Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars!

(Redirected from Bucky O'Hare (TV series))

Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars! (also known as Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Menace in Canada and Bucky O'Hare in the United Kingdom) is an animated series created by Sunbow Productions, Abrams/Gentile Entertainment, Continuity Comics and the French company IDDH, co-produced by Marvel Productions and distributed by Hasbro's subsidiary Claster Television.[1] It was based on the cult comic Bucky O'Hare,[2] and animated by AKOM.[3] It debuted in 1991 in the United States, and 1992 on in the UK on the BBC.[4] The show was made with the intention of promoting the new Bucky O'Hare themed toy line. When plans for that fell through, the series was abruptly cancelled after only 13 episodes.

Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars!
GenreAction-adventure
Based on
Bucky O'Hare
by
Developed byRoger Slifer
Directed byKaren Peterson
StarringJason Michas
Shane Meier
Long John Baldry
Richard Newman
Terry Klassen
Scott McNeil
Dale Wilson
Margot Pinvidic
Sam Khouth
Jay Brazeau
Garry Chalk
Opening themeDoug Katsaros
Country of originUnited States
France
No. of episodes13
Production
Running time30 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Networkfirst-run syndication (U.S.)
ReleaseSeptember 8 (1991-09-08) –
December 1, 1991 (1991-12-01)

Cast [5]

Long John Baldry as Komplex, Pit Stop Pete

Jay Brazeau as Toad Air Marshall, Secretary General, Mentor, Rumble Bee

Gary Chalk as Commander Dogstar, Al Negator, Quentin, MC, Major Bottlenose, Dan,  Blackbeak, Kamikaze Kamo, General Baboon, Total Terror Toad, Digger McSquint, Wolf, Tri-Bot #1

Doc Harris as Toad TV, Harman, Fake Pirate

Simon Kendall as Security Toad #3, Bridge Toad #1

Sam Khouth as A.F.C. Blinky, Frix, Doug, Jeff, Croakley, Tri-Bot #3

Terry Klassen as Rat Produce Merchant, Scarbill, The Newt, Toad Crew Member

Scott McNeil as Dead-Eye Duck, Frax, David, Tinker,  Larry, Wartimer, Dexter, Mostly-Mouth Robot-A, Grebb, Sly Lee-Zard, False Bucky

Shane Meier as Willy DuWitt

Jason Michas as Bucky O'Hare

Richard Newman as Toadborg, Wolf, Mostly-Mouth Robot-B, Tri-Bot #2

Pauline Newstone as Lanelle

Doug Parker as Andy Phibian, Bruiser’s Mother

David Steele as Toad-Mammal, Toad Cowboy

Margot Pinvidic as Jenny, Verruca, Sunshine, Mother Aldebaran, Mimi LaFloo, Aunt Iris, Susie, Roona, Toadanne, Felicia, High Artificer, T.J.

Dale Wilson as Bruiser, Bruce, Guardroid, Announcer, Captain Smada, Bob, Hopkins, Redjack, Samurai Commander, Rumble Bee

Differences from the comics

edit

Most of the ideas from the comic book were used for the cartoon, with several major differences. The parallel universe the story takes place in is named the "Aniverse". Willy DuWitt can travel freely between Earth and the Aniverse instead of being stranded there. Bruce is transported into another dimension instead of killed. The Toad Empire are willingly following KOMPLEX instead of brainwashed. Deadeye has a Southern accent instead of a Scottish accent. The nigh-omnipotent mouse is nowhere to be seen. Jenny reveals her psionic powers to Willy DuWitt. The cartoon explored more of the Aniverse and followed a loose unifying arc, with Bucky's home planet of Warren being captured by the toads in the season premiere and liberated in the finale (which was co-written by Neal Adams).

Characters

edit

Bucky and his crew are members of the S.P.A.C.E. organization, which stands for Sentient Protoplasm Against Colonial Encroachment.

  • Bucky O'Hare (Jason Michas) – a green hare, captains a S.P.A.C.E. frigate named The Righteous Indignation. His crew consists of:
  • Jenny (Margot Pinvidic) – first mate and pilot, a cat from the planet Aldebaran with mysterious magical and psionic powers common to the females of her species. They include telepathy, astral projection, energy blasts, and healing. Because of the sacred precepts of Alderbaran, she keeps these powers secret from the other members of the crew, with the exception of Willy, for whom she has overt Maternal affections.[6][7]
  • Bruce (Dale Wilson) – Bruiser's older brother, a Betelgeusian Berserker Baboon who served as the Righteous Indignation's engineer. He vanished into another dimension when the ship's photon accelerator malfunctioned during battle.
  • Willy DuWitt (Shane Meier) – engineer, a pre-teen human from San Francisco who enters the Aniverse via a portal between the ship's photon accelerator and his own accelerator at home. He replaced Bruce, the former engineer, who was killed (or in the franchise's terms, had "attained oneness with the Aniverse"). Later, Willy became stranded in the Aniverse when his parents turned off the photon accelerator back in his room. Bucky and his crew decide to keep Willy a secret from the S.P.A.C.E organization and the Toads.
  • Dead-Eye Duck (Scott McNeil) – gunner, a four-armed former space pirate duck from Kanopis III. He is missing an eye, and is impatient and violent, preferring to let his four laser pistols do the talking for him. Unlike the comics where he has a Scottish accent, he has an American accent.
  • AFC Blinky (Sam Khouth) – an advanced AFC ("Android" First Class). It has only one eye and uses the phrase "Calamity and woe!" to identify problem situations for Bucky and his crew-mates.

The members of the Toad Empire introduced are as follows:

  • KOMPLEX (Long John Baldry) – the undisputed ruler of the Toad Empire. This computer program was designed to run the consumerist toad culture but instead took it over and militarized it. Its name, in toad language, is an anagram for 'Feed me'.
  • Toad Air Marshall (Jay Brazeau) – one of KOMPLEX's foremost commanders, with a uniform adorned with medals and a face covered in warts.
  • Toad Borg (Richard Newman) – a large, purple cyborg second-in-command under KOMPLEX.
  • Storm Toads – the mindless toad soldiers who serve as the primary attack force for the Empire.

Characters only in the animated series

edit

Almost all the characters listed above are both from the comic book and the cartoon. Most of the new ones that were introduced are listed below.

  • Bruiser (Dale Wilson) – Bruce's younger brother, a Betelgeusian Berserker Baboon who joins Bucky's team as space marine on the Righteous Indignation. He, like all berserker baboons, scares the toads out of their wits and loves to beat them up. He is dimwitted but well-meaning, and has great respect for Willy.
  • Commander Dogstar (Garry Chalk) – Bucky's ally, captain of The Indefatigable, another frigate fighting against the toads.
  • Mimi LaFloo (Margot Pinvidic) – a fox (so to speak) originally a captive of the toads, Mimi is rescued by Bucky and goes on to command her own mammal frigate, The Screaming Mimi.
  • Frix and Frax – the Air Marshal's two bumbling subordinates, voiced by Terry Klassen and Scott McNeil respectively.
  • Al Negator (Garry Chalk) – a sleazasaur (bipedal crocodile) spy and mercenary frequently hired by the Air Marshal, though he is always demanding large payments in Simoleans (the Aniverse's currency) for his services. He dresses and speaks in a manner consistent to the cajun people.

Episode list

edit
Title Written by Original air date PC
1"War of the Warts (Part 1)"Christy MarxSeptember 8, 1991 (1991-09-08)101
Bucky O'Hare and the Righteous Indignation crew learn that the Toad Empire has taken over his homeworld Warren, and must travel there to investigate. Meanwhile, an Earth boy named Willy DeWitt enters Bucky's universe using an experimental device.
2"A Fistful of Simoleans (Part 2)"Christy MarxSeptember 15, 1991 (1991-09-15)102
Willy join Bucky's crew to Planet Warren where they find information relating to the world's recent climate change. The cause is revealed to be a new weapon called the Climate Converter. Meanwhile, a spy is hired by the Toad Empire to gain access through the Aniverse capital, Planet Genus.
3"The Good, the Bad and the Warty (Part 3)"Christy MarxSeptember 22, 1991 (1991-09-22)103
It's a race against time as the Righteous Indignation crew infiltrate a Toad Mothership to retrieve Planet Genus's access codes. The only things standing in their way are gun-for-hire Al Negator and the deadly Toadborg.
4"Home, Swampy Home"Christy MarxSeptember 29, 1991 (1991-09-29)104
After getting himself captured and then rescued by the Toads, Bucky plans to infiltrate a slave colony that is currently building a new Climate Converter.
5"On the Blink"George Arthur BloomOctober 6, 1991 (1991-10-06)105
The Toad Empire has taken control of a koala homeworld and has installed a defense system that prevents any mammalian access. It's up to the android Blinky to sneak onto the planet and shut it down.
6"Kreation Konspiracy"Martin PaskoOctober 13, 1991 (1991-10-13)106
Rumor has it that a powerful device is located in a barren planet and Bucky's crew must intercept it before the Toads do. Meanwhile, Blinky is kidnapped by three elder toads, who may have a connection with the Empire's leader, KOMPLEX.
7"The Komplex Caper"Doug MoenchOctober 20, 1991 (1991-10-20)107
KOMPLEX uses the power of Toad TV to control the mammalian population. Bucky must travel to the Toad Homeworld to shut down the transmission and, with any luck, KOMPLEX himself...
8"The Search for Bruce"Rick MerwinOctober 27, 1991 (1991-10-27)108
Brusier's brother, the former R.I. engineer Bruce, has returned in a spectral form but definitely alive. Meanwhile, the Toad Empire creates a new invention to teleport squads to anywhere in the Aniverse.
9"Corsair Canards"Christy MarxNovember 3, 1991 (1991-11-03)109
A treaty between the UAC Security Council and Dead-Eye's former pirate mates is about to be finalized, but a small group of pirates' recent plunders is on the verge of endangering the treaty's process.
10"The Artificers of Aldebaran"Christy Marx,
Bridget McKenna
November 10, 1991 (1991-11-10)110
Jenny's pupil, Princess Felicia, is abducted by Toadborg and it's up to her and Willy to save her. The source of power that the cybernetic villain is after may spell doom for Jenny's homeworld, Planet Aldebaran, and possibly the entire Aniverse.
11"The Warriors"George Arthur BloomNovember 17, 1991 (1991-11-17)111
The Toad Air Marshal is kicked out of his army after his most recent failure at the hands of Bucky O'Hare. To regain his status, he joins a samurai lizard, who is plotting to take over a nearby planet: Kanopis III, Dead-Eye's homeworld.
12"Bye Bye Berserker Baboon"Roger SliferNovember 24, 1991 (1991-11-24)112
The Toads invade the homeworld of Bruiser and his fellow Beetlegeusian Baboons, using special goggles to prevent their fear of their most terrifying foes. Bucky and crew fight back and soon encounter the empire's secret weapon: the unstoppable Terror Toad.
13"The Taking of Pilot Jenny"Neal Adams,
Peter Stone
December 1, 1991 (1991-12-01)113
Jenny has been captured by the toads. Toadborg is ordering a trade for a recently relinquished Climate Converter, unaware of Bucky's true objective.

Home media releases

edit

Sometime after its initial television airing, Family Home Entertainment released all thirteen episodes of the show on six VHS cassettes in North America. In the United Kingdom, BBC Video released twelve out of the thirteen episodes across six VHS tapes, then Metrodome Entertainment released all thirteen episodes on a Region 2 DVD set, as well as a single volume DVD, both of which are now out of print.

References

edit
  1. ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 97. ISBN 978-1538103739.
  2. ^ Kogan, Rick (5 January 1992). "Getting into Bucky O'Hare". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
  3. ^ "Bucky O'Hare - Closing Theme". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. AKOM Production Co. at :29, IDDH at :33, Marvel Productions is at :37-:40 Sunbow at :56.
  4. ^ Phil De Semlyen; Ali Plumb; Helen O'hara; James Dyer (9 October 2015). "Classic Kids' TV Shows That Still Rock Our World, Feature | Movies - Empire". Empireonline.com. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  5. ^ Long John Baldry Appreciation Page (26 October 2023). Long John Baldry in 'Bucky O'Hare'. Retrieved 19 September 2024 – via YouTube.
  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 31 March 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 3 July 2016. Retrieved 21 October 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
edit