Spaceballs: The Animated Series
Spaceballs: The Animated Series | |
---|---|
Genre | Adult animation Comic science fiction Satire |
Created by | Mel Brooks Thomas Meehan |
Voices of | Mel Brooks Daphne Zuniga Joan Rivers Tino Insana Rino Romano Dee Bradley Baker |
Theme music composer | Mel Brooks |
Opening theme | Spaceballs theme song |
Ending theme | Spaceballs theme song instrumental |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Mel Brooks Rainer Soehnlein |
Producer | Chad Hammes |
Running time | 30 minutes (including commercials) |
Production companies | Berliner Film Companie Brooksfilms Fantasy Prone Interactive G4 Media MGM Television |
Original release | |
Network | Super Channel (Canada), G4 |
Release | June 4, 2008Super Channel) November 21, 2008 – March 1, 2009 (G4) | (
Spaceballs: The Animated Series, also known as Spaceballs: The Series, is an adult animated television series that premiered in 2008 on G4 and Canada's Super Channel, and is loosely based on the parody science fiction film Spaceballs.[1] Similarly to how the original film parodied the original Star Wars films and the Star Trek universe, each episode of the series parodies a different film or other aspect of popular culture, such as the Star Wars prequel trilogy, The Lord of the Rings, or the Grand Theft Auto video games.
Production
Production began in early 2005 under the supervision of Brooksfilms, MGM and Berliner Film Company. Mel Brooks not only directed the writing, but also reprised his roles as President Skroob and Yogurt from the film.[2] Daphne Zuniga and Joan Rivers also reprise their roles from the film, while Bill Pullman and Rick Moranis do not. Those roles are filled by Rino Romano and Dee Bradley Baker, respectively. Tino Insana replaces John Candy, who died in 1994, as "Barf," and Rudy De Luca also supplied his voice talents.
Delayed series premiere
Some promotional items on the series were seen at the 2007 Comic-Con and a total of 13 episodes were planned to debut during the fall of 2007,[3] although this "deadline" passed by with no sign of the show on G4's schedule. A start date of June 1, 2008 was later reported,[4] but the series was delayed once again. Despite the lack of information in the United States, the series premiered on Canada's Super Channel.[1] and remained absent from G4 in America until its eventual series premiere on September 21, 2008. The first two episodes of the series were shown following an airing of the original film.[5]
Cast
- Mel Brooks as President Skroob / Yogurt
- Daphne Zuniga as Princess Vespa
- Joan Rivers as Dot Matrix
- Tino Insana as Barf (replacing John Candy)
- Rino Romano as Lone Starr[6] (replacing Bill Pullman)
- Dee Bradley Baker as Dark Helmet (replacing Rick Moranis due to his retirement)
- Rudy De Luca as Vinnie / Fort Lox Checkpoint official
- Julianne Grossman as Charlene / Marlene / Darlene / Yente / The Unsinkable Old Fat Lady / Commanderette Zircon / Princess Harley Van Patten / Pannakin's mother / Robohooker / Jasmine / Telephone Operator
- Dave Wittenberg
- Jim Meskimen
- Jim Jackman
- Dom DeLuise as Pizza the Hutt
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | "Pilot" | TBD | Mel Brooks and Thomas Meehan | DVD Episodes | |
A retelling of the movie with some key differences to set up the series. The primary changes are that Lone Star retains the ring of the Schwartz (though after his battle with Helmet, Lone Star is seen wearing the ring, meaning he got it back) and he does not turn out to be a prince. Thus, Vespa instead decides to stay single since she cannot marry him. This marked the final acting performance of Dom Deluise before his death in May 2009 | |||||
1 | "Revenge of the Sithee" | Jay Surridge | David Lewman & Joe Liss | November 21, 2008 | |
Dark Helmet gets knocked out by a robot stripper in Skroob's new casino and recalls his origin story as in a dream. Once he was a young boy named Pannakin Crybaby, he won his freedom in a NasPodrace, was trained in the Schwartz by Yogurt, fell in love with Princess Harley Van Patten, and became Lord Dark Helmet. Parody: Star Wars prequel trilogy | |||||
2 | "Grand Theft Starship" | Blake Leibel | Ian Dallas | November 28, 2008 | |
Lone Starr and Princess Vespa are sucked into a game of Grand Theft Starship, leaving the Spaceballs to conquer the known universe. But, missing Lone Starr's opposition, President Skroob and Dark Helmet follow them into the game world. Parody: Grand Theft Auto and various other video game series | |||||
3 | "Lord of the Onion Rings" | David Dulac | Boomie Aglietti | December 5, 2008 | |
Years ago Lone Starr's father stole the One Onion ring from Skroob's father. When Barf finds the Onion Ring stuck in an old couch inside the Eagle 5, Yogurt sends him on a quest to throw the Onion Ring into the deep fryer of Lardor. Meanwhile Skroob orders Dark Helmet to build him a dark army. Unfortunately they end up with a dork army instead. Parody: The Lord of the Rings | |||||
4 | "Watch Your Assic Park" | Chad Hammes | Adam Kosloff | December 12, 2008 | |
Lone Starr and Barf are named fans of the day at a Spankees ball game and win a trip to Watch your Assic Park to see the Spankees train. After they arrive at Isla Nueblo (180 star miles from Planet Costa Rica) they learn how Skroob, the owner of the Spankees, uses a combination of steroids and dinosaur DNA to create Dino-athletes and rule the sports universe. Despite being quite disgusted, Lone Starr, Barf, Vespa and Dot take the park tour anyway, accompanied by Skroob's precious 9 year old niece Jasmine and two anonymous lawyers. Parody: Jurassic Park | |||||
5 | "Outbreak" | Jay Surridge & Chad Hammes | Boomie Aglietti | December 19, 2008 | |
President Skroob hatches a plan to take over the galaxy with a pestilent soda. But Barf intercepts the shipment and causes an outbreak on planet Spaceball. Parody: Quarantine | |||||
6 | "Hairy Putter and the Gopher of Fire" | Chad Hammes | Julie Chambers & David Chambers | December 26, 2008 | |
Lone Starr and the gang go to a golf tournament at Mawgwarts academy. But President Skroob uses Dark Helmet to cheat using a magic diaper. Parody: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire | |||||
7 | "The Mighty Meteor" | Chad Hammes | Adam Kosloff | January 3, 2009 | |
Skroob and Dark Helmet attempt to destroy planet Druidia with a meteor, but it fails. With the help from Indians they launch a mighty meteor. Meanwhile Lone Starr becomes obsessed with his new van. Parody: The Mighty Ducks | |||||
8 | "Spaceballs of the Caribbean" | David Dulac | David Lewman & Joe Liss | January 24, 2009 | |
President Skroob fools Yogurt with a "free body scan" to steal his gallbladder which is the source of all the Schwartz. Now Lone Starr and "Black Barf" must get it back. But Dark Helmet wants all the Schwartz in the galaxy. Parody: Pirates of the Caribbean | |||||
9 | "Fishfinger" | David Dulac | Juile Chambers & David Chambers | February 1, 2009 | |
President Skroob has a plan to take over the galaxy's fish supply. Lone Starr AKA Double O "Sven" must stop Skroob AKA Fishfinger. Parody: Goldfinger | |||||
10 | "The Skroobinator" | Jason Raines & Michael Montaine | Joe Meehan | February 8, 2009 | |
Skroob is way behind in the re-election polls, so he and Dark Helmet go back in time to kill the great great etc grandmother of his opponent. Parody: The Terminator | |||||
11 | "Deep Ship" | David Dulac & Chad Hammes | Juile Chambers & David Chambers | February 15, 2009 | |
President Skroob kidnaps Princess Vespa and tries to use her as a virgin sacrifice on planet Areola. Parody: The Poseidon Adventure and Titanic | |||||
12 | "Druidian Idol" | Rainer Soehnlein | Boomie Aglietti | February 22, 2009 | |
Barf and Princess Vespa appear on the show Druidian Idol. Lone Star, Dot, and Skroob pose as judges. Parody: American Idol | |||||
13 | "Spidermawg" | Blake Leibel, Michael Montaine, & Jason Raines | Joe Meehan | March 1, 2009 | |
Barf gets bitten by a mutant space spider and becomes Spidermawg. Parody: Spider-Man |
References
- ^ a b Super Channel
- ^ "'Spaceballs' Series Enters G4's Orbit". Zap2it.
- ^ IGN: Spaceballs: The Cartoon!
- ^ Levin, Gary (March 24, 2008). "G4 network tries a new game plan to get more guys". USA Today. Retrieved May 23, 2010.
- ^ [1] Archived September 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Toronto voice actor 'had big cowl to fill' Archived 2012-11-04 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- 2008 American television series debuts
- 2009 American television series endings
- 2000s American adult animated television series
- 2000s American comic science fiction television series
- 2000s American parody television series
- Adaptations of works by Mel Brooks
- American adult animated action television series
- American adult animated adventure television series
- Animated space adventure television series
- American adult animated fantasy television series
- American animated science fantasy television series
- American adult animated comedy television series
- American adult animated science fiction television series
- American comic science fiction television series
- American flash adult animated television series
- Animation based on real people
- English-language television shows
- G4 (American TV network) original programming
- Parody television series based on Star Wars
- Animated television shows based on films
- Television series by MGM Television
- Television series created by Mel Brooks