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ReBoot

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ReBoot
File:Reboot poster.jpg
ReBoot Poster for Season III.
Created byIan Pearson
Gavin Blair
Phil Mitchell
John Grace
StarringSharon Alexander
Kathleen Barr
Michael Benyaer
Paul Dobson
Tony Jay
Country of originCanada
No. of episodes47 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerJay Firestone
Running timeapprox. 23 minutes
Original release
NetworkCanada YTV
United States ABC
ReleaseSeptember 17, 1994 –
November 30, 2001

ReBoot is a Canadian CGI-animated action-adventure television series that originally aired from 1994 to 2001. It was produced by Vancouver-based production company, Mainframe Entertainment, and created by Gavin Blair, Ian Pearson, Phil Mitchell and John Grace, with the visuals designed by Brendan McCarthy after an initial attempt by Ian Gibson.

It is credited with being the first full length, completely computer-animated TV series. Moreover, when the series debuted in 1994, the first computer-animated feature film, Toy Story, had not yet been released. Originally made for children, the series attracted many older fans, referring to computer terms and popular culture that would not be understood by younger viewers.

Background

Creation

The setting, which may have been inspired by the Disney movie Tron, is in the inner world of a computer system known by its inhabitants as Mainframe (for which Mainframe Entertainment is named). It was deliberately chosen due to technological constraints at the time, as the fictional computer world allowed for blocky looking models and mechanical animation.[1] Mainframe is divided into six sectors (moving clockwise): Baudway, Kits, Floating Point Park, Beverly Hills, Wall Street, and Ghetty Prime. The names of Mainframe's sectors are homages to famous neighbourhoods, mostly in New York or Los Angeles. However, the Kits sector is named for Kitsilano, a neighbourhood in Vancouver, British Columbia, Mainframe Entertainment's home city. Also, Ghetty Prime is a reference to Frank Herbert's Dune, as Giedi Prime is the home world of House Harkonnen, both being the home of the villain in each story. Mainframe is populated almost entirely by binomes, little creatures that represent either 1s or 0s, as well as a handful of Sprites who are primarily humanoid creatures of more complex design and are the main characters of the series.

Plot synopsis

The first season of ReBoot was highly episodic, with each installment being a self-contained two-part episode. Most of the episodes established characters, locations, and story elements, such as the gigantic "Game Cubes". When "The User" loads a game, a Game Cube drops on a random location in Mainframe, sealing it off from the rest of the system and turning it into a "gamescape". Bob frequently enters the games, "Reboots" to become a game character, and fights the User's character to save the sector. If the User wins a game, the sector the Cube fell in is destroyed, and the Sprites and binomes who were caught within are turned into energy-draining, worm-like parasites called Nulls.

The second season featured an extended story arc that began with the season's fifth episode, "Painted Windows". The arc revealed that Hexadecimal and Megabyte are siblings, and that Megabyte's pet Null, Nibbles, is their "father." It also introduced an external threat to Mainframe, "the Web". A creature from the Web entered Mainframe from Hexadecimal's looking glass (which was shattered by Mike), bonding with her. Mainframe's nulls covered her to form a monster known as "Nullzilla". The protectors of Mainframe defeated Nullzilla and neutralized Hexadecimal. The Web creature located Megabyte, took him over and forced him to merge with Hexadecimal, forming a destructive super-virus called Gigabyte. Gigabyte was eventually neutralized as well, but the Web creature escaped into the bowels of Mainframe, where it began stealing energy to stay alive. When the Web creature was cornered as Bob and the others investigated, it escaped Mainframe and opened a portal to the Web. The protectors of Mainframe had to team up with Megabyte and Hexadecimal to close the portal, but when they defeated the Web creatures that had entered the system, Megabyte betrayed the alliance, crushing Bob's keytool, Glitch, and sending him into the Web portal before closing it.

File:ReBoot back cover.jpg
The cover of the third season DVD.

For the show's third season, there was a marked improvement in model and animation quality due to the advancement of Mainframe's software capabilities during the time between seasons. Subtle details, such as eyelashes and shadow, as well as generally more lifelike sprite characters, were among several visual improvements compared to previous ReBoot episodes. In addition, the show shifted their target audience to children aged 12 and older, resulting in a darker and more mature storyline.[1] After severing ties with ABC following the second season, the show actually reached a greater number of households through syndication.[2]

The season started with Enzo, freshly upgraded into a Guardian candidate by Bob during the Web incursion, defending Mainframe from Megabyte and Hexadecimal with Dot and AndrAIa at his side. When Enzo entered a game he could not win, he, AndrAIa and Frisket changed their icons to game sprite mode and rode the game out of Mainframe. The accelerated game time matured Enzo and AndrAIa far faster than the denizens of Mainframe. The following episodes follow adult versions of Enzo and AndrAIa as they travel from system to system in search of Mainframe. The older Enzo adopts the name "Matrix," (previously his and Dot's surname) carrying the aptly named weapon "Gun" and Bob's damaged Glitch. The time spent in games and away from Mainframe has hardened both Matrix and AndrAIa; Matrix has developed a pathological hatred of Megabyte, and has grown into an overly muscled, shoot-first-ask-question-later hero, while AndrAIa has turned into a calm and level-headed warrior.

File:ReBoot Cast4.jpg
Cast of characters from the fourth season.

Matrix and AndrAIa are also shown to have developed a romantic relationship by this time. As the season progresses, Matrix and AndrAIa are reunited with Bob and the crew of the Saucy Mare and returned to Mainframe. Upon return, the heroes fought a final battle for control of Mainframe. Hexadecimal and Megabyte were defeated in confrontations with Bob and Matrix, respectively, but not before Megabyte's handiwork caused the system to crash. All final problems in Mainframe were dealt with by The User restarting the system, setting everything right and restoring everything as it was again for our heroes, with one major exception: younger and older Enzo now exist simultaneously, as Matrix's icon was still set to "Game Sprite" mode. Because of this mishap, he wasn't recognized by the system when it rebooted, so it created a replacement of his younger self.

After the end of the third season, two TV movies were produced in 2001 as a sort of "fourth season," Daemon Rising, which addressed the problem the Guardians were facing in season three, and My Two Bobs, which brings back Megabyte in a cliffhanger ending that has yet to be resolved. The two movies, broken up into eight episodes in its US run on Cartoon Network's Toonami, revealed much of Mainframe's history, including the formation of Lost Angles, Bob's arrival in the system, and the origin of Megabyte and Hexadecimal..

Initial plans for the fourth season included twelve episodes broken into three films, followed by a thirteenth musical special episode, although the final five were never produced.[3] Gavin Blair has been quoted as saying at a convention that internal politics at the channel's parent company led to the order being cut to eight episodes; how much of this account is accurate has been debated.[4]. An alleged former Mainframe employee stated on the ReBoot Corner message board that the cliffhanger in episode eight was "a last ditch effort to pry more cash out of the networks. We thought that they (the networks) wouldn't want to end like that".[5]

Revival

In late July 2007, Rainmaker Animation (Mainframe Entertainment who created the show was acquired and renamed by Rainmaker in 2006) announced plans to create a trilogy of ReBoot films with illustrator/animator Daniel Allen as the lead character designer. Rainmaker Animation executive vice president Paul Gertz stated, "ReBoot's legions of fans have been incredibly loyal and continue to keep the property alive on dozens of fan sites."[6] In conjunction with the website Zeros 2 Heroes, they announced an intention to allow fans greater access to the development of the movie plans and also in development of a ReBoot webcomic. Fans were given the chance to submit their own art and designs, with the potential to end up as an artist on the project, and their feedback ensured which one of five ReBoot pitches won.[6][7]

The winning pitch was ReBoot: Arrival, and it is currently being turned into a 22-page webcomic. Rainmaker will monitor feedback for the comic but may not use it as the basis for their movie plans.[8] Four ReBoot fans have been chosen to work as artists on the Arrival comic. [9]

Known plot details about Arrival, which are stated in its pitch at the Zeroes2Heroes website, show that Megabyte's Hunt has developed into a Net-wide war so bad that even other Viruses are united against it. The Users have gone, spending their time in an unending MMORPG Game. A sentient System named Gnosis is created as a way to stop Megabyte, but it goes rogue and begins enslaving Systems in its attempt to gain User-like powers. Two teams of heroes are assembled to stop Gnosis and bring back the Users, which will include some new characters and a one-off character named Lens the Codemaster from Season 2.

Characters

The main characters included:

File:ReBoot Cast2.jpg
The cast of characters from the second season
  • Bob, Guardian #452, acts as the guardian of Mainframe.
  • Dot Matrix, the COMMAND.COM of Mainframe, who also owns a local diner.
  • Enzo Matrix, Dot's younger brother who idolized Bob as a hero, later grows up to become the renegade known as Matrix.
  • Frisket, a feral dog who likes Enzo.
  • Phong, Mainframe's system administrator, serves as a mentor and advisor to its inhabitants and works with Bob in defense of the system.
  • AndrAIa, a game sprite and friend (and later girlfriend) of Enzo introduced in season two.
  • Megabyte, a computer virus and the series' main villain. Once came from the virus Gigabyte.
  • Hexadecimal, Megabyte's twin sister, also a computer virus, whose face is represented by a series of masks, each portraying a different emotion. Hex also came from the virus Gigabyte.
  • Mouse/Mous, A freelance Hacker who originally was mentioned briefly, then worked for Megabyte in a one shot early in the season, but joins Dot and Enzo to defend Mainframe when Bob is trapped in "The Web".

Cast

Distribution

Television broadcasts

ReBoot was first broadcast on Saturday mornings in the United States in 1994 by ABC and in Canada on YTV, and proved to be an instant hit with children and their parents, only to be abruptly cancelled on ABC, when the Walt Disney Company purchased the network. Episodes continued to air in Canada. Episodes from the second season could still be seen in the U.S. when Claster Television distributed them for a short period of time during the 1996-97 season. Although there were many demands for a third season, it would be a year before new episodes aired on YTV due to Mainframe's involvement in Transformers: Beast Wars (known as Beasties in Canada) and Shadow Raiders,[2] and the third season aired only on YTV at the time due to the lack of interest in the U.S. In March 1999 — years after Canadian audiences saw the third season — American audiences saw the episodes on Cartoon Network. Cartoon Network aired season 3, and then looped to seasons 1 and 2. Though they canceled the loop on season 3 after the episode "Firewall" due to poor ratings. Again, production on other series delayed the fourth season of ReBoot, and there are no plans to produce a fifth despite a cliffhanger season finale, as two of the show's creators have since left Mainframe Entertainment. Gavin Blair and Ian Pearson resigned in 2004 to form their own independent studio, The Shop.[10]

The show also aired in the United Kingdom in the mid 1990s, on the ITV children's strand CITV. It was broadcast on CITV's available timeslot of 4:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., every Thursday. In 1997, CITV aired the first 6 episodes of series 3. CITV stated that they had only bought the first 10 (out of 16) episodes of the show, and would buy the rest if the high ratings continued.[citation needed] On February 12 1998, CITV aired the show again, from the episode "Trust No-one". When "To Mend and Defend" should of aired, the episode "Firewall" aired in its place instead. The run ended with episode 9 of season 3, "Return of the Crimson Binome", and no more episodes has aired since. Reasons for the abrupt end were due to poor ratings and increasingly violent and darker settings shown in season 3,[citation needed] deemed by the broadcasters to be inappropriate for their younger target audience.

Since 2001, many of the show's fans have carried out a movement with the hope of convincing Mainframe to produce more ReBoot episodes. These efforts were unsuccessful, possibly due to the lack of support from American distributors. A spinoff called Binomes was also planned towards the end of 2004, featuring a family of Binomes who lived on a "chip farm". The series would have been composed of 52 11-minute episodes and aimed at a pre-school audience, but nothing of this project came to pass after the initial announcement.[11]

VHS and DVD release

In the US, four VHS tapes were released in 1995 with individual episodes from the first season through Polygram Video. Each release contained a single episode: "The Medusa Bug", "Wizards, Warriors, and a Word from Our Sponsor", "The Great Brain Robbery" and "Talent Night". The UK received two VHS releases, but with two episodes each: Volume 1 contained "The Tearing" and "Racing the Clock", while Volume two had "The Quick and the Fed" and "Medusa Bug".[12] In Australia there were four VHS releases with each containing two episodes, comprising the first eight episodes of season one. However, all the VHS tapes have long gone out of print.

The second season was never released, even though Polygram retained the rights to publish the episodes on home video with their deal for the first season. Despite this, in 2000 Mainframe struck a deal with A.D. Vision to release the third season on DVD[13] Spanning four volumes, all sixteen episodes were published, separated by each story arc of four episodes: "To Mend and Defend", "The Net", "The Web", and "The Viral Wars". ADV planned to re-release these DVDs at a lower price in 2005, but changed their plans as they decided to cancel several of their titles at the time. Some time afterward, the company lost the publishing rights. Much like the first season VHS tapes, the third season ReBoot DVDs are now out of print and considered rare.

Anchor Bay Entertainment released the fourth season in its original form as two films (Daemon Rising and My Two Bobs) on one DVD as "ReBoot v4.0" and went out of print early 2007. It was improperly mastered as the 25fps source material was treated as 24fps film speed material, meaning 3:2 pulldown flags were encoded into the mpeg stream which results in the video playing back 4.096% slower and all the voices sound deeper. Anchor Bay have corrected and remastered the fourth season disc but it is only available by contacting them for a replacement. The Fourth season has also been released in Australia in its original PAL video format, it is still in print. Germany has DVD releases of all of season two, while Russia has DVD releases for the first three seasons (though the first few season three episodes are counted as season two), both also in ReBoot's original PAL format.[citation needed]

Universal still owns the rights to publish the first and second seasons on home video and will maintain those rights until 2009. As of July 2007, Universal has not released the first and second seasons on DVD.

Season four is available on DVD from Mainframe's web site.

Unaired special episode

"Fast Forward: The Making of ReBoot" is a rare, special twenty-three minute episode that has never been aired on TV or released on DVD or VHS. The title sequence on the video sequence says "Date: February 27, 1995", putting its completion date after Season one and before Season two. A copy of the video can be found on Youtube.

The show starts off with going into Megabyte's lair where he has hacked into the principal office and through an energy vortex created a portal into a parallel universe (our universe), taking him into the offices of Mainframe Entertainment where the producer, writers and animators give some insights on how the show came about from early ideas, how it is scripted, voiced, animated and what the staff get up to in their spare time (playing with toys and ice hockey whilst wearing viral skull logo shirts appear to be high on their lists).

We get to see an animation test from 1990 with an early Bob flying round on a surfboard and Megabyte who looks more like Johnny 5 from the film Short Circuit than he does now in the ReBoot series, as well as a 1992 test piece from the "Wizards, Warriors and a Word From Our Sponsor" episode. Another notable CGI piece is from Def Leppard's "Let's Get Rocked" music video which the ReBoot team created, but absent from the show is any clip or mention of the well known music video to Dire Straits' song "Money For Nothing". (A reference to this clip is made in the "Talent Night" episode)

Amongst the interviews with the Mainframe staff, who all have toys on their desks & monitors, there are members of the public interviewed on a street somewhere about what they think of the show, though Megabyte is still in the background making narrator type comments about what he's watching.

The special was announced and due to be aired on Children's ITV (cITV) during the original broadcast of season one in the UK, but was subsequently pulled from the running order without explanation.

Awards

ReBoot has been the recipient of several awards. The show received Gemini Awards for Best Animated Program Series for three straight years between 1995 and 1997, as well as a 1996 Outstanding Technical Achievement Award. Other honors include the 1995 Award of Excellence and Best Animated Program from the Alliance for Children and Television and an Aurora Award in 1996.

Other Gemini Award nominations include "Best Children's or Youth Program or Series" in 1998, and "Best Sound - Comedy, Variety, or Performing Arts Program or Series" for My Two Bobs and "Best Sound - Dramatic Program" for Daemon Rising, both in 2002.[14][1]

Miscellaneous

References to computer technology

Several major characters are named after computer terms:

  • The character Phong is an allusion to the game Pong. Phong has a rule that any who seek his advice must first play him in a game of physical Pong. However, phong shading is also an interpolation method used in three dimensional graphics rendering, which was also the shading technique used on the character instead of the simpler Gouraud shading used on other characters.
  • The villain Megabyte is named after the unit of data measure which represents 1,048,576 bytes (a megabyte). Near the end of the second season Hex and Megabyte are fused, creating the new virus Gigabyte. Furthermore, in Daemon Rising, he is revealed to have evolved from a virus named Killabyte (a play on words, referencing a Kilobyte). The power of the virus reflects the magnitude of the unit used as its name. 1,024 kilobytes make 1 megabyte, and 1,024 megabytes make one gigabyte.
  • Hexadecimal, the benign virus, is named for the base-sixteen numerical system, otherwise known as the hexadecimal system.
  • Dot Matrix is a reference to dot-matrix printers.
  • A mostly unseen character known as Al may be a reference to A.I. programming. The name Al and the term A.I. are nearly indistinguishable in sans serif typefaces and A.I.s generally take a long time to develop even the "slowest" intelligences.
  • Citizens of Mainframe who were in a game won by the User become Nulls, and the area game touched down on is nullified. In computer science a null is a pointer reference to essentially nothing, giving rise to the idea that the characters are deleted.

For references to computer terminology in the episodes, see List of ReBoot episodes.

Pop culture references

ReBoot is full of computer and popular culture in-jokes and parodies:

  • Near the beginning of the first episode (Season 1), Bob's line "Did i make it?" is intoned and contextualised in such a way as to reference the film Tron, where Jeff Bridges' character asks "Did we make it?" in the same manner.
  • At the start of the episode "The Tiff", Dot’s business associate tells Dot the download from the first national data-bank is late. This is a reference to the First National Bank.
    • In the same episode, Bob receives a hologram which is introduced by Mike the TV. The video message begins with Mike saying, “When you care enough to project the very best, send Holomark”. This is a reference to the company slogan of Hallmark Cards: "when you care enough to send the very best, use Hallmark."
  • In the episode "Talent Night", Dot and a binome named Emma Fee are giving auditions for the birthday party show. Emma is a program censor who keeps rejecting nearly every act for trivial reasons, to preserve morality or prevent depictions of violence. She heartily approves, however, of a group of male binome singers and dancers called the "Smalltown Binomes", who are an obvious parody of the Village People and sing a song titled "BSnP" in the style of YMCA. In addition, "BSnP" happens to be the initials of Broadcast Standards and Practices, ABC's censors. BSnP was used in a season one episode to move Bob through a stained-glass window rather than shattering it, a technique BSnP felt children would emulate (also could refer to a Binary Space Partitioning (BSP) symptom)[2]. Further references to the American networks dropping ReBoot were inserted in the "Web World Wars" episode when Megabyte's Armored Binome Carriers ("A.B.C.s") betrayed the Mainframe C.P.U. fighters in mid-battle ("The A.B.C.s have turned on us! Treacherous dogs!") and in the first episode of the third season, a tombstone inside the "Malicious Corpses" Game cube read "Here lies the Mainframe Joint Venture, an unholy alliance."
    • In this same episode, when Megabyte and Bob guitar duel, Megabyte turns his volume to eleven, a reference to Spinal Tap and/or Marshall amplifiers. Bob also refers to the guitar form of Glitch as "B.F.G.", a reference to the BFG9000 ultimate weapon of the Doom game series.
  • Sal and Harv, the two worker characters from the 1985 Dire Straits music video "Money For Nothing", make a cameo appearance in "Talent Night", which is fitting since they were designed and animated by the creators of ReBoot. Primitive by today's standards, the "workers" could be considered celebrities of the computer-generated character set.
  • The series has numerous references to a sector of Mainframe named "Kits" this is most likely a reference to the real neighborhood of Kitsilano in Vancouver.
  • "Talent Night" also featured a comedian named Johnny O'Binome, whose binary joke translates as "Take my wife, please", a cyclopean robot that served as the YTV logo (although in airings outside of Canada, the YTV logo, but not the robot, is omitted), and Captain Quirk, an obvious Captain Kirk / William Shatner impersonation who did the first verse of "Rocket Man" in the style Shatner himself used at the 1980 Science fiction awards ending with Quirk bowing, causing his toupee to fall off, and disappearing in the style of a Star Trek transporter. When Megabyte makes his appearance, he turns the amps on his guitar up to 11. When he leaves, Mike the TV announces that "Megabyte has left the building!".
  • Although the "User" opponents featured in early episodes were usually invisible or designed with a minimalist appearance, increased computer rendering power allowed the third and fourth season game cubes to feature users who were parodies of known game characters and actors. These included:
  • In episode 5 of season 3, one of the binomes asks Matrix and AndrAIa upon arrival if they are a good User or a bad User, a refence to the Wizard of Oz.
  • The season three episode, "To Mend and Defend" featured a parody of the Michael Jackson music video "Thriller", where Enzo reboots into a zombie that wore the same clothes as Michael Jackson in the "Thriller" video. Also, he performed some of Michael Jackson's signature dance moves (such as the moonwalk) to Michael Jackson-esque music to get the User to waste ammunition on him. In the same episode there is a reference made to the Adobe program Photoshop, when Mouse says, "Uhh, sorry to break up this Photoshop moment..."
  • In the season two episode, "Nullzilla", Bob, Dot, Enzo, Frisket, and Mike the TV parody series such as Voltron and Power Rangers as they don alike suits and pilot insect-like giant robots to fight the giant monster. "Nullzilla" also pokes fun at the way these shows feature machines which don't really have a plausible way to fit together.
  • In season three, episode sixteen, one of Megabyte's ex-sprites exclaims, "Great Norton's Ghost!" a reference to a piece of software of the same name used for imaging computers.
  • In one episode, you can view a screen that says "Media Offline" which is an error message given to users of the Video editing software AVID when it can not find your file (Usually due to being disconnected from the server)
  • The episode "Trust No One" has a pair of binomes who introduce themselves as C.G.I. special Agents Fax Modem and Data Nully. They are obvious direct satires of Fox Mulder and Dana Scully from the Fox series X-Files. Data Nully is in fact voiced by Gillian Anderson, who plays Dana Scully in the X-Files. The episode title was also one of the X-Files slogans.
  • The gateway Megabyte builds in the episode "When Games Collide" and the gateway that Welman Matrix builds in the episode "Daemon Rising", resembles a Stargate.
  • In the episode "Bad Bob", a binome, upon seeing Mainframe's core corrupted, explains "Maniacs! They blew it up!" - a reference to Planet of the Apes.
  • In the episode "Identity Crisis: Part 2," the penguin from "Wallace and Gromit" makes an appearance. He also appears in several later episodes, usually walking along in the background.
  • In the episode "AndrAIa", Bob yells at a binome after a game, claiming all he said was "Make it so," to which the binome responds "And 'engage', I said 'engage' more times than 'make it so'". This references Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Network censorship

The show's early jokes at the expense of BSP came from frustration encountered by the show's makers by an abundance of script and editing changes that were imposed upon Mainframe before episodes were allowed to air. These changes were all aimed at making the show appropriate for children, and to prevent even the slightest appearance of inappropriate content, imitatable violence or sexuality.

For instance, the character Dot was considered too sexualized by exposing too much mammary cleavage, so the animators were forced to make them less curvy and form them into a lumpy "monobreast", as lightly referred to by the staff. However, starting with season three, the monobreasts of all adult female characters were replaced with more anatomically correct versions. In another case, the word "hockey" was banned from all episodes as in some countries it was supposedly used as a vulgar slang term. In the episode "Talent Night", one scene of Dot giving a kiss to her brother Enzo was cut due to BSP's fear of promoting incest, an insinuation which Pearson described as "one of the sickest things I've heard."[15]

ReBoot The Ride

There have been two IMAX Ridefilms based on ReBoot. The first, "ReBoot™ — The Ride," opened at Sega City@Playdium (now simply called Playdium) in Mississauga, Ontario on October 17, 1997.[16] Viewers sit in an 18-passenger vehicle mounted on an orthogonal motion base. The film is projected at forty-eight frames per second onto a fourteen foot 180° spherically curved screen. The ride played at the Circus Circus in the Adventure Dome in Las Vegas and then later was moved down the strip to The Luxor, where it can still be seen today.

The second, was named "ReBoot™ — The Ride V. 2: Journey Into Chaos". This was subsequently opened at Playdium in Burnaby, British Columbia and ran for a brief time.

Other

  • In episode 178 of the sitcom Roseanne, a trick-or-treater was costumed as Bob.
  • Electronic Arts made a game for the PlayStation of ReBoot, which includes actual original animation from Mainframe Entertainment. The game had a limited print in 1998 and is quite rare.[3]
  • United States president Bill Clinton was reportedly a fan of the series.
  • MGA released a handheld electronic game based on this show. [4]
  • The binome, old man Pearson, may be a reference to ReBoot originator Ian Pearson.
  • In the 2001 film AntiTRUST, 5" figures of Bob, Megabyte, Hack, Slash and a 3" Phong can be seen on the main character's desk.

Music

Throughout the ReBoot series, the creators made use of a variety of music. Here is a list of the episodes and the details of the music contained therein:

  • "Talent Night" - A binome named "Captain Quirk" sings "Rocket Man" by Elton John in the Style of Willam Shatner a parody of the "Transformed Man" Album.
  • "Talent Night" - Dot Matrix sings "Alphanumeric" to Enzo. The English and French version of this appear as Tracks 2 & 5 on a CD which came free with certain ReBoot Action Figures issued in 1996.
  • "Talent Night" - MegaByte and Bob go head to head in a Guitar Face Off. Also appears as Track 3 the 1996 Action Figure CD.
  • "Talent Night" - A version of "YMCA" called "BS&P" sung by the "Small Town Binomes" which is a parody of the Village People. Also appears as a French Translation on Track 7 of the 1996 Action Figure CD.
  • "Bad Bob" - Whenever Bob is driving his car (with tires for a change) there is very catchy background music playing.[verification needed]
  • "Firewall" - The introduction theme and video is a homage to the James Bond title sequences.
  • "End Prog" - The mainframers perform a musical at the end of this episode and it is to the tune of the classical Gilbert and Sullivan's "Major-General's Song".

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Hetherington, Janet L. "As Mainframe's technology reaches adolescence, there's a 'ReBoot' Renaissance". Animation Magazine #59. Vol. 11, Issue 8, September 1997.
  2. ^ a b Freeman, Mark. "Mainframe ReBoots with Beasties". Take One, p.42, Summer 1997.
  3. ^ Punter, Jennie. "Mainframe Reboots ReBoot". Take One. July 2001.
  4. ^ Quotation of Gavin and discussion of quote at ReBoot Corner message board [1]
  5. ^ Relevant post: http://www.rbcorner.com/cgi-bin/eblah/Blah.pl?m-1134758999/s-39/#num30
  6. ^ a b "Early CG TV show gets "ReBoot"". 2007-07-23. Retrieved 2007-08-05. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ "ReBoot Reborn: Reaching Out to Old Fans in a New Way". Zeros 2 Heroes. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
  8. ^ Zeroes2Heroes FAW http://live.zeros2heroes.com/content/view/35/128/
  9. ^ http://live.zeros2heroes.com/content/view/37/99/
  10. ^ Ball, Ryan (December 15 2004). "Platinum Sends Dylan Dog to The Shop". Animation Magazine. Retrieved 2006-08-11. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  11. ^ "Mainframe - Binomes". Archived from the original on 2004-10-12.
  12. ^ Smith, Joe (2001). "Reboot Video Tapes and DVD". The Unofficial ReBoot Home Page. Retrieved 2006-07-08. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  13. ^ ""ReBoot" Home Video Collection to Be Released by ADV Films" press release". ADVfilms.com. Archived from the original on 2000-12-11. Retrieved 2006-07-08.
  14. ^ The Envelope: The Ultimate Awards Site. LA Times.
  15. ^ Van Bakiel, Roger. "Before Toy Story, there was... Reboot." Wired 5.03, March 1997.
  16. ^ http://www.c4vct.com/kym/slachash/transcrp/imax/rideflm1.htm

Bibliography

Official sites

Unofficial sites