to like this movie even more. It was the icing on the cake to meet and greet with the author/screenwriter Peter S. Beagle and the post film Q&A was equally illuminating. Obviously the animation is from the same folk who did the Rankin/Bass animated 'The Hobbit'/'The Return of the King' and it's rather hard not to sing 'Frodo and the Nine Fingers' or 'The Greatest Adventure' but America singing the songs seem completely right.
#222
DVD Talk Limited Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
Hmm...I have The Boondocks The Complete First Season in my watched-but-unlogged list. If it interests you, I'd be game for syncing up and watching along with you. LJG765 and I just finished our tour through Captain Kirk's Five Year Mission (TOS and TAS) that way and it was a lot of fun. We watched our respective discs while chatting via Facebook about each episode.
Which reminds me, in case anyone cares, I'm on Facebook here.
Which reminds me, in case anyone cares, I'm on Facebook here.
#223
Moderator
#224
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread
My/our objective was simply to tour Captain Kirk's adventures. We've still got the original six movies to go, but I think we're going to let this breathe for just a bit first.
#225
DVD Talk Special Edition
Re: 4th Annual August Animation Challenge - Discussion Thread

Now, some of my friends smirk when I talk about my love for ThunderCats and He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, but I stand by those shows. They are awesome. Has anyone seen the remake of ThunderCats? Is it worth checking out?



