Battletoads (animation): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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In 1992, ''[[Battletoads (Video Game)|Battletoads]]'' was a hot game and the ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987 (Animation)|Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987]]'' cartoon was still going strong. Given the similarity between the two properties, it stood to reason that a good [[Animated Adaptation]] could give the games better [[Popcultural Osmosis]].
In 1992, ''[[Battletoads]]'' was a hot game and the ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987]]'' cartoon was still going strong. Given the similarity between the two properties, it stood to reason that a good [[Animated Adaptation]] could give the games better [[Popcultural Osmosis]].


Someone must have thought so, because a ''Battletoads'' cartoon series, produced by [[DiC Entertainment]], was launched.
Someone must have thought so, because a ''Battletoads'' cartoon series, produced by [[DiC Entertainment]], was launched.
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The pilot was shown on Thanksgiving 1992. It is a prequel to the game, but does not provide the same backstory as the one published in ''Nintendo Power''. It appeared to be based on a very, ''very'' obscure comic adaptation printed in some other gaming magazines at the time, rather than the game itself. In this origin story, Morgan Ziegler, Dave Shar, and George Pie are, rather than computer technicians, three teenage losers from Oxnard, California who are squirted with [[Super Serum]] by Professor T. Bird and turned into the Battletoads. Tasked with defending the Princess from the Dark Queen, they receive the "ancient names of honor": Zitz, Rash and Pimple.
The pilot was shown on Thanksgiving 1992. It is a prequel to the game, but does not provide the same backstory as the one published in ''Nintendo Power''. It appeared to be based on a very, ''very'' obscure comic adaptation printed in some other gaming magazines at the time, rather than the game itself. In this origin story, Morgan Ziegler, Dave Shar, and George Pie are, rather than computer technicians, three teenage losers from Oxnard, California who are squirted with [[Super Serum]] by Professor T. Bird and turned into the Battletoads. Tasked with defending the Princess from the Dark Queen, they receive the "ancient names of honor": Zitz, Rash and Pimple.


It was directed by Kent Butterworth and written by David Wise, who were both major figures in the development of the original ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987 (Animation)|Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987]]'' animated series (Butterworth was a senior animator on almost every episode; Wise was the head writer for the majority of its run, and [[Name's the Same|not to be confused in this context]] with the David Wise who wrote the music for the ''[[Battletoads (Video Game)|Battletoads]]'' games). A natural expectation would be these guys would make a decent ''TMNT''-alike show.
It was directed by Kent Butterworth and written by David Wise, who were both major figures in the development of the original ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987]]'' animated series (Butterworth was a senior animator on almost every episode; Wise was the head writer for the majority of its run, and [[Name's the Same|not to be confused in this context]] with the David Wise who wrote the music for the ''[[Battletoads]]'' games). A natural expectation would be these guys would make a decent ''TMNT''-alike show.


The pilot bombed spectacularly: the aborted series is a textbook example of a [[Stillborn Franchise]]: a niche work being rammed into another medium, adaption changes alienating the existing fans, critical panning and a failure to capture a new mainstream audience. No further episodes were broadast and it likely destroyed any chance of a good ''Battletoads'' series ever being made.
The pilot bombed spectacularly: the aborted series is a textbook example of a [[Stillborn Franchise]]: a niche work being rammed into another medium, adaption changes alienating the existing fans, critical panning and a failure to capture a new mainstream audience. No further episodes were broadast and it likely destroyed any chance of a good ''Battletoads'' series ever being made.
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For many years it was nearly forgotten (though it was released on VHS in 1994), buried in the wasteland alongside hundreds of other failed TV pilots, until rediscovered by the Internet. See it in its 30 minutes of glory [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=df5UEKxHQ3U here] (or the somewhat [[MST|MSTed]] version [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKkL-e5FfEA here]).
For many years it was nearly forgotten (though it was released on VHS in 1994), buried in the wasteland alongside hundreds of other failed TV pilots, until rediscovered by the Internet. See it in its 30 minutes of glory [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=df5UEKxHQ3U here] (or the somewhat [[MST|MSTed]] version [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKkL-e5FfEA here]).
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{{tropelist}}
=== Tropes appearing in the ''Battletoads'' cartoon: ===
* [[Alien Among Us]]: Subverted, T. Bird walks around openly and doesn't seem to be at all afraid of being seen. Played somewhat straight with Angelica, who tries to work like a normal human.
* [[Alien Among Us]]: Subverted, T. Bird walks around openly and doesn't seem to be at all afraid of being seen. Played somewhat straight with Angelica, who tries to work like a normal human.
* [[Analogy Backfire]]: "Life is one big basketball game!" Um...what?
* [[Analogy Backfire]]: "Life is one big basketball game!" Um...what?
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* [[Diner Brawl]]: The first [[Fight Scene]].
* [[Diner Brawl]]: The first [[Fight Scene]].
* [[Epic Fail]]: Morgan/Zits making a computer monitor explode just by pressing a few keys and Princess Angelica making a jelly doughnut explode by gently pinching it. Though the latter might have been an animation error.
* [[Epic Fail]]: Morgan/Zits making a computer monitor explode just by pressing a few keys and Princess Angelica making a jelly doughnut explode by gently pinching it. Though the latter might have been an animation error.
* [[Everything's Better With Princesses]]: Princess Angelica
* [[Everything's Better with Princesses]]: Princess Angelica
* [[Fictional Video Game]]: Any resemblance between "Galaxy Wars" and any [[Real Life]] arcade game is coincidental.
* [[Fictional Video Game]]: Any resemblance between "Galaxy Wars" and any [[Real Life]] arcade game is coincidental.
* [[Flying Car]]: Introduced with a ''[[Back to The Future]]'' [[Shout-Out]]: "Where we're going, we don't need tires!"
* [[Flying Car]]: Introduced with a ''[[Back to The Future]]'' [[Shout-Out]]: "Where we're going, we don't need tires!"

Latest revision as of 14:25, 13 July 2021

In 1992, Battletoads was a hot game and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987 cartoon was still going strong. Given the similarity between the two properties, it stood to reason that a good Animated Adaptation could give the games better Popcultural Osmosis.

Someone must have thought so, because a Battletoads cartoon series, produced by DiC Entertainment, was launched.

The pilot was shown on Thanksgiving 1992. It is a prequel to the game, but does not provide the same backstory as the one published in Nintendo Power. It appeared to be based on a very, very obscure comic adaptation printed in some other gaming magazines at the time, rather than the game itself. In this origin story, Morgan Ziegler, Dave Shar, and George Pie are, rather than computer technicians, three teenage losers from Oxnard, California who are squirted with Super Serum by Professor T. Bird and turned into the Battletoads. Tasked with defending the Princess from the Dark Queen, they receive the "ancient names of honor": Zitz, Rash and Pimple.

It was directed by Kent Butterworth and written by David Wise, who were both major figures in the development of the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1987 animated series (Butterworth was a senior animator on almost every episode; Wise was the head writer for the majority of its run, and not to be confused in this context with the David Wise who wrote the music for the Battletoads games). A natural expectation would be these guys would make a decent TMNT-alike show.

The pilot bombed spectacularly: the aborted series is a textbook example of a Stillborn Franchise: a niche work being rammed into another medium, adaption changes alienating the existing fans, critical panning and a failure to capture a new mainstream audience. No further episodes were broadast and it likely destroyed any chance of a good Battletoads series ever being made.

For many years it was nearly forgotten (though it was released on VHS in 1994), buried in the wasteland alongside hundreds of other failed TV pilots, until rediscovered by the Internet. See it in its 30 minutes of glory here (or the somewhat MSTed version here).


Tropes used in Battletoads (animation) include: