Showing posts with label Underdog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Underdog. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Animation Congregation: More Animated Themes, Dreams and Schemes!



Redartz: Hey, last week was a lot of fun- there's a lot of love out there for Saturday mornings (and after school, and evenings; anytime animation is available). I'm gobsmacked by the response you all had (picture me as Wile E Coyote getting clobbered by an ACME Anvil). So, to slake your thirst for more cartoonish capers, here is one more heaping helping of memory prompters. Some were inspired by your comments last week. Others, I just tried to mine a few more obscure clips. And to start us off, here's a few of those Saturday morning preview ads so prominently featured in the comics. They always appeared in late summer comics, so the anticipation they prompted for the new fall season helped take the sting out of the impending return of school...








Next up, before we hit the toons, here's a couple of fondly remembered Public Service-type spots that were common throughout  the 70's and 80's. Bet you still know the lyrics...

Schoolhouse Rock: Conjunction Junction


Time for Timer



And now, let's settle back and feast our eyes upon some more cartoons. How many do you remember?

Thundarr the Barbarian (1980)




Jabberjaw (1977)



Return to the Planet of the Apes (1976)



Where's Huddles (1970)


The Jackson Five (1971)



Groovie Ghoulies (1970)



Star Trek (1974)


Roger Ramjet (1965)


Underdog (1964)


Super Friends (1973)


The  Mighty Heroes (1966)


Smurfs (1981)



Wait 'Till Your Father Gets Home (1972)



Well, that about does it. We'd better turn off the set and get busy before we're told to "turn that off and go play outside". Hope you enjoyed another dose of classic animation; next week we'll be looking at some comics art. So until then, keep sharing those thoughts, and be well!

Friday, August 18, 2017

Animation Congregation: Underdog!




 Redartz:  Thinking back to my childhood, the first superhero I loved wasn't Spider-Man. It wasn't Superman, Batman, or anyone else you might suspect. It was a short, long-eared dog with a cape: yes, Underdog. Produced by Total Television/ Gamma Studios ( who also brought us Tennessee Tuxedo and King Leonardo), Underdog ran from 1964 through 1973, and lives on forever on cable and dvd.  The show also featured shorts with the Go Go Gophers (Native American rodents pursued by the Feds), Commander McBragg (a storyteller who manages to show up at every moment in recent history), and numerous other characters. But for me, the attraction was always the heroic hound.

Underdog presented the adventures of  humble, loveable "Shoeshine Boy"(memorably voiced by Wally Cox), a modest dog who, when threats arise, assumes his secret identity of "Underdog" (complete with red union suit and blue cape). His superpowers, rather vast and varied (rather like Superman), arise once he opens a compartment in his ring and swallows his "energy pill" (about which more in a moment). He then transforms, in a burst of brilliance, to the mighty Underdog. 


 
Also like the Man of Steel, Underdog has a friend / romantic interest in a female reporter, in the person (dog?) of "Sweet Polly Purebred". Sweet Polly, like a certain Lois Lane, often ends up in peril or  in captivity, requiring rescue from her perennially rhyming hero (Underdog has a tendency to speak in verse, as in "When trouble is near I am not slow, so hip hip hip and away I go!"). 

 










 
And again, like Superman, Underdog has a rogue's gallery of vile foes (as of course every hero should). Most notable among them were Simon Bar Sinister (absolutely LOVE that name), a mad scientist type who constantly tries to destroy Underdog, Sweet Polly, the earth, or any combination thereof. Oh, and like his foe Underdog, Simon has a fondness for wordplay. In his case, whenever he is activating one of his nefarious devices, he prefaces it with "Simon Says...". For instance, "Simon says, go snow" when he was utilizing a freeze ray turning everyone into snowmen. All great stuff for a kid just discovering cartoons, heroes, villains, and all the accompanying tropes!









 Underdog's other frequent foe was Riff Raff. A kind of wolf/person/hoodlum, Riff Raff was the embodiment of all the old mobster movies rolled into one. Usually armed with a Tommy Gun, Riff Raff knocked off banks, armored cars, etc. with flair and a pinstriped suit. And something about Riff Raff vaguely scared me as a little tyke...













Finally, what superhero show could succeed without a cool theme song? And Underdog's was one of the coolest. Actually, the whole show was pretty cool. It always seemed to have an undercurrent of impending doom; even the narrator at the show's closing contributed to that sense of threat: "Looks like this is the end...". It sure kept me coming back every week. 


Oh, about the ring: it seems showing your lead character popping a pill to gain energy every week eventually troubled the tv watchdog groups. Later broadcasts edited out the pill. Not surprising, really. I always wanted a ring with secret power pill compartment as a kid. Never got it; never got a Green Lantern power ring either. Oh well...




You Might Also Like --

Here are some related posts: