Pocket Dragon Adventures
Pocket Dragon Adventures | |
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![]() DVD Cover for "Brave as they can Be!" | |
Also known as | Pocket Dragons Adventures Pocket Dragons (Spanish) |
Genre | Children's adventure Animation Fantasy |
Created by | Real Musgrave (Original Characters) |
Developed by | Craig Miller Marv Wolfman |
Directed by | Antoni D'Ocon (Earlier episodes) Kurt Weldon (Later episodes) |
Starring | Ian James Corlett Jason Gray-Stanford Sam Vincent Kathleen Barr Tabitha St. Germain Venus Terzo Terry Klassen Christopher Gaze Robert O. Smith Saffron Henderson |
Theme music composer | Matt McGuire Sandy Howell Laura Cerdan (Spanish) |
Composer | Matt McGuire |
Country of origin | Spain United States |
Original languages | Spanish English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 52 (104 Segments) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Antoni D'Ocon Craig Miller Marv Wolfman Kaaren Lee Brown Andy Heyward Robby London Michael Maliani |
Producers | Antoni D'Ocon (Earlier episodes) Kurt Weldon (Later episodes) |
Animators | Earlier episodes D'Ocon Films Productions Later Episodes Animation Services Hong Kong Hang Yang Production Hong Ying Animation Young Woo Production Co. |
Production companies | D'Ocon Films Productions Bohbot Entertainment DIC Productions, L.P. |
Original release | |
Network | TVE1 (Spain) Syndication (BKN) (North America) |
Release | 15 March 1998 3 January 1999 | –
Pocket Dragon Adventures (Spanish: Pocket Dragons) is an animated TV series produced by the Spanish animation studio D'Ocon Films Productions, in co-production with Televisión Española, Bohbot Entertainment, and DIC Entertainment. The series is based on the Pocket Dragon characters created by artist Real Musgrave, best known for the Pocket Dragons figurines also based on his work.[1]
The series centers on the Pocket Dragons (a group of very small dragons) who live with a kindly old wizard, and their many adventures.[2] The show premiered in the United States on the Bohbot Kids Network syndicated programming strand in early 1998.
The series itself was created by Craig Miller and Marv Wolfman, who also produced and story edited the series. Together or separately, they wrote over 40% of the total number of episodes. Pocket Dragon Adventures was also the first animated series signed to a labor contract with the Writers Guild of America.[3]
Synopsis
The setting is shown to be set in the Medieval era, with other elements thrown in; often bizarre ones (e.g., yellow-painted taxicabs pulled by rhinoceroses). Most episodes of the series include standard Medieval fare, such as armored knights, and some science fiction elements, such as flying saucers.
Characters
Pocket Dragons
- Filbert (voiced by Ian James Corlett) – The largest and oldest of the six Pocket Dragons, who wears a red bandanna around his neck, and assumes the role of leader, even though he's seldom in control of the others.
- Zoom-Zoom (voiced by Jason Gray-Stanford) – The fastest runner of the group, who wears an old-style aviator's helmet and wishes that he could fly, despite the Pocket Dragons' inability to fly.
- Specs (voiced by Samuel Vincent) – The bookworm of the group, who wears a pair of human-sized glasses balanced on his nose. He has a crush on the Princess.
- Scribbles (voiced by Kathleen Barr) – One of the two female dragons; a somewhat scatterbrained inventor whose creations tend to cause more problems than they solve. She and Specs disagree as to which of them is smarter. She wears a special quiver in which she carries a pencil. Scribbles often fills in the leadership position when Filbert is incapacitated.
- Binky (voiced by Tabitha St. Germain) – The other female dragon, who is the smallest and youngest of the six dragons. In one episode, "Attack of the 50 Foot Binky", she wanted to be as tall as Filbert, so she used a growth potion and because she didn't put a limitation on it, she gradually grew bigger until the others found the antidote. Despite her childlike qualities, she sometimes surprises the others with her competence and clear-headedness. She is the only one of the group who usually does not wear anything.
- Cuddles (voiced by Venus Terzo in Season 1 and Terry Klassen in Season 2) – A drowsy dragon who wears bedroom slippers and carries a pillow, and is usually shown sleeping. Sometimes when he sleeps, he "sleep-plays" that he's a daring adventurer named Sir Cuddles; he snaps out of this and wakes up whenever someone says "Cushladoo".
Other characters
- Wizard (voiced by Christopher Gaze) – A kindly, avuncular wizard who watches over the Dragons and owns the castle in which the dragons live. He tries to keep them from getting into too much trouble. An accomplished magician, he has a vast library and a laboratory in the castle.
- Library Cat – A winged cat who is the wizard's familiar and a helpful companion to the Pocket Dragons. The cat also wears spectacles.
- Theobearus – A living teddy bear, who occasionally aids the pocket dragons.
- Sparkles (voiced by Robert O. Smith) – A full-sized dragon who is not very bright. He is able to float through the air by inflating himself like a balloon.
- Princess Betty Bye Belle (voiced by Saffron Henderson) – The princess who runs the town library; when the former librarian retired, the Princess offered to let him live in the castle while she took over the library, because of her love of literature. She seems to be aware of Specs' feelings toward her, although she sees him more as a friend.
- Shmahz – A short wizard who hates the Dragons for disrupting his evil schemes and often tries to get revenge on them.
- Sir Nigel (voiced by Garry Chalk) – A full-sized dragon who is a friend of the Wizard and the Pocket Dragons. He is a figure of culture and learning.
- Trafalgar – A villainous full-sized dragon, who takes tips on how to be evil from his guidebook.
- The Pie-Rats – A trio of rodent thieves named Cuda, Wuda, and Shuda who specialise in stealing pastries.
- Gnorman the Gnome (voiced by Brian Drummond) – A bumbling, sometimes villainous, sometimes helpful character. The "G"'s in his name are not silent (it is pronounced "G-norman the G-nome"). His brother is called Gnasty and his sister is called Gnoxious.
- Chumley – Sir Nigel's bumbling artistic brother, he speaks with a Welsh accent and is based on a Welsh Dragon.
Cast
- Ian James Corlett as Filbert
- Jason Gray-Stanford as Zoom-Zoom
- Samuel Vincent as Specs
- Kathleen Barr as Scribbles
- Tabitha St. Germain as Binky
- Venus Terzo as Cuddles (earlier episodes)
- Terry Klassen as Cuddles (later episodes)
- Christopher Gaze as the Wizard
- Robert O. Smith as Sparkles
- Saffron Henderson as Princess Betty Bye Bell
Additional voices
- Long John Baldry
- Jay Brazeau
- Don Brown
- Garry Chalk
- Michael Dobson
- Jesse Moss
- Richard Newman
- Mark Oliver
- Doug Parker
- Bill Reiter
- Russell Roberts
- French Tickner
- Lee Tockar
- David Ward
- Alec Willows
- Dale Wilson
Production
Development
Development of the series started after Kaaren Lee Brown, Bohbot Entertainment's general manager, went to a party and oversaw a set of Pocket Dragon figures - finding out that Craig Miller and franchise creator Real Musgrave were negotiating to adapt the figures into an animated TV series. In October 1995, Bohbot bought the television rights from Miller and Musgrave and signed D'Ocon Films Productions as a European co-producer in April 1996.[4]
The series was officially announced in July 1996[5] and was pre-sold at MIPCOM that year in some territories. In February 1997, D'Ocon was confirmed to handle a majority of the series' production, as well as holding rights in Spain and Portugal, while Bohbot would control all other territories.[6] In December, the series was confirmed to be the first to be supplied under a new deal with the WGA.[7]
Series overview
Each half-hour episode contained two 11-minute segments. The episodes contained some educational elements, but were mostly written for entertainment. The plots usually involved the Pocket Dragons getting into some kind of mess, either due to their own actions or those of others, and going through wild and crazy situations while trying to set things right.
Some of the episodes' plots and titles are parodies of films or TV series, such as the episodes "Binky, Warrior Princess", and "Attack of the 50 Foot Binky".
104 eleven-minute episodes were produced. They aired as 52 half-hour episodes in the United States, with some countries airing them as 15-minute programs (in the United Kingdom, for example, the series ran seven days a week on BBC1[8] and BBC2 for six years as part of its children's programming strand CBBC).
Episodes
No. | Title | Original release date | |
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1 | "Day for Knight / All Alone and Feeling Boo" | 15 March 1998 | |
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2 | "Zoom-Zoom's Wish / Gnome Alone" | 22 March 1998 | |
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3 | "The Art of Magic / Never Wish Upon a Star" | 29 March 1998 | |
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4 | "Stop! Pay Troll! / Whookerpop" | 5 April 1998 | |
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5 | "Speed of Flight / Just Desserts" | 12 April 1998 | |
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6 | "In Your Dream / Science Friction" | 19 April 1998 | |
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7 | "A Harp Day's Night / It Came from Outer Space" | 26 April 1998 | |
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8 | "Sea Sickness / A Clear and Present Scribbles" | 3 May 1998 | |
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9 | "The Unicorn Hunters / Down Deep" | 10 May 1998 | |
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10 | "Snow Job / A Rocky Friendship" | 17 May 1998 | |
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11 | "A Cold, Cruel World / Pen Pals" | 24 May 1998 | |
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12 | "Pocket Dragons vs. the Flying Saucer / Minky Business" | 31 May 1998 | |
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13 | "Masquerade / Ducks Amok" | 7 June 1998 | |
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14 | "Shmahz Strikes Again / The Nervous Novice" | 14 June 1998 | |
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15 | "A Dragon in This Dress / Malice with the Chalice" | 21 June 1998 | |
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16 | "King of the Hill / Disguise in Love with You" | 28 June 1998 | |
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17 | "Follow the Leader / Trashmandu" | 5 July 1998 | |
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18 | "Surely you Joust / Tree's a Crowd" | 12 July 1998 | |
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19 | "Mulch Ado about Nothing / Mission: Indigestible" | 19 July 1998 | |
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20 | "A Dry Spell / Weather or Not" | 26 July 1998 | |
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21 | "Yonder Lies the Castle of My Wizard / Pillow Squawk" | 2 August 1998 | |
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22 | "First Pocket Dragons on the Moon / All's Faire" | 9 August 1998 | |
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23 | "Hail, Hail, the Ghengis here / Thief in the Night" | 16 August 1998 | |
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24 | "Something Wicker This Way Comes / There's No Place Like Gnome" | 23 August 1998 | |
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25 | "Winter Take All / The Big Nap" | 30 August 1998 | |
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26 | "The Trouble with Scribbles / Attack of the 50 Foot Binky" | 6 September 1998 | |
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27 | "Snow Binky and the Six Pocket Dragons / Reservoir Clogs" | 13 September 1998 | |
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28 | "Brother, Can You Spare a Dragon? / The Frill of a Lifetime" | 20 September 1998 | |
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29 | "A Babe in the Woods / A Really Bad Hair Day" | 27 September 2998 | |
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30 | "Sleepwalk on the Wild Side / To Hex or Not to Hex" | 4 October 1998 | |
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31 | "Binky, Warrior Princess / Rose-Colored Specs" | 11 October 1998 | |
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32 | "Now You See Me, Now You Don't / Mortal Wombat" | 18 October 1998 | |
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33 | "Monster Mashed / Here There Be Dragons" | 25 October 1998 | |
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34 | "The Echoing Dwarf / Binky and the Beanstalk" | 1 November 1998 | |
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35 | "Fled a Good Book Lately? / A Knight to Remember" | 8 November 1998 | |
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36 | "Altitude Adjustment / The Unbearable Lightness of Zoom-Zoom" | 15 November 1998 | |
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37 | "Jester Round the Bend / Dumb Diddy Do" | 22 November 1998 | |
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38 | "Nothing But the Roof / Clanks a Million!" | 29 November 1998 | |
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39 | "Trap Happy / Opposites Distract" | 6 December 1998 | |
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40 | "All That Glitters / Clockwork Berserk" | 13 December 1998 | |
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41 | "Bewitched, Bothered and Bedragoned / The Ransom of Sparkles" | 20 December 1998 | |
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42 | "Sharp Dressed Gnome / Dragon Snaps" | 27 December 1998 | |
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43 | "Slice of Ice / Another Fine Hex" | 3 January 1999 | |
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Release
Pocket Dragon Adventures has been released on DVD in the United States and around the world (including the United Kingdom, France and other European countries) but availability is limited. DVDs contain selected episodes only. The entire series is currently available on the free streaming platforms Tubi, Pluto TV, and Peacock. In the United Kingdom, the show currently airs in repeats on London Live as part of Bounce!.
References
- ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 469. ISBN 978-1538103739.
- ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 626. ISBN 978-1476665993.
- ^ Hulett, Steve (22 October 2011). "Women in Animation Panel". animationguildblog.blogspot.com/.
- ^ https://kidscreen.com/1997/04/01/17600-19970401/
- ^ https://kidscreen.com/1996/07/01/17103-19960701/
- ^ https://kidscreen.com/1997/04/01/17600-19970401/
- ^ "Wolfmill Pockets First WGA Deal". Animation World Magazine. 2 (9). December 1997. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
- ^ https://www.awn.com/news/bbc1-renews-pocket-dragon