Metacritic TV Episode Reviews, Snoopy's Getting Married, Charlie Brown, Snoopy runs into a female poodle while guarding Peppermint Patty's house and decides to marry her. Peppermint Patty's School Days. Sat, Oct 5, 1985 30 mins. Charlie Brown tries to prevent Snoopy from learning new tricks, while Marcie tries to help Peppermint Patty improve her. A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving is a series that is currently running and has 1 seasons (1 episodes). The series first aired on November 20, 1973. Where to Watch A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving is available for streaming on the ABC website, both individual episodes and full seasons.
DVDizzy.com | DVD and Blu-ray Reviews | New and Upcoming DVD & Blu-ray Schedule | Upcoming Cover Art | Search This SitePeanuts DVDs Reviewed: | Peanuts 1960's Collection • Peanuts 1970's Collection, Vol. 1 • Peanuts 1970's Collection, Vol. 2 Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (It's the Great Pumpkin / A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving / A Charlie Brown Christmas) It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown • He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown • You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown • You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown • 'The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show' Charlie Brown's Christmas Tales • I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown |
'The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show': The Complete Animated Series DVD Review
The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show: Seasons 1 & 2 (1983-85) Show & DVD Details Creator/Writer: Charles M. Schulz / Producers: Lee Mendelson (executive), Bill Melendez Series Director: Bill Melendez / Episode Directors: Sam Jaimes, Bill Melendez, Dick Horn, Steven C. Melendez, Robert E. Balzer, Phil Roman, Sam Nicholson Voice Cast: Brad Kesten (Charlie Brown #1), Angela Lee (Lucy van Pelt #1), Jeremy Schoenberg (Linus van Pelt #1), Victoria Vargas (Peppermint Patty #1), Stacy Heather Tolkin (Sally Brown #1), Kevin Brando (Schroeder #1), Michael Dockery (Marcie #1), Bill Melendez (Snoopy, Woodstock), Brett Johnson (Charlie Brown #2), Heather Stoneman (Lucy van Pelt #2), Gini Holtzman (Peppermint Patty #2), Keri Houlihan (Marcie #2), Jeremy Schoenberg (Linus van Pelt #2), Stacy Ferguson (Sally Brown #2, Patty #2), Jason Mendelson (Rerun van Pelt), Mary Tunnell (Frieda), Danny Colby (Schroeder #2), Dana Ferguson (Little Girl), Carl Steven (Franklin) Running Time: 344 Minutes (18 episodes) / Rating: Not Rated 1.33:1 Fullscreen (Original Broadcast Ratio) / Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono (English) Subtitles: None; Not Closed Captioned Episodes Originally Aired September 17, 1983 - October 12, 1985 Two single-sided, dual-layered discs (DVD-9s) / Clear Keepcase Suggested Retail Price: $35.98 / DVD Release Date: November 20, 2012 (WBShop.com) Episodes also available on Amazon Instant Video and iTunes |
Own it today on DVD. Buy The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show: Amazon.com • WBShop.com
It started with comic strips. In October 1950, 27-year-old Charles Schulz, the creator of the St. Paul Pioneer Press comic Li'l Folks, introduced Peanuts to the world as a daily comic in nine major metropolitan newspapers. Fifteen years later, Schulz's characters took to television in the CBS animated special A Charlie Brown Christmas. Claiming half of the televisions across the nation, that beloved special would go on to win Emmy and Peabody awards. The success created obvious demand for more. Schulz, his director/producer Bill Melendez, producer Lee Mendelson, and composer Vince Guaraldi obliged, giving the network a new special just about every year. Some were tied to a holiday or season. Others were not. In the early 1980s, the output of Peanuts animation increased, with the first half of 1983 seeing a record three new specials, two of them airing in the month of May. But that wasn't enough for CBS. That fall, they unveiled the weekly television series 'The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show' as part of their Saturday morning line-up. Originally introduced in the 10:30 timeslot, between 'The Dukes' (a cartoon 'Dukes of Hazzard' spin-off) and 'Benji, Zax & the Alien Prince' (a live-action show starring the dog of Joe Camp's feature films), 'Charlie Brown and Snoopy' would move to 8 AM in the spring, then spend the remainder of its time in various early afternoon slots. Though it spent three full years in the CBS Saturday schedule, it ran for just two seasons, the second a short stint of only five episodes. While the most iconic Peanuts holiday specials have been released and rereleased to DVD and even Blu-ray, the full 18-episode run of 'The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show' has only now made its way to DVD in The Complete Animated Series, a two-disc set from the Warner Archive Collection. 'Charlie Brown and Snoopy' is comprised of short vignettes, most of them introduced with an onscreen title. Some run as short as a minute. In that way, it closely reflects the comic strip design. The other way in which it reflects the comics is that it relies heavily on familiar gags. You don't produce a comic strip set in the same universe every day for 50 years (33 by this point) without repeating yourself. These routine character bits feel as if they could very well be recycled from past specials (as the first season's opening titles' moments are). Lucy holds the football for Charlie Brown only to pull it away before he can kick it. Charlie Brown manages a hopeless baseball team. Linus clings to his security blanket. Lucy pines for Schroeder as he stays intent on playing the piano. Snoopy and Woodstock get into all kinds of nonverbal adventures. A noticeable improvement, the short-lived Season 2 opts for longer segments with more to them and less of the standard scenarios. As a result, its episodes are (like its catchy new theme song) easier to distinguish, remember, and appreciate. There is also the fun fact that the brief second season features Stacy Ferguson, a.k.a. Fergie of The Black Eyed Peas, as the voice of Sally Brown. Along with her run on 'Kids Incorporated', this represented one of the ten-year-old's first professional credits. This 1980s television series is Peanuts at its most basic and ordinary. It's definitely not a low point for the franchise, as there have been worse specials, especially the more recent ones produced after Schulz's 2000 death. But, while it may be the closest the series has ever got to the comic strips, 'Charlie Brown and Snoopy' does run short on invention, originality, and effort. I suppose to someone who doesn't really appreciate Peanuts, this series is what the entire large canon feels like: pleasant enough but not quite funny and rather slight. To a Peanuts animation fan like myself, these episodes are nothing remarkable, but it's always nice to spend time with these lovable characters. I must admit that the more Peanuts animation one sees, the more you realize how terrific the classic specials like A Charlie Brown Christmas, It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, and A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving are. It's not just the increased exposure and yearly airings that have made these specials stand out. They're just a lot more memorable than the series' average efforts, which are simply enjoyable diversions you aren't compelled to revisit much (if ever). That accurately describes 'Charlie Brown and Snoopy', which plays like a highlights reel and mostly lacks narratives substantial enough to distinguish. The simple animation style is upheld. The characterization is unchanged. Even the young voice cast, replaced every few years and from Season 1 to 2, is clearly on point, if we're considering Christmas the definitive standard for each character's innocent sound. Five of these episodes have been included on Warner's recent Happiness Is...Peanuts DVDs, which have succeeded the studio's previous two-special discs that I often reviewed (links at bottom). The other thirteen are entirely new to DVD. Disc 1 Season One 1. Snoopy's Cat Fight (22:28) (Originally aired September 17, 1983) 2. Snoopy: Team Manager (22:29) (Originally aired September 24, 1983) 3. Linus and Lucy (22:30) (Originally aired October 1, 1983) 4. Lucy vs. the World (22:28) (Originally aired October 8, 1983) 5. Linus' Security Blanket (22:28) (Originally aired October 15, 1983) 6. Snoopy: Man's Best Friend (22:23) (Originally aired October 22, 1983) 7. Snoopy the Psychiatrist (22:29) (Originally aired October 29, 1983) 8. You Can't Win, Charlie Brown (22:27) (Originally aired November 5, 1983) 9. The Lost Ballpark (22:24) (Originally aired November 12, 1983) Disc 2 10. Snoopy's Football Career (22:28) (Originally aired November 19, 1983) 11. Chaos in the Classroom (22:26) (Originally aired November 26, 1983) 12. It's That Team Spirit, Charlie Brown (22:28) (Originally aired December 3, 1983) 13. Lucy Loves Schroeder (22:25) (Originally aired December 10, 1983) Season Two 14. Snoopy and the Giant (22:28) (Originally aired September 14, 1985) 15. Snoopy's Brother Spike (22:28) (Originally aired September 21, 1985) 16. Snoopy's Robot (22:28) (Originally aired September 28, 1985) 17. Peppermint Patty's School Days (22:25) (Originally aired October 5, 1985) 18. Sally's Sweet Babboo (22:27) (Originally aired October 12, 1985) Watch a clip from The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show: VIDEO and AUDIO Considering the low expectations one has for a Warner Archive release of 30-year-old Saturday morning cartoons, the DVD's picture quality is great. The 1.33:1 fullscreen presentation is marred infrequently by minor smudges, specks, and lines. More noticeable but not especially bothersome, the coloring seems off. For instance, the characters' skin is almost snow white. Consistency is also off. Some episodes inexplicably look and sound quite a bit better than others. Colors even vary, with Snoopy's red doghouse sometimes appearing orange or even yellow. The picture is occasionally a little lacking in sharpness and focus. All things considered, though, this is a most satisfactory presentation and practically perfect at times. Most of the time, the Dolby 2.0 Mono soundtrack is good too, but typical for Warner Archive, these discs sadly include neither subtitles nor closed captions. BONUS FEATURES, MENUS, PACKAGING and DESIGN If you're familiar with Warner's other Peanuts DVDs and not the Warner Archive Collection, you might be surprised to discover a complete lack of bonus features here. The studio has done a really nice job with the entertainment agency Trailer Park to create substantial featurettes on the major specials, complete with the involvement of such individuals as Schulz's wife, Schulz's son, producer Mendelson, and, prior to his 2008 death, director/producer/Snoopy and Woodstock voice Bill Melendez. Each disc gets one simple, static menu giving you the choice to watch one episode or all of the ones on that disc. Episodes are divided into anywhere from 5 to 9 chapter stops, each fittingly tied to segments unlike the Warner Archive discs that simply drop in stops every ten minutes. The standard clear keepcase holds Disc 1 on a swinging tray and Disc 2 on its ordinary hub. The simple and uniform nature of Warner's Peanuts DVDs makes it very difficult to notice this one's artwork is just barely of a lesser print quality. The stark lack of reverse side artwork and usual absence of the official DVD logo are the biggest giveaways as to its MOD origins. In addition, the packaging's copy is plagued by a typo, in this case the misspelling 'Charles M. Shultz' (really?!), whose seemingly contractually-obligated signature is also noticeably lacking from the character artwork. CLOSING THOUGHTS Unless you're a Peanuts completist or have really fond memories of this incarnation, 'The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show' probably won't do a whole lot for you. Though fine entertainment for 1980s Saturday mornings and 1990s syndication, most of these segmented episodes do not have the holding power of the series' best specials and movies nor the unique, original content to make a distinctive impression apart from the rest. Warner Archive's long-overdue DVD is fundamentally sound and really just an English SDH subtitle track away from being a retail-ready release. But if you are going to spend $30 or more on Peanuts animation, you'd be better served by getting the Deluxe Holiday Collection on Blu-ray or DVD and another one or two of the 2-special collections. Buy The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show on DVD: Amazon.com • WBShop.com |
Related Reviews:
Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection • Peanuts 1960's Collection • Peanuts 1970's Collection, Vol. 1 • Peanuts 1970's Collection, Vol. 2
It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown • I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown • Charlie Brown's Christmas Tales
He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown • You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown • It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown • You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown
New to Warner Archive Collection: Bugs Bunny Superstar • The Flintstones: Prime-Time Specials Collection, Volume 1 • The Halloween Tree
New: A Special Sesame Street Christmas • Prep & Landing • DreamWorks Holiday Classics • Pixar Short Films Collection, V2 • Grave of the Fireflies • Brave
'80s Cartoons: Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1980s • Adventures of the Gummi Bears: Volume 1 • The Jetsons: Season 2, Volume 1
More '80s Animation: The Smurfs: Season One, Volume One • Yogi Bear's All-Star Comedy Christmas Caper • The Smurfs and the Magic Flute
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Reviewed November 27, 2012.
Text copyright 2012 DVDizzy.com. Images copyright 1983-85 United Feature Syndicate, Inc. and 2012 Warner Home Video.
Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown! | |
---|---|
Genre | Animated television special |
Created by | Charles M. Schulz |
Directed by | Phil Roman Bill Melendez |
Voices of | Liam Martin Bill Melendez |
Theme music composer | Vince Guaraldi |
Opening theme | 'Linus and Lucy' |
Composers | Ed Bogas Judy Munsen Vince Guaraldi |
Country of origin | U.S. |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producer | Lee Mendelson |
Producer | Bill Melendez |
Editors | Roger Donley Chuck McCann |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Picture format | 4:3 |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | February 23, 1978 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown (1977) |
Followed by | Happy Birthday, Charlie Brown (1979) |
What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown! is the 17th prime-timeanimatedtelevision special based on the comic stripPeanuts by Charles M. Schulz. It originally aired on Thursday, February 23, 1978, at 8:00 P.M. ET/PT on CBS. The special is unusual in that Snoopy and Charlie Brown are the only members of the Peanuts cast to appear in it.[1] The plot is similar to that of Jack London's The Call of the Wild, and centers on Snoopy having a nightmare about being an Arctic sled dog. This was the first special Bill Melendez directed since 1973's A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving.
In June 2010, the special debuted on DVD as part of the Peanuts 1970's Collection, Volume Two set by Warner Home Video.[2] Before that it was released on CED format in 1983, and on VHS by Media Home Entertainment in 1985, Hi-Tops Video in 1988, and on September 6, 1995 by Paramount Home Media Distribution along with It's Magic, Charlie Brown. The special occasionally saw airings on the American TV channel Nickelodeon from 1998 to 2000 as part of Nickelodeon's umbrella branding for Peanuts programming, You're on Nickelodeon, Charlie Brown!
One winter day, Charlie Brown is trying to pretend to be a musher with Snoopy, but the dog has other ideas and gets Charlie Brown to pull while he has fun riding in the sled. When night comes and they are comfortably indoors, Charlie Brown is indignant that Snoopy is adjusting too well to home life, reminding Snoopy of facts that Arctic dogs are only fed once a day, their meals largely consisting of cold meat and raw fish (to which Snoopy blanches and gives a look of 'it's too bad to be them') and coming to the conclusion that Snoopy is 'an overly civilized, underly 'dogified' dog'. Snoopy makes a sumptuous dinner of five pizzas and a milkshake, to which Charlie Brown retorts he hopes Snoopy can digest all that food. Snoopy then falls asleep atop his doghouse, but when he wakes up he finds himself in a polar region, to which he is made a sled dog of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska, presumably during the Klondike Gold Rush or the 1925 serum run to Nome.
Snoopy is cruelly mistreated, being run ragged by his owner, who is only seen in shadow or silhouette and only speaks in a much deeper version of the classic Peanuts adult 'waa-waa-waa' language. Snoopy was being denied any food or water by his fellow dogs. The dogs take turns barking loudly at Snoopy in order to let him know he is indeed an outsider. One scene which breaks the snow scenes is where the sled master stops at a honky tonk, and a hungry Snoopy sneaks inside to snatch a sandwich and a mug of root beer sitting near a piano, where he feigns playing John Philip Sousa's 'The Washington Post March'. Snoopy later tries his hand at a game of poker, where he keeps a poker face until he laughs out loud revealing his improbable winning hand of five aces, which causes a brawl and leaving Snoopy to escape into the next room. He finds himself on stage with a painted backdrop of Paris and is cheered for his dancing. However, when the music changes and he impersonates a can-can dancer, Snoopy is thrown out of the bar and is back with the sled dogs, where he continues to be mistreated.
Unable to take any more, that night Snoopy breaks down crying, then once he's done he goes about converting to his 'new life' in order to survive, baring his fangs and falls to walking on all fours. Snoopy challenges the lead dog to a fight and wins, becoming the 'Alpha Male' of the sled dog pack. He also turns the tables on the rest of the dogs by denying them food and water. Eventually, he leads his owner over an ice-covered lake where the ice cracks and causes all the sled dogs and the owner to be swallowed into the water. Snoopy finds himself being pulled into the hole. As he grapples screaming for his life, Snoopy wakes up clinging to the side of his doghouse and is relieved that he was just having a nightmare. Snoopy later wakes Charlie Brown up and recounts his nightmare in pantomime, to which Charlie Brown allows Snoopy to spend the night inside with him, but not before Snoopy helps himself to a large ice cream sundae, reminding himself that his Arctic experience was indeed a nightmare.