In 1776, a cowardly New Englander named
Jonathan Muddlemore grabbed his cat, Boo, and hid from British soldiers
inside a grandfather clock in an old, abandoned mansion. Two hundred
years later, a vicious storm forced three teenagers to hole up in the
mansion, where they proceeded to reset the aforementioned clock to
midnight. This action released the ghosts of Muddlemore and Boo, and
the pair teamed up with the teens to fight crime. Dubbed “Muddsey” by
the teens, the still cowardly Muddlemore turned invisible whenever he
got frightened, which was quite often. The gang rode around
in the Looney Duney dune buggy, crisscrossing America and stomping out
evil. Boo’s ghost had a dustup in every episode with Elmo, the
teen’s pet bulldog. Animated in Australia, The Funky Phantom was noted
for its unique sound effects, which were unlike those in any other
Hanna-Barbera cartoon. The show’s run of original episodes only lasted
one season, with repeats being substituted for the second season. After
being cancelled in 1973, the show’s episodes were incorporated into The
Godzilla/Dynomutt Hour with the Funky Phantom, proving once and for all
that if you
like Revolutionary War-era ghosts, you’ll love them even more if
they're joined by a giant fire-breathing dinosaur and a robotic
crimefighting dog. This last series only ran two months, after which
the Phantom
and Boo presumably fled to the veritable sanctity of their grandfather
clock, embittered by the phoniness of show business.
This
cartoon is completely a la Scooby Doo, everything, from the monsters
&
ghosts, the Villains in bad Halloween costumes, the clues, the jokes
and the background
music that you hear when they are trying to solve a mystery. How ever
sometimes
the fights between Jonathan &
Skip reminds me Archie and his
friends. Specially when they are trying to impress April, that seems to
love watching them fight for who’s going to set next to her. The other
part
that could be consider different is that this is the first time that HB
shows a
phantom that is a coward and that seems to forget that he’s a phantom
also.
This cartoon is not exactly one of my favorites, but it deserves to be
mention as one
of the all time HB classics.
CAST:
Jonathan - Muddsey
Muddlemore-DawsButler
April Stewart-Tina Holland
Skip - Mickey Dolenz
Augie - Tommy Cook
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EPISODES
- Fiirrst and Second
Season ( 1971 - 1973 )
1.- Don’t
Fool with a Phantom
2.- Heir
Scare
3.- I’ll
Haunt you later
4.- Who’s
Chicken
5.- The
Headless Horseman
6.- We Saw A Sea Serpent
7.- April's
Foolish Day
8.- The
Forest's Prime Evil.
9.- Ghost
Grabber
10.- The Hairy
Scarey Houndman.
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JABBER JAW
9/11/76 - 9/3/77 ABC
Yesterday I was talking with my friend Tony and he give me a very
interesting opinion about this cartoon. Is very similar to Josie
and the Pussy Cats, a Rock Band traveling the world with their music
and stoping all kinds of Villains. For me this cartoon was
never one of the best ones that Hanna Barbera has created and for some
reason I actually find it very annoying, but well that’s only my
opinion. Set in the far future, in the year
2076 to be exact, a group of teenagers formed a band. They called
themselves the Neptunes, with Biff on guitar, Shelly on tambourine,
Bubbles on
piano, and Clam-Head on cello.
Not getting the sound they wanted, the band
was faced with
difficult questions: Where are we going to play? Do we need a drummer?
and, perhaps most importantly, Why is there a cello in our rock band?
Deciding to tackle the drummer issue first, they turned to their good
friend Jabberjaw. Jabberjaw brought several things to the table. Aside
from the fact that he was a terrific drummer, he was very funny. That
would come in handy during those lonely nights on the road. He was also
a real shark at the negotiating table. As a matter of fact, he was a
real shark everywhere. A great white, to be
exact. The band now complete, The Neptunes would ride in the Aqua car
to
their concert dates, playing bubblegum pop tunes and inexplicably
getting mixed up with criminals in nearly every episode.
Jabberjaw constantly whined about getting no
respect, a trademark of comedian Rodney Dangerfield, yet his voice and
mannerisms were eerily reminiscent of Curly from The Three Stooges.
The show ran for two seasons, the second of which was composed entirely
of repeats. The shark himself reappeared later in the decade as a
competitor on Scooby's All-Star Laff-A-Lympics.
CAST
Jabber Jaw - Frank Welker
Biff - Tommy Cook
Shelly - Pat Paris
Bubbles - Julie McWhirter
Clam-Head - Barry
Gordon
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9/8/73
- 8/31/75 ABC Saturday 10:30 -
11:00 A.M EST.
Ghost Chasers was a
magazine that employed Gilly, Ted, and Tina as
investigators of the paranormal. Accompanying them on their adventures
was Goober, an alarmingly skinny dog who wore a winter hat as a plot
contrivance. You see, whenever Goober got scared, he turned
invisible-except for the hat. So even when he was invisible, the young
viewers could easily spot him. The
gang would chase all sorts of
frightening baddies—spirits, mummies, werewolves, etc. However, most of
the villains turned out to be of the human variety, merely disguised as
ghosts a la Scooby-Doo.
The show also featured members of the ABC nighttime sitcom The
Partridge Family as guest stars. The characters of Laurie, Danny,
Chris, and Tracy were voiced by the actors who portrayed them on the
sitcom—Susan Dey, Danny Bonaduce, Brian Foster and Suzanne Crough,
respectively.
Goober and the Ghost Chasers aired for two seasons, the second
consisting entirely of repeats.
CAST:
Goober - Paul
Winchell Laurie
Partridge - Susan Dey
Gilly - Ronnie
Schell Danny Partridge - Danny Bonaduce
Ted - Jerry
Dexter
Chris Partridge -
Brian
Forster
Tina - Jo Ann
Harris Tracy Partridge - Suzanne
Crough
Another awesome
Story written by my good friend
Sean E Phillips
"Tony", Click on Goober
to read it.
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EPISODES
( First
and Second Season )
Assignment: The Ahaab Apparition
(first aired: 9/8/73) - With the
Partridge Family.
Brush Up Your
Shakespeare (first aired: 9/15/73) -
With the Partridge Family.
The Galloping
Ghost - Wilt Chamberlain (first aired: 9/22/73)
The Singing
Ghost (first aired: 9/29/73) -
With the Partridge Family.
The Ghost
Ship (first
aired: 10/6/73) -
With the Partridge Family.
Aloha
Ghost (first
aired: 10/6/73)
Mummy Knows
Best (first aired: 10/13/73) -
With the Partridge Family.
The Haunted
Wax Museum (first aired: 10/20/73) -
With the Partridge Family.
Venice
Anyone? (first aired: 10/27/73)
The Wicked
Witch Dog (first aired: 11/3/73) -
With the Partridge Family.
Is Sherlock
Holme?(first aired: 11/10/73)
Go West Young
Ghost, Go West (first aired: 11/17/73) -
With the Partridge Family.
A Hard Days
Knight (first aired: 11/24/73)
That Snow
Ghost (first aired: 12/1/73)
Inca Dinka
Doo (first aired: 12/8/73)
Old McDonalds
Had A Ghost - EE II EEYOW (first aired: 12/15/73) |
It was
a cartoon show that priemered back in 1978 in the style of the Dukes of
Hazard, and lasted one year, during the 78/79 season. It was one of a
slew of Scooby-Doo clones that was produced by Hanna-Barbera studios
during the seventies. "Buford" resembled "Clue Club" more than it did
the others, mostly because both shows featured bloodhounds and a
dimwitted sheriff. Also, "flashback" sequences were featured at the end
of both shows to explain the mysteries. What made "Buford" different
was mostly its regional setting in the depths of Okefenokee swamp on
the Florida side. There is no actual
"Fenokee county" where the series takes place, so I'm guessing that in
the HB cartoon world the county is located in northeastern Florida,
where the Okfenokee spills over the Georgia border. Unlike most other
HB teen mysteries, "Buford" took place in the same general area, and
all the characters knew each other. There was seldom any fake monster
or ghost on the loose in this series, though "The Haunting of Swamp
Manor"
was an exception. The Mysteries usually involved petty robberies,
kidnappings,
and similar hijinks involving the local yokels. The main characters
were
Buford, a notoriously lazy lavender bloodhound, whose nose flashes red,
and whose ears moved like radar dishes when he was on the trail of the
bad
guys. He lived at a place called Boggs Landing in Fenokee Swamp with
his
teenage pals Woody, and Cindy Mae, who was the smartest of the three
investigators. The two other most often shown characters were the Boss
Hog-like Sheriff Muletrain, and his dimwitted deputy, Goofer. A typical
"Buford" episode
had the two incompetent law enforcers arresting the crooks after Buford
and the kids had done all the work solving the crime.
CAST
Buford - Frank
Welker
Nugget Nose - Frank Welker
Cindy Mae - Pat Parris
Rita - Pat Parris
Deputy Goofer - Roger Peltz
Fuddy Duddy - Hal Peary
Sheriff Dupres - Henry Corden
Wendy - Marilyn Schreffler
Woody - David Landsberg
THE BUFORD FILES EPISODES
The
Swamp Hermit. This is the premeire episode. Buford and the
Boggs twins are visting their friend Jeb
Crowley in the swamp, when they discover he's kidnapped. The culprits
are billy and Luke Scroggins, a pair of escaped convicts who
have buried loot out in the swamp. They capture the crooks and rescue
their friend. Multrain and Goofer, don't really have a large part
on this episode, except to warn the kids and apprehend the bad
guys. The Vanishing Stallion . A stallion
mysteriously
vanishes during the Fenokee annual Steeple chase race, and Buford
and the kids find out who's the culprit. The Swamp
Saucer. A mysterious craft that appears to be a flying saucer
crashes in Fenokee Swamp. The locals are paniced. Both the two
incompetent
law enforcers, and the Bogs twins and Buford, set out to solve the
mystery.
I guess I'll give away the ending here, so stop reeading this
description
if you don't want to know. The "saucer" turns out to be a Cape Kennedy
Space Shuttle gone off course, and the space alien is an experimental
chimp
who makes friends with Buford. The Man With the
Orange
Hair At an ice-skating show at fenokee Sports palace, a pair of
prize silver skates are mysteriously stolen, apparently by a mysterious
performer with orange hair. After Muletrain and Goofer try to find out
who in the show had orange hair, Cindy Mae discovers that the crooks
used
"black light" to make his hair look orange. The Demon of
Ur
A grotesque, Near-Eastern statue vanishes without a trace while on
baord
a train bound from Tecusah to Fenokee Community Center. Buford and the
kids find out what 's going on. The Missing Bank
While the Boggs kids and Buford go on a Saturday picnic,
Goofer delivers 10 million dollars to from Fenokee bank to a bank in
Culpepper. But afterward, the bank president claims he never recieved
the money. A
mysterious road detour sign lead Buford and the Boggs twins to the
money
and the crooks. Scare in the Air At an air
show, Buford has a near-fatal accident when he chooses to sleep aboard
a remote-control plane. Then one of the plnes is stolen by a crook, and
the characters track him into the swamp. Buford and
the Beauty Buford' s dream-girl, Duchess, is introduced.
Duchess
is a show-dog, who is starring in a movie being filmed in fenokee
county.
Goofer is left to guard her when she is kidnapped. Buford is able to
rescue
Duchess, and Cindy Mae fingers the kidnapper. Peril
in the Park When the Boggs kids visit the local amusement
park to look for summer jobs, it seems that the rides have gone
mysteriously
awry. It turns out they have been sabetoged in an attempt to drive the
owern out of business. Clues lead them to who the crook is.
The Magic Whammy The banks in Fenokee are being robbed
with no sign of any break-in at about the time that the Great Zambini,
a renowned stage magician is in town. It turns out that Zambini has a
mysterious
amulet which he uses to hynotize his audience after every show so that
they will have no memory of what took place during the crucial time
when
the bank was robbed. (There seems to be a hint of actual paranormal
activity
here. Is Zambini just a good hypotist, or does the amulet hold some
kind
of occult power?) The Haunting of Swamp Manor This
episode bears the closest resemblence to classic Scooby-Doo. The ghost
of
a Confederate general is reputed to be haunting a local antebellum
mansion.
When Buford and the kids caputre the ghost, the ending is
predictable. The Missing Gator Jeb Crowley's
pet gator, Gertrude, has
gone missing. Poachers are believed to be involved. Muletrin, dismisses
the two suspects, only to learn that they are really diamond smugglers.
it turns out Gertrude has only gone off to lay her eggs.
Don't Monkey with Buford When a circus comes to town, Duchess
returns. This time her diamond-studded collar vanishes. A chimp trainer
is suspected. But the real clues anable Buford and the kids to find the
real crook.
Buford riskes his life to recover Duchess collar. The series ends with
Bufrd giving a sad farewell to Duchess.
I thank my good friend Sean Phillips “Tony”
for sending me the images and the information of The Buford Files.
FANG FACE: Every 400 years in the Fangsworth Family a werewolf is
born. Now, he in the company of 3 Teenagers, "Kim", "Biff" and Puggsy they solve the most spooky cases. Sounds familiar?
This cartoon is compeletly a la
Scooby Doo, from the entrance, to the characters and the cases. The
weird part is that is not from the Hanna Barbera Studios, this came out
from the Ruby Spears Studios in 1978. They made a very bad job with
this cartoon,
is very easy to know who is Freddy Jones, Daphne and Shaggy. The only
original character is Sherman Fangsworth,
the poor guy that turns in to a werewolf every
time he sees an image of the moon and turns back when he sees a
picture of the sun. C'mon =). Any way,
this unfortunately is one of
those cartoons that were everything but good or original.
DRAK PACK: When monsters form a new generation dedicated
to end the evil of their
ancestors, they choose as a leader no other than Dracula, the great D.
3
Teenagers form the Dracula’s Drak Pack Team. With their special powers
they
turn in to monsters that use their powers to stop evil. Specially the
diabolical Drake, that is always trying to conquer the world. Oh
brother =).
Well this
one of those cartoons created by Hanna Barbera Studios that is not a la
Scooby
Doo, but unfortunately it’s a variation of it. This cartoon is silly in
many
ways, from the characters to the cases they solve and specially the way
they
turn in to monsters to stop just one crazy monster who’s plans never
work =).
Any way, the only thing I can ask now is… What a hell they were
thinking? =).
This, the second
television incarnation of Charlie Chan, ( The Chinese detective from
the 1950's ) was in animated form, produced by Hanna Barbera, and shown
on Saturdays its first season. The clever detective was back solving
mysteries in this version, and was “assisted” by the Chan Clan, a group
consisting of Charlie’s ten children and the family dog Chu Chu. Henry
and Stanley were Charlie’s eldest, and therefore the leaders of each
mystery/search, which took place in a different American locale every
week.
The Clan tooled around in a van which could change into various
vehicles, depending on what was needed for camouflage. The family also
performed as a rock group, sans Charlie of course; he was always more
of a solo artist. The well-intentioned Clan would try to help solve the
mysteries, usually doing more harm than good; Charlie would then bail
them out at the end of the show by clearing up everything.
The voice of Charlie was provided by Keye Luke, who
portrayed Number One son in the Charlie Chan movies of the 40's. Except
for Henry and Alan, the children’s voices were almost immediately
recast, as their dialects were deemed too thick to be understood by
Western audiences. In an intersting footnote, future Oscar winner Jodie
Foster was one of the actresses brought in to replace the original
voice talents.
EPISODES OF THE FIRST SEASON:
1.-
The Crown Jewel Caper , 2.- To Catch a Pitcher, 3.- Will
the Real Charlie Chan Please Stand Up?, 4.- The Phantom
Sea Thief, 5.- Eye of the Idol , 6.- The Fat
Lady Caper, 7.- Captain Kidd's Doubloons, 8.- The
Bronze Idol, 9.- Double Trouble, 10.- The
Great Illusion Caper , 11.- The Mummy's Tomb, 12.- The
Mardi Gras Caper, 13.- The Gypsie Caper, 14.- The
Greek Caper, 15.- White Elephant, 16.-
Scotland Yard.
The second season of the show consisted of repeats, and aired on
Sundays.
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Characters &
Voices
Charlie - Keye Luke
Henry - Bob Ito
Stanley - Stephen Wong,
Lenny Weinrib
Suzie - Virginia Ann
Lee, Cherylene Lee
Alan - Brian Tochi
Anne - Leslie Kummamota,
Jodie Foster
Tom - Michael Takamoto,
John Gunn
Flip - Jay Jay Jue, Gene
Andrusco
Nancy - Beverly Kushida
Mimi - Leslie Juwai,
Cherylene Lee
Scooter - Robin Tomm,
Michael Morgan
Chu Chu - Don Messick
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I thank my good friend Louisa Swanson
for sending me the information of the Charlie Chan Cartoon.
All the material in this page,
except the image of Freddy Corven.
Its property of the Hanna Barbera Studios and is only being use
for entertainment purposes.
Please, if you
want to use any of the
images in this site ask for my
permission first. It toke me a while to Screen Scan all these
images.
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