Woody Woodpecker: Difference between revisions

(Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9))
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 24:
In 1999, Universal wanted to cash in the character again, so thet tried to put together an all-new show for Woody Woodpecker and his friends, called ''The New Woody Woodpecker Show''. Woody was voiced by [[Billy West]], and the shorts actually had some top talents working on it, including former ''[[Ren and Stimpy]]'' staff members Bob Jacques and Mike Fontanelli. The show was rife with censorship and [[Executive Meddling]], as the former staff members can attest to. As a result, this revival was ultimately a failure (however the show still has its fan base), barely lasting around 50 episodes, some of which weren't even aired in the US, although the entire series is on Netflix, with certain episodes on Hulu.
 
Despite this setback, his theatrical serials are still fondly remembered by classic animation fans and he is still the official mascot of [[Universal]] Studios to this day.<ref> Though the position was stolen from him by [[An American Tail|Fievel]] from the late 1980s into the 1990s. He seems to have earned it back, though.</ref> While the series was in a state of hiatus since then, a new CG feature length Woody Woodpecker feature is [https://web.archive.org/web/20120419053337/http://www.cartoonbrew.com/feature-film/illumination-developing-cg-woody-woodpecker.html stated to be in the works.]
 
His character trademark has always been his [[Annoying Laugh|unique, skull-splitting laugh]], supplied by legendary voice actor [[Mel Blanc]] (and later, Lantz's own wife), which is up there with iconic sounds like the [[Wilhelm Scream]] and the [[Super Mario Bros.]] theme, known and recognized even by people who haven't even seen any of the Woody Woodpecker cartoons.
Line 353:
* [[Animation Bump]]: The early shorts by Lantz and Lovy had very sloppy, off model prone animation. The animation improved to a degree when [[Shamus Culhane]] joined the studio, but his efforts were still undermined by bad inkers and sloppy inbetween work. The animation finally got up to par when Dick Lundy took over as the director, but then started to deteriorate again after the studio's temporary shutdown in 1949. The animation quality remained quite good under Lundy's replacement, Don Patterson, but grew steadily worse and worse when Patterson left and was replaced by Paul J. Smith and the returning Alex Lovy. Surprisingly enough the animation did improve near the end of the studio's life, when Smith recruited some better animators in 1971--72, but it was really too little, too late.
* [[Annoying Laugh]]: His trademark happens to be one, actually. Although it's not the ''only'' laugh he's ever used.
* [[Anthropomorphic Shift]]: Woody started off looking like a [https://web.archive.org/web/20130304193307/http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/74/Woodywoodpecker-pantrypanic1941.jpg deranged bird] to looking like a [http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/dc/Barber-of-seville-2.jpg standard issue funny animal.]
* [[Anti-Hero]]: Woody varies between a Type V and a [[Villain Protagonist]].
** Woody is rarely the true villain, especally in the later episodes which is the bulk of them. In spite of what Jerry Seinfeld thinks, he was rarely the instigator. He is like Bugs Bunny in that he always got the best of his enemies, but they almost always started the confrontation somehow. Where Woody differed from Bugs a bit was tht Woody went WAY more overboard with his revenge.
Line 363:
* [[Berserk Button]]: Woody doesn't like cheesecake. The Loan Shark from ''The Loan Stranger'' learned this the hard way.
** Also, in the short ''Knock Knock'', Woody pulls this on Andy Panda when he first tries to salt him:
{{quote|'''Woody:''' You're not going to pull that old gag on me, are you, son? ''(puffs up as he speaks)'' Do you know what I '''DID TO THE LAST GUY THAT TRIED THAT?!''' '''[[ThisPunctuated! IsFor! SpartaEmphasis!|WHY, I TORE HIM LIMB—FROM—LIMB!]]''' {{spoiler|[[Anticlimax|And then he promptly walks off, playing his beak like a flute and deflating himself in the process.]]}}}}
* [[Big Eater]]: Woody's desire to get a quick meal (usually on the cheap) is the source for many of the plots.
* [[Bigfoot, Sasquatch, and Yeti]]: In an issue of an old Woody Woodpecker comic, Woody goes with his (niece and nephew?) over to Asia to film the abominable snowman. His camera is taken by a band of thieves using the legend of the snowman to scare people into giving them gift to appease them. {{spoiler|And then the real deal come along and scares the band away.}}
Line 542:
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:The Nineties]]
[[Category:The Renaissance Age of Animation]]
[[Category:The Golden Age of Animation]]
[[Category:Works by Walter Lantz]]
[[Category:The Forties]]
[[Category:Western Animation]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Animal Title Index]]
[[Category:Western Animation of the 1940s]]
[[Category:Western Animation of the 1950s]]
[[Category:Western Animation of the 1960s]]
[[Category:Western Animation of the 1970s]]
[[Category:Western Animation of the 1980s]]