Quantcast
Channel: Dan Alexander Dizmentia
Viewing all 166 articles
Browse latest View live

Turbo, The Live Action Snail Mascot For Go Go Escargot Fast Food Restaurants In France

$
0
0

Bonjour!  The 2013 DreamWorks animated film "Turbo" stars Ryan Reynolds as a snail racing in the Indianapolis 500.  The Turbo F.A.S.T. series on Netflix was just the start of the snail's quest for world domination.

Today, Chanson Pourlespetitsenfan, the CEO of Go Go Escargot Restaurants (the fastest growing restaurant chain in France) has announced that Turbo will become the official mascot of the snail-based fast food empire.  Chanson says, "We encourage children to play with their food, so Turbo is the perfect fit.  Also, the character works well with our slogan."

That slogan just happens to be "Slow Food---Fast!"

New live action commercials will star a trained garden snail playing Turbo.  The snail will be fed peanut butter to stimulate the mouth movement, and Ryan Reynolds will add the voice later.  The new ads, directed by Michael Bay, will be filmed all over the world as part of the new ad campaign for Go Go Escargot.

Or I was inspired to make all that up when I found this 1999 STP fuel injector cleaner snail ad in an old magazine, and it reminded me of Turbo.

That Guy Will Be The Next Food Network Star

$
0
0

Some guys always stand out in the crowd.  Especially if their name is "Guy."

I was looking through an April 7, 2006 issue of Entertainment Weekly Magazine and discovered a very interesting ad for The Next Food Network Star.  It really looks like Guy Fieri (who clearly dominated that photo session) is the star of the show, and he ended up winning the competition.

Guy then went on to star in Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, and Guy's Big Bite, and Rachael vs. Guy, and Rachael vs. Guy: Kids Cook-Off, and Guy's Grocery Games on Food Network.  And he usually has seasonal TV specials on Food Network.  He also hosted NBC's game show, Minute to Win It.

Of course, he also has merchandise and restaurants everywhere, including Guy's Burger Joint on Carnival Cruises.



I would like to pitch a new "Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs" type storybook and animated film called Winner, Winner Chicken Dinner of Flavortown (a mixture of Guy's catchphrases).  I've even made concept art of the title character.

As far as I know, Guy is the only winner of The Next Food Network Star to become this successful.  (Comedian Bobby Moynihan frequently impersonates Fieri on Saturday Night Live).

Food Network is currently celebrating their 20th Anniversary.  I started watching within the last few years and it is one of my favorite channels, boasting some incredibly creative shows that are fun to watch even if (like me) you don't cook.  Some of my favorites include Halloween Wars, Aces of Cakes, Cupcake Wars, and Food Network Challenge (especially the Cake episodes, which often have episodes tied to popular film and TV properties.  Seriously, someone made a live-size cake replica of Big Bird from Sesame Street that looked exactly like the Muppet).

Disney's Lady And The Tramp Holiday Dog Treats For Humans

$
0
0

Most dogs would not think twice about eating garbage out of a trash can.  Lady and the Tramp prefer a nice spaghetti dinner.  These classy canines also enjoy fancy desserts.  They would like to share a couple of their favorite holiday recipes, which are intended for people.

Tramp wants the English Butter Toffee Bars.  The ingredients include 24 saltine squares with unsalted tops (say what?!?).  The Toffee Bars are also made with a package of semi-sweet chocolate morsels.  Sorry Tramp, they say you aren't supposed to eat that.


Lady and the Tramp was released on videocassette for the very first time in 1987 (I got it as a Christmas present).  Let's talk about how much this video was.  The suggested retail price was $29.95!

Lady wants to chat and gossip with her b*tches (in the doggy sense) and munch on Eggnog Cream Puffs.


This dessert also has chocolate.  If you try to take chocolate away from a Lady, you do risk getting your hand bitten off.

For more fun, check out Disney's Lady And The Tramp At McDonald's and Disney's Live Action Lady And The Tramp: The Real Life Reference Models.

Walt Disney World And The Christmas Moose

$
0
0

Melvin the Moose loves Christmas at Walt Disney World in Florida.  It is the one time of year that he is not just a disembodied head.

In the Country Bear Jamboree, Melvin is an animatronic Moose head mounted on the wall.  For Miss Minnie's Country Christmas, Melvin gets his Christmas wish granted: he gets a body!

Fans of Disney's One Saturday Morning on ABC may remember a very similar looking female character (without antlers) named Miss Moose.  She and Melvin should get together.

Vat vill ve get Moose and Squirrel---I mean Moose and Mouse---for Christmas?  Starring roles in a live show at Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom during the holidays.


This show played at the Diamond Horseshoe in Frontierland in the late 1990s, not far from The Country Bear Jamboree.  Melvin previously headlined the Melvin the Moose Breakfast Show (as a head on the wall) at Pioneer Hall in Fort Wilderness (Walt Disney World's camping resort) in the late 1980s (the show later became "Chip and Dale's Country Morning Jamboree).

Walt Disney World is also famous for having a team of reindeer at Christmas, too.


These goofy characters are a holiday favorite.  At Disneyland in California, the reindeer got a makeover years ago, and they don't look as silly (they look more like Bambi now).

For more fun, check out Walt Disney World and Disneyland Christmas Characters.

Seinfeld, The Animated Series

$
0
0

Did you know that some people never knew about the Seinfeld cartoon?  To quote Jerry Seinfeld, "Who Are these people?!?"

Cartoon Seinfeld characters first appeared in 1998, and were created by artist Glen Hanson (known for his work in illustration, comics, and animated shows like MTV's Spy Groove and a proposed TV series version of Disney's The AristoCats).


The Seinfeld animated series took viewers places that the live action show never could.  This included guest cameos by some very famous personalities, including Monica Lewinsky, who played "Gipple" in the episode The Double Date With Mulva and Gipple.

In Three Men and an Ugly Baby, Ted Danson and Bill Cosby guest star as Jerry's new neighbors, Bill and Ted.


Danson and Cosby also appeared in the episode Bill and Ted and Jerry's Excellent Adventure.

Kramer gets cloned in Kramer VS Kramer, and becomes a co-owner of a diner in Green Eggs and Pigman.

Kramer also becomes a Ninja in Kung Fu Fighting With Donna Chang.

Elaine continues to explore her writing and cartooning career by scripting a children's show in Spongebobworthy.


Jerry's postman nemesis ruins the holidays by sending everyone to jail (for mail fraud) in How The Newman Stole Festivus.

Kenny Rogers Roasters chicken restaurants had a special Bobble Head promotion to promote the Seinfeld cartoon.


The taxi cab display with all four Seinfeld bobble head figures is highly valued by collectors.

Of course I've made up most everything I've written here (there was NOT a Seinfeld Animated Series), but the content (totally out of context) could be found in a special issue of TV Guide in May of 1998.


This special Seinfeld issue of TV Guide featured covers by legendary illustrator Al Hirschfeld.

There were covers for Jerry, Elaine, George and Kramer.


Hirschfeld's work has been enjoyed and admired for decades, and even served as the inspiration for Disney's Aladdin and the Rhapsody in Blue segment of Fantasia 2000.

For more fun, check out NBC It! Seinfeld and Wings Kellogg's Cereal Prizes (which is real!!).

The Muppet Christmas Carol At Taco Bell

$
0
0

Many people have happy memories of collecting fast food toys.  I vividly remember getting this Muppet Christmas Carol ornament at Taco Bell in 1992 and thinking it was pretty sad.

At the time, Taco Bell was not known for having cool toys for kids.  I don't think there were any commercials for this promotion.


At least the artwork (with Kermit as Bob Cratchit, Robin as Tiny Tim, and the penguin carolers) is nicely done.

These ornaments are just two stickers and a blank plastic disc with a piece of string.  You have to put them together yourself.


A better set of fast food toys (finger puppets) for The Muppet Christmas Carol was released at Hardee's in 1993.  You can check them out at The Muppets And Pee-Wee Herman: The Great Big Christmas Caper Adventure.

A more impressive set of Muppet fast food toys that required assembly was Jim Henson's Muppet Workshop At McDonald's.

Happy Days With Mr. Cool And The Fonz

$
0
0

Before Family Guy, there was another animated TV series that featured a time-traveling talking dog and Donny Most and the Fonz.  Mr. Cool starred in Hanna Barbera's 1980 Saturday Morning cartoon, The Fonz and the Happy Days Gang.

Mr. Cool's character design always stood out to me, and I could not figure out why.  Then I learned about the way he was designed.  According to The Animation Anecdotes #101 by Jim Korkis on Cartoonresearch.com:

 In 1980, when Hanna-Barbera decided to develop an animated television series based on the popular “Happy Days” sitcom, they were faced with a problem. They needed a “cool” dog character to add to the cast but all the submissions they got from HB artist resembled previous HB dog stars like Scooby-Doo. As a joke, animator Scott Shaw! who was amused at the fact that no artist could come up with a truly different looking dog character, decided to use his vast knowledge of cartoons to create an outrageous character. He took the head of Wile E. Coyote and grafted it onto the body of Walt Kelly’s Pogo Possum and submitted it. The design was accepted and after some reworking it became Mr. Cool, the dog companion of the Fonz.

The Happy Days live action show, created by Garry Marshall, debuted in 1974.  Henry Winkler's cool Fonz quickly became the most popular character on the series.




The Fifties were big in the Seventies, and characters similar to the Fonz could be found all over TV.

Mandy Patinkin played a similar (though ghostly) character called Teen Angel in 7Up ads in 1970 (yes, before Happy Days!).  The Trix rabbit dressed up like "King Cool" in 1975.  A suave dude named "Rocky" sang in 1977 commercials for 5th Avenue candy bars (complete with swooning backup singers).  A Fifties motorcycle riding "Big Bully" tried to take cereal from kids in 1977 ads for Honeycomb Cereal.

Also in 1977, Hanna Barbera launched a Saturday Morning cartoon series called "Heyyy, It's the King!" which mixed Jungle Animals and Happy Days-type situations and characters.  The Fonz type character was represented by a lion, "The King."

Another very similar character called Chopper could be found in a famous nutritional Public Service Announcement (animated by DePatie Freleng) in the Eighties singing "Exercise Your Choppers" on ABC Saturday Mornings.

The Fonz could be found on all sorts of merchandise, including Halloween costumes, action figures, and comic books.


There was a small amount of merchandise created for the Hanna Barbera cartoon, including the puffy stickers that I have here (stickers were really a big deal in the 1980s).

Cupcake, a new character for the Hanna Barbera cartoon, was from the future and voiced by Didi Conn (Frenchy from 1978's Grease).



Jeff Conaway (Kenickie in Grease) appeared in an episode of the live action Happy Days.  Grease and Happy Days were both projects from Paramount Studios.

Ron Howard voiced Richie in the cartoon.  Donny Most was Ralph Malph.  Henry Winkler, of course, was the Fonz.  Mr. Cool was voiced by Frank Welker.  Potsie (Anson Williams) was not part of the Gang for some reason.




These days, you can find Henry Winkler and Ron Howard on Arrested Development.

Happy Days spin-off shows were also given the Hanna Barbera cartoon spin-off treatment.  Laverne and Shirley in the Army (complete with a cartoon pig sidekick, Sgt. Squealy) aired in 1981 and Mork and Mindy (with an alien dog sidekick) debuted in 1982.

These cartoon Garry Marshall shows were animated by Hanna Barbera's animation studio in Sydney, Australia.  When Hanna Barbera closed this studio, it morphed into Walt Disney Animation Australia (they produced many Disney Afternoon shows and films like The Lion King 2: Simba's Pride).  Then Disney closed the studio.

Interestingly, American animator Jon McClenahan (founder of StarToons Animation in Chicago, which worked on Tiny Toon Adventures and Animaniacs for Steven Spielberg and Warner Brothers) got his start on these Happy Days spin-off cartoons in Australia.  Check out this very informative interview with Jon McClenahan for some behind-the-scenes dirt.


The Hanna Barbera Happy Days cartoons are owned by Paramount (Warner Brothers owns nearly all the other Hanna Barbera shows), so we will probably never get to see The Fonz appear in any new cartoons with Jabberjaw the shark.

The Happy Days gang can currently be found in a stage show called Happy Days A New Musical.

Finding Nemo At McDonald's

$
0
0

Fish are friends, not food, even when they are found in McDonald's Happy Meals.

Nemo the clownfish is in good company with Ronald McDonald.


The eight Disney Pixar Finding Nemo McDonald's toys sold in the Summer of 2003 are something of an engineering marvel: they are plastic water squirt toys that have a sound or light feature.

Have you found a Finding Nemo Coloring Page?  No, it's the highly detailed, somewhat peculiar instructions for the Nemo Happy Meal toy.


The Nemo toy has a sound feature.  What line from the movie does talking Nemo say?  I'm guessing it is not "I hate you."

The Wonder Twins give each other an electric shock by touching fingers so they can show how to properly operate Nemo.


These directions are hilarious to me, and I can think of so many things to say that would get me in trouble.

When I got these toys, I was obsessed with keeping them "Mint In Package."


I finally opened the toys to write this story, and most of them don't work.

Pearl the octopus is Nemo's friend from school.  She is part of the gang that slips away from Mr. Ray's class, resulting in Nemo getting taken from the Great Barrier Reef by divers.


Pearl is a Flapjack Octopus.  The flapping "ears" on the top of the head (actually fins) inspired the name "Dumbo Octopus" for this type of octopus.

The directions for the Pearl the Octopus toy seem to have a Japanese Anime feel.


If you want to make your Pearl toy "ink" like she did in the movie, simply fill your bathtub with India Ink.

Pearl lights up.  I have a feeling many people have thought this toy is "Bad Squishy" the jellyfish and not an octopus.


This is one of the few toys in the set that I have that actually works.

A great deal of Pearl merchandise has been sold over the years, even though the character has very little screen time in Finding Nemo.


I'm guessing Pearl was popular with toy manufacturers because she is a cute pink octopus.

Nemo is taken to a dentist's office in Sydney, Australia.  There, he meets the Tank Gang, led by Gill (voiced by Willem Dafoe).


Willem Dafoe played the villain Green Goblin in the 2002 film version of Marvel's Spider-Man.

Gill's scar lights up.  The special feature may be odd, but this toy does function (Gill and Pearl are the only toys that can perform their special trick).


Gill tells Nemo that all drains lead to the ocean.  When Finding Nemo was in movie theaters, many kids decided to send their mom and dad's expensive aquarium fish back to the sea by flushing them down the toilet.

I would like to go on record and say that, in my experience, it is easier to take care of a dog or a cat than a small pet in a cage or an aquarium.  As a kid, I had fish that jumped out of the tank or got Ich.


I also had trouble taking care of a Guinea Pig.  You have to clean their cage ALL THE TIME.

Maintaining an aquarium was a nightmare for me.  Gill, I would gladly send you back to the ocean.


I really thought that Gill would have asked Nigel the Pelican to scoop up the Tank Gang in his mouth and take the fish back to the ocean.  But then the movie would have been way too short.

The Tank Gang is made up of some kooky characters that have been cooped up together too long.

Bloat the Pufferfish inflates when he gets agitated.

The Bloat toy lights up.  Well, it is supposed to.  The one I have does not.


Bloat was voiced by Brad Garrett (from Everybody Loves Raymond).

Brad Garrett is a big (tall) on-camera actor and an equally big voice-over actor.  For Pixar, he played Dim in A Bug's Life and Gusteau in Ratatouille.


It's worth noting that the inflated version of Bloat is typically used for Finding Nemo merchandise.

Like all the members of the Tank Gang, Bloat is an expert in the field of dentistry.


Dried Pufferfish with glued-on googly eyes and straw hats are frequently sold in gift shops near the beach.

You'd think that Nemo's dad could tell a good joke, but unfortunately Marlin the sad clownfish is not that funny.


Neurotic Marlin loses his wife and most of his children at the beginning of Finding Nemo.

Marlin must overcome his fears when his son Nemo is taken away.


The Marlin toy talks.  It would be funny if he said a line from the movie that was taken completely out of context, like "How do I taste, Moby?"

Albert Brooks, the voice of Marlin, is no stranger to the world of animation.  Brooks has voiced characters for The Simpsons and The Simpsons Movie.


I am a big fan of the movie Fargo (I have a Fargo snow globe!), so I flipped out when I learned that the original voice of Marlin was William H. Macy.

Because he looks so similar to Nemo, Marlin is often not used for Finding Nemo merchandise.


Luckily, the McDonald's promotion for Finding Nemo did not include a new menu item called Fish McSticks.  Unless it really did and I forgot.

Bruce the shark and his pals believe that "Fish are Friends, Not Food."

The mechanical shark used in the 1975 Steven Spielberg film Jaws was named Bruce.

Nothing makes bath time more fun than a ferocious shark with glowing red eyes.


Australian actor Barry Humphries (creator of the character Dame Edna) provided the voice of Bruce.

Bruce's Hammerhead friend, Anchor, was played by Eric Bana.


As a kid, I spent many summer vacations collecting prehistoric shark teeth on the beach in Venice, Florida ("The Shark Tooth Capital of the World").  We filled jars full of the teeth, which are very easy to find.

Bruce was featured prominently in the marketing campaign for Finding Nemo, though the character only appears in one major sequence, and then at the end of the film.


Bruce has been a popular merchandising character.  It's no secret that kids (and adults) love sharks.

Squirt the turtle helps Marlin reach Sydney via the East Australian Current.  Squirt lights the way with his glowing shell.  Wait, that does not happen in the movie.  Squirt's shell does glow for the McDonald's toy, though.

Squirt's surfer-dude father, Crush, stars in Turtle Talk With Crush, an interactive show at Disney theme parks.

Turtle Talk With Crush is at Epcot (Walt Disney World in Florida), Disney's California Adventure (Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, California), and at Tokyo DisneySea (Tokyo Disney Resort in Japan).  A temporary version of the show also played at Hong Kong Disneyland.


Walt Disney World's The Living Seas at Epcot became The Seas With Nemo and Friends in 2007.

In France, Crush's Coaster (a spinning roller coaster) opened in 2007 at the Walt Disney Studios theme park at the Disneyland Paris Resort.


At Disneyland in California, the Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage opened in 2007, upgrading the Submarine Voyage attraction that opened in 1959.

Finding Nemo: The Musical opened at Disney's Animal Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Florida in 2007.  New songs were created for the show by Avenue Q and Frozen musicians Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez.  Puppets for the production were developed by Michael Curry, who worked on the stage version of The Lion King.


At Walt Disney World in Florida, humans can "sleep with the fishes" in the Finding Nemo section of Disney's Art of Animation Resort hotel, which opened in 2012.

Forgetful, optimistic Dory helps Marlin find Nemo.


Voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, Dory has some of the best lines in Finding Nemo.

The Dory toy has a sound feature.  I think she should say "Careful of that hammer." Or "Seamonkey has my money." Or "Bad Squishy!"


Throughout the movie, Dory gets Nemo's name wrong.  She calls him Bingo, Harpo, Chico, Elmo and Fabio.

Dory is a Royal Blue Tang.  If you see this fish at an Aquarium and there are kids there, chances are you will hear "Dory! Dory! Dory!" Of course if you see a Clownfish, you'll hear "Nemo!!"


Dory speaks Whale.  It would have been funny if this toy made all her whale sounds.

The Finding Nemo universe will expand with a new film called Finding Dory.


Among the new characters in Finding Dory are Dory's parents (played by Diane Keaton and American Pie patriarch Eugene Levy), Dory's adopted Killer Whale sister (voiced by Kaitlin Olson from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia) and a Beluga Whale (Modern Family star Ty Burrell).

I've always been interested in Australian animals, including Weedy and Leafy Sea Dragons (relatives of Seahorses).  I was surprised that these amazing creatures did not appear in Finding Nemo.  I'll never forget seeing them at the National Aquarium in Baltimore.

I came up with my own characters, Sea Dragons and the Yeti Crab.  Yes, a Yeti Crab is a real (fairly recently discovered) hairy crustacean that is also called a Bigfoot Lobster.  Crazy but true!

Sea Dragons and the Yeti Crab by Dan Alexander
Keep your eyes open for Weedy and Leafy Sea Dragons in a movie called Finding Sea Dragons.  The Yeti Crab will get a spin-off called Alaskan King Crab Kong.  Then the adventures continue with How To Train Your Sea Dragons and Sea Dragons: The Desolation of Smaug.

The Crouching Hidden Tiger Dragon At Kali River Rapids In Disney's Animal Kingdom

$
0
0

In 1999, Walt Disney World in Florida opened the Kali River Rapids attraction in the Asia section of Disney's Animal Kingdom.  The new addition included the arrival of a new (very creative) dragon mascot for the park.  This Tiger Dragon makes appearances on merchandise, and the Kali River Rapids sign, but unfortunately cannot be found anywhere else.

Kali River Rapids was originally supposed to be called Tiger Rapids Run.  Since there were no actual tigers to see, a name change was in order.


This artwork appeared on early Animal Kingdom merchandise, and strongly suggests a dragon encounter on Kali River Rapids.  That would have been really cool.  Too bad it never happened.

Maybe one day we'll see a fully animated version of this dragon in a re-imagined version of Kali River Rapids.

Hope Canyon: Arizona's Lost Animated Film And Theme Park

$
0
0

Not all animated movies have a happy ending.  Arizona animators could tell you that.

My grandparents live in Phoenix, Arizona.  Over the years, they have sent me numerous newspaper clippings, especially about animation.  I was well-informed about the opening of Fox Animation Studios in Phoenix, and the production of Anastasia (1997) and Titan A.E. (2000).  And of course, they let me know when the studio closed down.

In 2002, they sent me an article about (former Fox) animator Len Simon's Fat Cat Animation Studios in Phoenix, Arizona.  Fat Cat did contract work for DreamWorks, but their first big project was supposed to be Hope Canyon.  We get a glimpse of the main character, Makai, and we learn the movie involves poachers.


Arizona has some amazing wildlife, which is well-suited for animation.  You may have heard of the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote.  They're just the tip of the iceberg.  I can't believe there's not a famous cartoon horned toad.

We'll address that right now.  Here's my new cartoon character, Randy the Horned Toad.

Randy the Horned Toad will star in his own animated series on Spike TV.

Ok, back to Hope Canyon.

Doing some research, I discovered the plans for Hope Canyon were much more ambitious than I thought.  Curiously, the article my grandparents sent fails to mention that a Hope Canyon "theme park" was in the works for Arizona.

Check out this archived article (that I found today online) from the Phoenix Business Journal:

Jan 6, 2002, 10:00pm MST

Partners pitch Hope Canyon preserve


Anne Robertson
A Phoenix animation company is hoping its newest feature film, "Hope Canyon," will spawn a wildlife preservation park in the Valley that could mean a cultural and economic boost for Arizona.
Hope Canyon Wildlife Preserve, Aquarium and Aquatic Park could provide a new animal sanctuary while spotlighting endangered species and their habitats, say its creators, if all goes according to plan.
The project is tied in to the upcoming animated film franchise, "Hope Canyon," a movie produced by Fat Cat Animation of Phoenix. The film tells the story of a Native American boy and a rancher's daughter who inherit an animal preserve, and their struggle against "evil black-market dealers in endangered wildlife," according to general partner Erik Stoops.
Project founders include Stoops, a Phoenix zoologist and author who specializes in endangered animals, mainly reptiles; Bill Watts, president of Winward Design in San Diego, who served as a primary architect for Orlando, Fla.-based Sea World parks across the nation; and Martin Reker, an English professor at Glendale Community College.
"We're contracted with Len Simon (head) of Fat Cat, and we want to create a franchise similar to the `Land Before Time' franchise," Stoops said. He formed the nonprofit Hope Canyon Preservation Foundation to advance animal conservation.
The $45 million theme park will offer features from dolphins to kayaking to a giant film theater, and is slated to open in 2004 after the release date of the film, Stoops said.
Specifically, the ambitious plans call for several sites: A kayaking and waterslide area; 3,000-gallon enclosed lagoon with sting rays and sharks that spectators can walk through; a 20,000-gallon dolphin bay; a 300,000-gallon aquatic life park, and a main lobby with traditional salt water and fresh water species, Stoops said.
Statuettes of extinct animals will define the entrance's walkway, and the park also will offer a sanctuary exhibit with reptiles, birds and small mammals, along with a penguin "encounter," where people can interact with the creatures behind glass.
Plans for the park also include a giant theater for the animated films, an area for retail shops and restaurants, as well as an "ocean petting zoo," or swim reef, he said.
As for scary snakes, the project will include a serpentarium for exotic venomous snakes and a working venom lab.
Project partners also hope the park will serve as a viable field research center, with the support of the science research community.
Animation characters from the Hope Canyon film, such as "Dink the Skink," a real-life, illegally poached reptile saved by the Arizona Fish and Game Department, will be housed at the preserve.
"The characters in the film will have ecological meaning, so when children say `Dink the Skink,' they'll understand that poaching is wrong," Stoops said.
Other primary characters include "Naya," a white Spirit Bear, which are found in Canadian rain forests; and Ruby, the late elephant from the Phoenix Zoo famous for her painting talents.
"It will put Arizona on the ecological map globally, and we want to raise awareness to help stop poaching worldwide," Stoops said.
At this point, the partners are raising the money to launch the project, an effort expected to fully unroll once the movie has secured a contract for distribution with a major Hollywood studio. Watts said such a contract is in negotiation and close to completion, possibly as soon as this month.
The movie contract is critical to the park's funding, he said. Watts said he could not disclose who the financial backers are because plans are still in the preliminary stages.
"The movie is the biggest trigger; once that happens, we'll go after private funding and we're already working with contacts in Hollywood," Watts said. "In my business, I have a lot of venture capitalist sources globally who want to invest in marine life attractions. They understand the nature of the business."
Watts said feedback has been encouraging.
"We also want to solicit investors from the Phoenix community -- corporate sponsorships are positive opportunities for local businesses, considering the cultural and educational components," he said.
Hope Canyon is seeking a location in either Phoenix or Chandler, and has visited potential sites with representatives from both cities. The integrated park will need about 45 acres of land.
Phoenix economic development officials confirmed that they have been in talks with Hope Canyon founders.
"We think it sounds like a great idea," said Mary Vivion-Withrow, economic development coordinator for the city of Phoenix.
Watts said the entire facility will take about a year to complete.
"It will also give the Valley more job opportunities. The project will require about 300 to 400 employees," he said.
Reker, a third partner, said the project has attracted the backing of several Hollywood stars who have supplied signed endorsement letters.
"People want to protect animals that are endangered," he said.
This project was never constructed, and the Hope Canyon movie was never released in theaters.
In the 1980s, a proposed movie/theme park project called Huck's Landing had a similar fate.  Created by Tom Carter Productions, Huck's Landing was planned to be a water park in Las Vegas and an animated feature.  The project was never built, the film was never made, and the studio did not survive.  An entire chapter of the book Cartoon Confidential by Jim Korkis and John Cawley is devoted to the history of Tom Carter Productions.
Hopefully, someday we'll see more of Len Simon's Hope Canyon and Makai and his animal friends will have the Happy Ending that animated characters typically get.

Howard The Duck Tales

$
0
0

Think of the worst movie that you've ever seen.  The 1986 film Howard the Duck is probably worse than whatever you just thought of.

Yet, as a kid, I was drawn to this bizarre live action movie about an alien duck (from a duck world---think of a darker, more adult version of Duckburg from Disney's Duck Tales) visiting Earth (specifically Cleveland, Ohio).  I just had to have the Howard the Duck Candy Dispenser that I saw at the Circle K store during a summer vacation in Florida.


This is probably the only toy made for this movie, which bombed big time during its brief run in theaters.

In addition to a person with a puppet head playing Howard, the film starred Lea Thompson and Tim Robbins.  They were young, and needed the work.


I cannot believe that I watched this movie on TV with my grandmother in the same room.  Howard is one dirty duck.

Howard the Duck (based on a comic book of the same name) was a Universal Pictures movie and the love child of Marvel and Lucasfilm. Now that Disney owns Lucasfilm and Marvel, I guess we could see a new version of Howard starring Donald Duck and Scrooge McDuck.  But I doubt that will happen.  Or maybe it will...

Disney's Treasure Planet Plush

$
0
0

When I first saw the 2002 film Treasure Planet, I thought "This should have been a computer animated movie." The similar 2000 hand-drawn/CGI hybrid Fox Animation Studios Titan A.E. faced similar box office woes.  It's a shame, because Treasure Planet has quite a bit to like, including Jim Hawkins (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) and John Silver (Brian Murray).  Aside from a McDonald's Happy Meal tie-in, Treasure Planet merchandise was tough to find.  The plush toys sold at Disney Stores were among the best items I saw.  Filmmakers thought of the part-mechanical Silver as an alien bear creature, and he translates well as a stuffed toy.

Instead of a parrot, Silver has the shape-shifting Morph.


An intergalactic spin on Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson, the film even did something different for the music.  The songs were performed by John Rzeznik from The Goo Goo Dolls.

Before James Cameron's AVATAR, there was alien kitty Captain Amelia (Emma Thompson).


Captain Amelia eventually marries Jim's canine alien friend, Dr. Doppler (David Hyde Pierce).  They even have kids!

Insane robot B.E.N. (Martin Short) was used frequently in the marketing campaign for Treasure Planet.  Maybe that scared some people.


Treasure Planet die-cast Disney Wild Racers cars (of B.E.N. and Silver) were announced but never released.

I think a live action Treasure Planet starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt probably would do well these days.  I bet someone could talk Emma Thompson and David Hyde Pierce into wearing prosthetic cat and dog makeup.

Disney's Atlantis Beanie Babies And Kida, The Lost Disney Princess

$
0
0

I wonder if children who saw Disney's 2001 animated film Atlantis: The Lost Empire begged their parents for bean bag toys of the Martag fish vehicle and the Stone Giant.  Who would not want to cuddle up with a menacing Stone Giant?

With Frozen doing big business these days, it is interesting to look back at Atlantis and wonder how things would have been done differently with Princess Kida today.  Kida (voiced by Cree Summer) is exotic looking and has Queen Elsa's platinum blonde hair.  She really should have been the star of Atlantis.  Think of all the dolls that could have been sold.  Instead, the focus was on dozens of other characters.  This movie could have been Disney's answer to Grease 2 (I know that is not necessarily a good thing, but hear me out).


The main character in Atlantis: The Lost Empire is Milo Thatch (Michael J. Fox), a huge nerd.  Milo meets Princess Kida and by the end of the movie, Milo is wearing a Hugh Hefner robe (see the Milo doll) and Kida and Milo are a couple.  Kind of what happens in Grease 2.

There were big plans for Atlantis, including an animated TV series.  The series morphed into the 2003 video sequel Atlantis: Milo's Return.

When I first heard about Disney's Atlantis movie, I really hoped it would be about the legendary race of fish folk living in Atlantis, as portrayed in the 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea attraction that opened at Tokyo DisneySea in Japan back in 2001.  That would have been something really different.

Tigger And Pooh And Buzz And Woody, Too: A Stuffed Toy Story

$
0
0

Did you ever wonder what happened to Pooh and Tigger when Christopher Robin was sent away to Boarding School?  Well, wonder no more!  This Toy Story and Winnie the Pooh mash-up could be found years ago in the Disney Catalog and at The Disney Store.

Pooh is cast well as Buzz Lightyear ("Am I reallly that fat?").  He is joined by Tigger (Woody), Piglet (Little Green Man) and Eeyore (Bullseye).

It would have been funny to see Kanga as Jessie, thought it probably would have been difficult for her to squeeze into a pair of pants.  Kanga could have had Roo (dressed as Stinky Pete) in her pouch.

Re-imagined versions of Winnie the Pooh characters are nothing new.  In 2001, a new puppet series called The Book of Pooh debuted on The Disney Channel.  This show featured an older version of Christopher Robin.


The new look for the cast of the 100 Acre Wood for The Book of Pooh was created by Chris Renaud, who directed the 2010 film Despicable Me.

I bet someday we will see a live action Winnie the Pooh movie with computer animated plush toy characters (like Ted).  It could be an epic, multiple movie franchise like Lord of the Rings.  Just think: Daniel Radcliffe IS Christopher Robin!

Disney's Toy Story At Burger King

$
0
0

In November of 1995, the groundbreaking PIXAR animated film Toy Story debuted.  Back then, it was known as Disney's Toy Story.  In the United States, Burger King promoted Disney's big animated films, starting with Beauty and the Beast in 1991 and ending with The Hunchback of Notre Dame in 1996.  Outside of America, McDonald's promoted all these films, including Toy Story.

Burger King Kids Club Meals featured six different Toy Story toys.  Aside from the Burger King toys, Toy Story merchandise (especially anything related to Buzz Lightyear) was tough to find in stores in 1995.


With such a large cast, it is interesting to see which characters were chosen for the promotion.  The Army Recon Squad is a fun and different choice.  I remember thinking the Little Green Men aliens should have been represented.  The Woody premium is worth noting because the head and boots are plastic and the body is cloth (a similar toy was used for Clopin in Disney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame toys sold at Burger King in 1996).  I thought it was interesting that Hasbro's Mr. Potato Head was used rather than another Disney-owned Toy Story character.  Rex the dinosaur has wheels here for some reason.

In addition to the Kids Club Meal toys, Burger King sold Toy Story hand puppets for $1.99.


I think the Buzz Lightyear puppet was the toughest to get.  Burger King also sold character puppets for The Hunchback of Notre Dame in 1996.

Computer animated movies are very common today, but in 1995, quite a few Toy Story viewers did not know what kind of film they were watching.


I can remember watching Toy Story in the movie theater, and seeing the trailer for Disney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame.  I do remember thinking that Toy Story was the beginning of the end for hand drawn films.

Naturally, a movie about toys has a good chance of being a big hit at Christmas.


Because Toy Story was such a different type of movie, there was uncertainty of how well it would be received.  At the time, Disney was trying to diversify their animated offerings.  That's why there was Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993), A Goofy Movie (1995) and James and the Giant Peach (1996).

Kid Vid and his friends were the mascots for the Burger King Kids Club for many years.


Burger King discontinued Kid Vid and his pals years ago.  They should not feel too bad, because I haven't seen Grimace and the other classic McDonaldland characters at a McDonald's in years.

How ironic that the movie that seemingly ended hand drawn animated features used a hand drawn flip book as a Burger King promotional tool.


In the United States, Burger King had another set of Toy Story Kids Club Meal toys in October of 1996 to promote the home video release of the film.  When Disney's stateside partnership with Burger King ended in 1996, the Toy Story characters found a home at McDonald's.  In 1999, McDonald's promoted Toy Story 2 with a set of 20 different toys.  By the time Toy Story 3 debuted in 2010, marketing decisions had changed, and there weren't any fast food promotional toys for the film.

For more fun, check out Disney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame At Burger King And McDonald's.

The Return of Paddington Bear

$
0
0

Paddington Bear, created by Michael Bond, first appeared in 1958.  I became aware of the character from watching the 1975 stop motion/hand drawn animated BBC Paddington series that ran on American Television stations like PBS.  I liked Paddington enough to ask my parents for this small figurine of the marmalade-loving bear from Peru (he is missing his trademark hat).

Many kids in the United States learn quite a bit about England from watching imported programs like Paddington.  I personally enjoy speaking with an English accent on the telephone sometimes.  I call myself "Nigel."

Paddington is eager to return to the spotlight, and one wonders if he's been getting career advice from Miley Cyrus.  Trailers for the 2014 live action/computer animated Paddington movie show the beloved bear (who was originally going to be voiced by Colin Firth) tasting his own ear wax and sticking his face in a toilet.  It's kind of shocking, but I guess it is true to some British comedy.  The new Paddington, which features Downtown Abbey star Hugh Bonneville as Mr. Brown, has inspired the "Creepy Paddington" sensation on the Internet, inserting the semi-realistic movie version of the bear into horror film situations.

Meanwhile, Winnie the Pooh is watching and thinking about his next career move.  Hopefully not a live action movie called Pooh Hits the Fan.

Despicable You: Antonio And The Despicable Me 2 Minion Surprise

$
0
0

I seek out the rare and unusual.  Despicable Me 2 was a huge hit for Universal in July 2013 (their most profitable film ever).  Merchandise for the movie, especially toys of the Minions, has popped up everywhere.  But what about a secondary character like Antonio Perez, the son of villain Eduardo "El Macho" Perez (voiced by Benjamin Bratt)?  This figurine truly was a "Minion Surprise" for me today, especially since I was not even looking for it.

Having an outlet to write about things like this makes me feel like I'm making something constructive out of a day of setbacks.  Let me explain.

I live in the South.  It is June, and over the past few days, it has become clear that the Air Conditioner in my house (that I just bought in 2008) has a problem.  The problem, according to what the repairman said today, is that I need a brand new Air Conditioning unit (which, in case you wondered, is extremely expensive).  So that is a purchase I look forward to making.

As the repairman was getting ready to leave my house, I explained to him that my next task was to go get a new battery for my car.  Yesterday, I had problems starting my car.  Friends suggested that it was probably my battery.  The car seemed to eventually start, so could this really be the problem?

The Air Conditioner repairman suggested I go to Walmart to get a new battery.  Fingers crossed, I put the key in the ignition.  The car started, eventually.  I found the Auto Repair section at Walmart, which was unattended.  I parked my car.  I found an employee.  They told me to bring my car to one of the maintenance bays.  The car would not start.  At all.  It was finally dead.

At least I was in the right place for that to happen.

The Auto Repair guy told me it would be at least one and a half hours until he could do anything, because they were busy and short-handed.

So I spent hours wandering around Walmart, not wanting to be That Guy that keeps asking "Is my car ready yet?"

By the second hour (I think) I was wandering in one of the Clearance sections and found dozens of silver foil "blind bag" packages of Despicable Me 2 Minion Surprise figures.  They are small, and only $2.88 each, and included characters that I had not seen merchandise for, including Antonio and Eduardo.  I had just spent over $100 on an Air Conditioner that needs to be replaced and was about to spend over $100 for a new car battery.  So I decided I would not try to get all of these.  In fact, I only bought one.


I think I spent a good thirty minutes feeling each foil bag.  The Figures are packaged between a cardboard insert, which makes it difficult to tell what you will get.  I correctly guessed which bag had Antonio.  I could not find Eduardo (I bet he was there---at the time, I did not understand that they were packed between two pieces of cardboard).  I know I found Agnes, Gru, Lucy, Dr. Nefario, Unicorn and Margo.  There were lots of Minions, but I could not tell which ones.

I think today was Screaming Baby Day at Walmart.  The Minion Surprise was fun and much-needed.  I admit that I want to go back to get more of these figures, even though I really should not.

The most unusual thing I found in the Clearance Section at Walmart today was Spider-Man Fighter Pods figurines of the (retired) Marvel comic book Spider-Man spoof pig character Spider-Ham (Peter Porker).  That was actually shocking to see.  I would have bought it, but you had to get a whole set of characters and it was $7.00.  That's not really a lot to spend, unless you just bought a new car battery and what turned out to be a pointless maintenance session on a useless Air Conditioner.

I'm not bitter.  Really.

I Am Pete's Dragon, Hear Me Roar Like Helen Reddy

$
0
0

There's a port on a western bay and it serves a hundred ships a day.  Lonely sailors pass the time away and talk about their homes.  And there's a girl in this harbor town and she works layin' whiskey down.  They say "Brandy, fetch another round".  She serves them whiskey and wine.  The sailors say "Brandy, you're a fine girl (you're a fine girl!)!  What a good wife you would be (such a fine girl!)!  Yeah, your eyes could steal a sailor from the sea!"

Brandy wears a braided chain, made of finest silver from the North of Spain.  A locket that bears the name of a man that Brandy loves.  He came on a summer's day, bringing gifts from far away.  But he made it clear he couldn't stay.  The harbor was his home.  Yeah, Brandy used to watch his eyes when he told his sailor stories.  She could feel the ocean foam rise.  She saw its ragin' glory.  But he had always told the truth, lord he was an honest man.  And Brandy does her best to understand.

At night, when the bars close down, Brandy walks through a silent town.  And loves a man who's not around.  She still can hear him say: "Brandy, you're a fine girl (you're a fine girl!).  What a good wife you would be (such a fine girl!).  But my life, my lover, my lady is the sea."---Elliot Lurie, writer and composer of the 1972 Looking Glass song Brandy (You're a Fine Girl).

It's fitting that Brandy was written by someone named Elliot, because whenever I hear this song, it reminds me of Nora (Helen Reddy) in the 1977 Walt Disney Productions film Pete's Dragon.  Nora, of course, lost her man to the sea.  And she spends time with drunks in a bar, including her dad Lampie (Mickey Rooney).  Nora adopts Pete (Sean Marshall) and Pete's animated dragon, Elliott.


Elliott was a big deal in the late 1970s and early 1980s.  In the Disney universe, he is widely known because of his appearance in The Main Street Electrical Parade at Disneyland in California and at the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Florida.

Pete and Elliott have many foes.  Luckily, Elliott can breathe fire.


Pete's Dragon is full of wild characters like abusive matriarch Lena Gogan (Shelley Winters), a potential dragon-murderer named Dr. Terminus (Jim Dale) and tipsy henchman Hoagy (Red Buttons).

There's some great songs here, including Brazzle Dazzle Day and Candle on the Water.

Thankfully, Elliott saved the day in Pete's Dragon with his pyromaniac tendencies.  He also reunited Nora with her fiance, Paul.  No such luck for Brandy.

Elliott has appeared on quite a bit of groovy merchandise.


Canadians found Pete's Dragon character prizes in boxes of Nabisco Shreddies Cereal (there were different color toys of Elliott, Lampie and Pete).

In Pete's Dragon, the horrible schoolteacher dismisses Pete's idea of having a dragon by saying "Dragon Wagon!" This phrase was actually used in a (non-Disney) 1977 "C.B. Iron On" promotion for Honeycomb Cereal.


These days, the characters from Star Wars are now part of the Disney universe.  And proving it is a small world after all, Helen Reddy is part of the Star Wars universe.  She appeared in the 2007 "Blue Harvest"Star Wars episode of Family Guy.  Red Buttons is there, too!

The Tasmanian Devil Went Down To Georgia

$
0
0

This past weekend, I went to a wedding in Scottsboro, Alabama, and it got me thinking about the Tasmanian Devil.  Let me explain.  The Bride grew up in Alabama, and the Groom is Australian.  I have always been fascinated by Aussie wildlife, and animation, so naturally I'm familiar with the Warner Brothers Looney Tunes Tasmanian Devil (or "Taz").  The character, voiced by Mel Blanc, debuted in 1954.  The appearance of the Tasmanian Devil has changed drastically over the years, particularly on merchandise.  I especially like this stuffed animal version of the character, sold in the 1970s (it actually looks a bit like a real Tasmanian Devil).

Taz has been a very popular merchandising character for Warner Brothers.  Over the years, stuffed animals of the Tasmanian Devil were produced by a company called Mighty Star.


The memorable Tasmanian Devil only appeared in a few animated Looney Tunes shorts from 1954 to 1964.

It seems Mighty Star began producing Taz stuffed animals in 1971.


Mighty Star plush toys were sold in many toy stores and theme parks.  Believe it or not, for a short time in the 1990s, the Mighty Star Looney Tunes plush were sold at the Looney Bin Roger Rabbit "toon" store at the Disney MGM Studios (now called Disney's Hollywood Studios) at Walt Disney World in Florida.

In 1976, Marriott's Great America amusement parks opened in Illinois and California.


The Tasmanian Devil and the rest of the Looney Tunes served as mascots for the parks.

The shops inside Marriott's Great America sold souvenirs featuring the Warner Brothers characters.


The Marriott Corporation sold the Great America parks in 1984.  The park in Illinois was purchased by Six Flags, which inherited the Looney Tunes characters.  The Great America Park in California eventually became part of the now-defunct Paramount Parks chain (which featured Hanna Barbera and Nickelodeon characters and included Kings Island in Ohio, Carowinds in North Carolina, and Kings Dominion in Virginia).

By 1985, Looney Tunes "lands" took over the kid sections in the Six Flags parks chain.


Growing up in Alabama, my "home park" was Six Flags Over Georgia.  Taz enjoyed taking the park's Mind Bender roller coaster for a spin.

Looney Tunes merchandise invaded Six Flags gift shops.  I made sure to get this five inch tall vinyl Tasmanian Devil figure (made in Hong Kong) in 1985.


The Tasmanian Devil of 1985 looks very different from the Tasmanian Devil of 2014.

Mighty Star plush Looney Tunes toys were sold inside Six Flags parks during the 1980s.


Mighty Star continued to tinker with the design of the Tasmanian Devil.

Gradually, the nose and mouth on the Taz toy got larger.


Taz became the "go-to" tough guy character for Warner Brothers.

The Tasmanian Devil stuffed toy gradually got shorter and stockier.


The 1979 Stephen King short story The Crate was apparently inspired by the Warner Brothers Tasmanian Devil.

By 1991, Taz got his own animated TV series, Taz-Mania.  The Tasmanian Devil was the star of the show, which was set in Australia.  Jim Cummings (the voice of Winnie the Pooh and Tigger for the past few decades) played Taz (and some other characters) on Taz-Mania.



This is what Mighty Star's Tasmanian Devil plush toy looked like in stores at Six Flags parks in the 1990s.  This version could also be found in Warner Brothers Studios Stores in shopping malls around the world, until Warner Brothers started designing their own plush toys in the mid-Nineties.  Then the stores closed.  Poor Taz!

Very different looking versions of Taz plush toys can be found today, even in "Claw" Machine Games at the grocery store or Walmart.

For more fun, check out Taz the Biker: Tasmanian Devil or Angel?

Upset, Icy Waterbirds: An Angry Birds Parody

$
0
0

Sometimes my mind comes up with really unusual things, like this Penguin parody of the hit Angry Birds.  My nephew is (was?) obsessed with this very popular game.

Why not make fun of it with some ticked-off female penguins, and some inconsiderate walrus characters replacing the green pigs?

Angry Birds currently has their own take on Star Wars.  Maybe the PMS Penguins could do their own take on The Real Housewives franchise or Designing Women or The Golden Girls.
Viewing all 166 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images