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|image=[[Image:Marvinthemartain.jpg|200px]]
|image=[[Image:Marvinthemartain.jpg|200px]]
|caption=Marvin in ''[[Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century]]''
|caption=Marvin in ''[[Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century]]''
|first=''[[Haredevil Hare]]'' (November 14th, 1948)
|first=''[[Haredevil Hare]]'' (November 21st, 1948)
|creator=[[Chuck Jones]]
|creator=[[Chuck Jones]]
|voice=[[Mel Blanc]] (1948–1989)<br>[[Joe Alaskey]] (1990–current)<br>[[Maurice LaMarche]] (''[[Animaniacs]]'')<br>[[Rob Paulsen]] (''[[Taz-Mania]]'')<br>[[Bob Bergen]] (''[[Space Jam]]'')<br>[[Eric Goldberg]] (''[[Looney Tunes: Back in Action]]'')<br>[[Neil Ross]] (''[[Air Jordan Commercial]], [[Pinky and the Brain]]'')<br>[[Jim Cummings]] (''[[Superior Duck]]'')<br>[[Eric Bauza]] (2011-current)<br>Damon Jones (''[[The Looney Tunes Show]]'', singing voice)<br>[[Mike Myers (actor)|Mike Myers]] (2012 Marvin the Martian film)
|voice=[[Mel Blanc]] (1948–1989)<br>[[Joe Alaskey]] (1990–current)<br>[[Maurice LaMarche]] (''[[Animaniacs]]'')<br>[[Rob Paulsen]] (''[[Taz-Mania]]'')<br>[[Bob Bergen]] (''[[Space Jam]]'')<br>[[Eric Goldberg]] (''[[Looney Tunes: Back in Action]]'')<br>[[Neil Ross]] (''[[Air Jordan Commercial]], [[Pinky and the Brain]]'')<br>[[Jim Cummings]] (''[[Superior Duck]]'')<br>[[Eric Bauza]] (2011-current)<br>Damon Jones (''[[The Looney Tunes Show]]'', singing voice)<br>[[Mike Myers (actor)|Mike Myers]] (2012 Marvin the Martian film)

Revision as of 18:11, 21 November 2012

Marvin The Martian
File:Marvinthemartain.jpg
First appearanceHaredevil Hare (November 21st, 1948)
Created byChuck Jones
Voiced byMel Blanc (1948–1989)
Joe Alaskey (1990–current)
Maurice LaMarche (Animaniacs)
Rob Paulsen (Taz-Mania)
Bob Bergen (Space Jam)
Eric Goldberg (Looney Tunes: Back in Action)
Neil Ross (Air Jordan Commercial, Pinky and the Brain)
Jim Cummings (Superior Duck)
Eric Bauza (2011-current)
Damon Jones (The Looney Tunes Show, singing voice)
Mike Myers (2012 Marvin the Martian film)
In-universe information
AliasMarvin Martian
SpeciesMartian
GenderMale

Marvin the Martian is a character from the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons.

Conception and creation

Animation director Chuck Jones noted that Bugs Bunny soon began to outwit Yosemite Sam (the creation of the senior director, Friz Freleng), so he decided to create the opposite type of character; one who was quiet and soft-spoken, but whose actions were incredibly destructive and legitimately dangerous. Marvin the Martian made his debut in 1948's Haredevil Hare.

Unlike the other villains, Marvin can be actually evil at most points, and not just daft. However, he is a funny cartoon character like the other villains. Marvin is the quietest of the Warner Bros villains, and the most soft-spoken, and unlike most of the other villains, he is very clever.

Marvin's design was based on a conception of the Roman god Mars. "That was the uniform that Mars wore — that helmet and skirt. We thought putting it on this ant-like creature might be funny. But since he had no mouth, we had to convey that he was speaking totally through his movements. It demanded a kind of expressive body mechanics."[1]

Marvin was never named in the original shorts (though he was called the Commander of Flying Saucer X-2 in The Hasty Hare in 1952), but decades later, when the character attracted merchandising interest, the current name was selected.

Voice Actor portrayal

In his first appearance, he was voiced by Mel Blanc who gave him a nasal-like voice, but later, Mel adopted an accent resembling Received Pronunciation for the character. Marvin was voiced in recent years by Joe Alaskey, Bob Bergen, Eric Goldberg, and Eric Bauza. However, Sterling Holloway was suggested for Marvin's voice.

History

Marvin hails from the planet Mars, but is often found elsewhere. He is often accompanied by his dog "K-9", and sometimes by other creatures (one gag, first used in Hare-Way to the Stars (1957), being candy-sized "Instant Martians" that become full-size on addition of drops of water).

Marvin wears a Roman soldier's uniform, with old-fashioned basketball shoes. The style of these resembles the Chuck Taylor All-Stars brand name, considered to be the "generic" or "standard" basketball sneaker. His head is a black sphere with only eyes for features. The curved crest of his helmet appears, with the push-broom-like upper section, to comically resemble an ancient Greek hoplite's or a Roman Centurion's helmet. The appearance of the combination of Marvin's head and helmet allegedly led to Bugs Bunny thinking he was a "bowling ball wearing a spittoon" in one Looney Tunes animated short. Marvin speaks with a soft, nasally accent, and often speaks technobabble. The helmet and skirt that surround him are green and his suit is red (in a few of the original shorts, his suit was green). He is also known for his trademark quotes "Where's the kaboom? There was supposed to be an earth-shattering kaboom!", "Isn't that lovely?", and "This makes me very angry, very angry indeed."

On numerous occasions, Marvin has tried to destroy the Earth with his "Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator" (sometimes pronounced "Illudium Pu-36").[2] Marvin always laboriously over-pronounces the name of the device, which resembles a mere stick of dynamite, in order to avoid any possibility of confusing it with some other similar technology.[3] Marvin attempts to destroy the Earth because, he reasons, "it obstructs my view of Venus"; he has been trying to destroy the Earth for more than two millennia, suggesting that members of his species, and possibly martian creatures in general, have extremely long lifespans. The original reference to "Uranium Pu-36" changed to "Illudium PU-36" in subsequent cartoons [1]. Marvin is consistently foiled by Bugs Bunny. He has battled for space territory, Planet X, with Daffy Duck, a.k.a. Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century.

He has appeared in three animated shows on Cartoon Network — as a 3 year old toddler in Baby Looney Tunes, as a primary villain in the Duck Dodgers television series, and most recently in The Looney Tunes Show.

  • In "Baby Looney Tunes", he is shunned and ridicued by the other babies (except for Taz) for being "weird", as he is too shy to speak to them, before they befriend him upon seeing how helpful he is, and later in songs Including "Oh Where oh where has my Marvin Gone" (Based on the Children's song Oh Where Oh Where Has My Little Dog Gone).
  • In "Duck Dodgers", he works for the Martian Queen Tyr'ahnee. This show reused his original name from The Hasty Hare (although the opening credits list him as Marvin playing Commander X-2, in the same way as Daffy is playing Duck Dodgers).
  • Marvin the Martian appears in "The Looney Tunes Show" episode "Reunion" and appeared in the short "I'm a Martian", voiced by Eric Bauza. Here, he is described as a former classmate of Daffy's who has been plotting to destroy Earth since graduation. The episode also has a flashback, in which it is revealed that the yellow headdress on the top of his helmet is actually his hair, showing that in high school (before he started wearing the helmet) he kept it down.

Over a decade prior to any of these, he guest-starred in a Tiny Toon Adventures segment titled "Duck Dodgers Jr.", where he was accompanied by an apprentice named Marcia the Martian.

He was also in a Taz-Mania episode "The Man from M.A.R.S." and did a cameo in The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries ("What's the Frequency, Kitty?").

Marvin also made appearances on Animaniacs, notably in the Mindy and Buttons short subject, "Cat on a Hot Steel Beam" (which also featured the cute kitten Pussyfoot) and in "Star Warners", along with his dog K-9 And most recently in a MetLife commercial.

Cartoon Network also created a 2-minute filler piece featuring Marvin-- "Mars Forever" by the Plastic Fantastic Machine. It's a disco-style video combining clips of Marvin and Bugs Bunny from their encounters in "Haredevil Hare," "Hareway to the Stars," as well as bits of "Duck Dodgers in the 24th-and-a-half Century" and "Rocket Bye Baby."

Marvin has also appeared in a number of video games. He served as the main antagonist in both the Mega Drive/Genesis game Taz in Escape From Mars and the Super Nintendo game Daffy Duck: The Marvin Missions. He also appeared in Bugs Bunny Lost in Time for PlayStation where he was the boss of Dimension X, and in the final level of Sheep, Dog, 'n' Wolf. He was a common enemy in the Quantum Beep stages of Road Runner's Death Valley Rally for Super Nintendo. He also made a brief cameo in the 2003-2007 CN Fridays intro.

Marvin was also cast as the referee in Space Jam (though he did not stay to referee the whole game due to Bupkus beating him up), and then later had a major villainous role in Looney Tunes: Back in Action where he was hired by the ACME chairman, Mr. Luther J. Chairman (Steve Martin), to finish DJ (Brendan Fraser) and the gang at Area 52. In the film's climax, he reappears to bring the Blue Monkey diamond to the ACME satellite, but is thwarted by Bugs (who he duels in a parody of Obi Wan Kenobi and Jango Fett in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones) and Daffy (who arrives as Duck Dodgers to save Bugs after he is exhausted from the battle), resulting in Marvin trapped in a bubble floating through space.

Marvin appeared in the Looney Tunes version of A Christmas Carol, Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas as an employee at Daffy Duck's "Lucky Duck Super Store". Marvin was homesick for his planet, Mars, and wanted to go back for Christmas (but also mentions that he's planning to destroy the Earth as well). At first, Daffy doesn't let him take Christmas off, since he expects the employees to work on Christmas Day. After being visited by the abrasive yet well-intentioned Christmas ghosts, Daffy is redeemed, and as part of a surprise Christmas celebration, gives Marvin a rocket that will go faster than the speed of light, allowing him to make it to Mars by yesterday.

In nearly all of his appearances, Marvin is shown using a small pistol that fires either bubbles of pliable plastic or energy beams. He is also apparently immortal or long-lived, since he mentions doing over two thousand years of research to create the Illudium Q-36 Space Modulator, and he is seen in Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century, with Gossamer, a hairy red monster, as his assistant.

Jobs

1. In older Looney Tunes episodes, Marvin is unemployed; later, he does secret missions for the M3 Squad.

2. In Looney Tunes Back in Action, he is an evil villain working for the Chairman.

3. In the Duck Dodgers series, he is a Martian commander/super villain for the queen.

4. In one Duck Dodgers episode, he is demoted to slave boy as punishmen for hurting Dodgers.

5. In the new Looney Tunes show, he makes pizzas and helps deliver them.

6. In Looney Tunes Christmas, he puts prices on products in a super store, until the end of the film when he is promoted to assistant manager.

7. Marvin was the referee in Space Jam.

Other media

File:MarvinTheMartian-3882.jpg
Marvin the Martian live character at Six Flags Over Texas amusement park
File:Nasa mer marvin.jpg
The launch patch for the Spirit Mars Rover, featuring Marvin the Martian.

Planned film

On July 29, 2008, Warner Bros. and Alcon Entertainment announced plans for a live action/computer-animated film starring Mike Myers as the voice of Marvin and Christopher Lee as Santa Claus. The film would have involved Marvin trying to destroy the Earth during Christmas by becoming a competitor of Santa Claus' but being prevented from destroying the Earth when Santa wraps him inside a gift box. Alcon compared the project to other films such as Racing Stripes and My Dog Skip.[4] It was initially scheduled for an October 7, 2011 release, but the movie was later taken off the schedule and no word on it has been heard since.

See also

References

  1. ^ Korkis, Jim. "The Return of Duck Dodgers". Outré. 1 (7): 25.
  2. ^ . Differences of opinion exist regarding the correct pronunciation; Chuck Jones rendered the modulator's name as Q-36 in print in Chuck Amuck : The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist (New York: Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1989; ISBN 0-374-12348-9), p. 213.
  3. ^ Adamson, Joe (1990). Bugs Bunny: 50 Years and Only One Grey Hare. Henry Holt. ISBN 0-8050-1855-7
  4. ^ McNary, Dave (2008-07-29). "WB to develop 'Marvin the Martian'". Variety. Retrieved 2008-07-30.