ReBoot: Difference between revisions

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'''Unofficial Sites and Fan Sites'''
'''Unofficial Sites and Fan Sites'''
*[http://www.rebootmayhem.com/ ReBoot Mayhem]
*[http://www.rebootmayhem.com/ ReBoot Mayhem]
*[http://www.icomefromthe.net/ icomefromthe.net]
*[http://intropage.bravehost.com/ReBoot/ IntroPage / UltraWeb (ReBoot Version)]
*[http://intropage.bravehost.com/ReBoot/ IntroPage / UltraWeb (ReBoot Version)]
*[http://www.rbcorner.com/ Julia Cat's ReBoot Corner]
*[http://www.rbcorner.com/ Julia Cat's ReBoot Corner]

Revision as of 19:43, 12 March 2006

File:Reboot poster.jpg
ReBoot poster.

ReBoot is a Canadian animated series that was produced by Mainframe Entertainment, created by Gavin Blair, Ian Pearson, Phil Mitchell, and John Grace, and credited with being the first completely computer animated TV series. Originally made for children, the series attracted many older fans when it became thematically darker partway through its second season. Additionally, throughout its entire run ReBoot made countless references to computer terms and pop culture that would not be understood by most children. The success of this series helped establish Mainframe Entertainment as one of the predominant computer animation studios in the world.

It is important to note that when the series debuted in 1994, the first computer animated feature film, Toy Story, had not yet been released.

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 (also from which Mainframe Entertainment is named for). Mainframe is divided into six sectors (moving clockwise): Baudway, Kits, Floating Point Park, Beverly Hills, Wall Street, and Ghetty Prime. Mainframe is populated almost entirely by binomes, little creatures that represent either 1's or 0's, as well as a handful of Sprites who are primarily humanoid creatures of more complex design and are the main characters of the series. ReBoot is considered by many as one of the greatest cartoons ever. One poll by Cartoon Network asked, "What is your favorite Toonami show of all time?" ReBoot garnered 49% of votes.

File:ReBoot Cast4.jpg
ReBoot season 4 cast

ReBoot was first broadcast on Saturday mornings in the United States in 1994 by ABC and in Canada on YTV (although YTV had exclusive rights to air first-run episodes), proved to be an instant hit with children and their parents, only to be abruptly cancelled when the Walt Disney Company purchased the network. Episodes from the second season could still be seen in the States 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 Beasties(Beast Wars) and Shadow Raiders, and the third season aired only on YTV at the time due to the lack of interest stateside. As such, the third season was largely free of the network censorship that plagued the first two seasons; this is evidenced by the series establishing that the adult Matrix and AndrAIa have become lovers (going so far as AndrAIa actually calling Matrix "lover"). It was March 1999 - years after Canadian audiences saw the third season - before American audiences saw the episodes on Cartoon Network. 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 the show's writers have since left Mainframe Entertainment.

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 have been unsuccessful up to this point, possibly due to the lack of support from American distributors. Today, reruns of ReBoot can be seen occasionally on YTV and CBC.

The show also aired in the UK in the mid 1990s, on the ITV children's strand CiTV.

Characters

With the exception of a few characters, such as Bob, most ReBoot characters are named after technical computer terms or pieces of computer hardware.

Main characters

Bob

Bob

Guardian 452 and defender of Mainframe from both internal and external threats. He is equipped with a Guardian Keytool, Glitch, which can transform into any device with a voice command. Bob is often criticised by other Guardians for his unorthodox views regarding viruses: Unlike other Guardians, who believe that viruses should simply be deleted on sight, Bob theorizes that viruses can be rehabilitated to live as Sprites. Despite this criticism, Bob is still respected as one of the finest Guardians ever to come out of the academy. Compared to Dot, he usually does things 'on the fly'.
Bob's name is completely unrelated to any sort of technical hardware. Apparently, Reboot's creators simply liked how the name was pronounced on Black Adder (a British TV show). He has no canon last name, although many fanfiction writers give him the full name of 'Robert Lan'.

Dot Matrix

Proprietor of Dot's Diner, Dot later became command.com of Mainframe in place of Phong. She is admired for her brilliant and invaluable tactical skills. Although she and Bob would never admit it, they are attracted to one another and this sometimes leads to awkward moments between them.
Her name is a reference to dot matrix printers.
Enzo Matrix

Enzo Matrix

Dot's little brother. Enzo hero-worships Bob and intends to become a Guardian. He has a crackling, mid-pubescent voice and often uses phrases such as "alphanumeric" and "high-density" in place of real-world utterances like "cool" and "awesome" to express enthusiasm. Enzo is very energetic and loves to play games like Jet Ball and Circuit Racing. When Mainfraime was rebooted at the end of Season 3, Matrix had accidentally left his icon in "Game Sprite" mode, causing the system to recognize Enzo as missing, and so created a second Enzo using the last available data on him: sometime before Talent Night. Enzo looks up to his older self as much as he does Bob.
File:MATRIX.jpg
Matrix

"Matrix"

Enzo Matrix when he's grown up. Ashamed of the child he used to be, whom he views as weak, he prefers to be addressed by his surname, Matrix, instead of his given name, Enzo, which reminds him of his childhood. With a cold personality, violent behaviour and a "built-like-a-tank" physique, he's nothing like the child he used to be. He was tempered by what was from his perspective a lifetime of fighting. Although he is quick to anger he has still shown a desire to help those in need and his quest to return to Mainframe has let him bring many systems back from the brink of annihilation. He harbours an unparalleled hatred towards viruses and won't hesitate to delete them in a violent and merciless manner. He is in love with AndrAIa, who has now matured as well, but is also quite jealous and protective of her. His right eye was severely damaged in a game, but was replaced with a cybernetic eye. This eye grants him extended visual powers, such as magnified long-range vision and X-ray vision. Matrix has also acquired a gun, the aptly named Gun, which has many functions that Matrix invokes with voice commands. Gun operates in a fashion similar to a Guardian Keytool, possibly because Matrix idolized Bob as a child. Matrix's mechanical eye also works in conjunction with Gun for lock-on targeting and tracking purposes. One of his guns functions is "Death Blossom" which allows the gun to hover in midair spinning rapidly in 720 degrees autolocking to all targets in sight.
Death Blossom Mode is a reference to the movie The Last Starfighter.
File:ReBoot AndrAIa 1.jpg
AndrAIa

AndrAIa

(pronounced "andrea") A backup copy of a Game Sprite who met Enzo in an undersea-themed game. She fell in love with him at "first sight." (Ref: ReBoot 4.03 What's Love Got To Do With It?) The original AndrAIa piggy-backed her icon on Enzo's. This allowed the backup to escape the game and stay in Mainframe with Enzo, but the original remained in the game. (Ref: ReBoot 2.06 AndrAIa) Because of the nature of the game from which she was born, AndrAIa has many mermaid-like qualities: she wears fish-skin garments, wears starfish in her hair, and utilises such armaments as paralysis-inducing fingernails and a trident in combat. During the period of her and Enzo's exile into the games, she matures into a statuesque beauty who continually tries to temper her lover's cynism. It is also during this time when AndrAIa matures into a warrior like Matrix, using spines that she can fire from her fingers, and an extendable trident.
Her name is a reference to Artificial Intelligence
File:PHONG.jpg
Phong

Phong

System administrator and keeper of the core for Mainframe who lives and studies in the Principal Office. A wise old sprite somewhat evocative of Confucius, he often dispenses advice in the form of confusing and vague philosophical quotes gleaned from old README files. Very fond of Pong, one must defeat him in a game to be considered worthy of his knowledge. Phong is immune to forced viral infection (he is read-only memory), but may still be harmed by other means. (ref: ReBoot 1.04 The Medusa Bug)
His name is a reference to phong shading; it could also be considered as a reference to his favorite game, Pong.

Mouse

Bob's old flame. A hacker extraordinaire, equipped with a katana to cut her enemies into small pieces. Originally hired as a mercenary by Megabyte. Mouse became a main character over the course of Season 3. She speaks with a sugary Southern accent. In his rookie days, Bob arrested her for attempting to hack into the Supercomputer. It was releaved that she used to be a Game Sprite like AndrAIa, but how she escaped from her game has yet to be explained.
Her name is a reference to the computer mouse

Secondary characters

Frisket
Enzo's dog, vicious toward just about everyone other than Enzo, with a particular dislike of Bob. Frisket has uncanny physical strength, comparable to that of Megabyte, and is known to catch cannon balls in his teeth. Frisket is extremely loyal to Enzo and wouldn't hesitate to sacrifice his life to protect Enzo's. Frisket followed Enzo and AndrAIa into the games at the end of season 2.
His name probably derives from the masking technique that is used by artists.
Ray Tracer (The Surfer)
Web search engine introduced in Season 3, he became a main character upon the return to Mainframe. During Season 4 and beyond, he is romantically involved with Mouse. His icon resembles a Motorola logo, which is appropriate because Motorola helped to name his character (they also made a line of SURFR modems).
His name is a reference to a computer graphics technique, ray tracing. He resembles a certain 3D Realms character.
Captain Gavin Capacitor (The Crimson Binome)
A software pirate and captain of the Saucy Mare. Capacitor is a one-binome armed with a hook for a right hand and a peg leg in place of his left leg. Fits the pirate stereotype perfectly, complete with pirate catchphrase mutations such as "Shiver me templates!" and "By the code!"
His last name is a reference to capacitors. His first name may be a reference to actor Gavin MacLeod, who played another seagoing captain, Merrill Stubing, on the 1977-1986 television series The Love Boat; then again, Capacitor may have been named for ReBoot co-creator Gavin Blair, and the "connection" to another fictional ship's captain may be coincidental.
Mr. Christopher
Captain Capacitor's bookkeeper is a nerdy and timid zero-binome who's never seen without his laptop. His name is likely a tribute to Fletcher Christian, the Master's Mate from the HMAS Bounty.
Princess Bula
A giant one-binome on Captain Capacitor's crew.
Mike the TV
An annoying, ambulatory television set from Bob's apartment who is constantly pitching bizarre products (like the famous Bucket-O-Nothing for only 99.99.99) or simply rambling until somebody shuts him up. He appears at random moments to irritate the rest of the cast. His remote control ran away, so he can't be turned off. In later seasons, he stars as a TV reporter for Mainframe.
His name is a possible reference to Mike Teavee.
Turbo
Prime Guardian and leader of the Guardian Collective. He is equipped with a Guardian Keytool, Copeland, which can transform into any device with a voice command. He speaks with a Texan accent.
His name is a reference to turbo mode some early PCs had which, despite its name, actually slowed the CPU of a computer to enable old programs to run much smoother.
Copeland is a reference to Mac OS
Old Man Pearson
Owns a waste disposal system (analogous to a Windows Recycle Bin) and data dump in Sector 1001. Pearson is a cranky old-binome with a Scottish accent and the former Codemaster known as Talon. As a Codemaster, Pearson possesses a Gibson Coil Pike weapon. (Gibson Coils are a reference to science fiction writer William Gibson.)
He may have been named for one of Reboot's co-creators, Ian Pearson.
File:Al From Reboot.GIF
Al.
Al
Almost never seen, only heard to shout, "What?!" He can be seen for short moments running when chaos erupts in MainFrame.
Al owns Al's Diner (a.k.a. Al's Wait & Eat) on Level 31, and also serves as cook. According to his waiter, Al runs at 3 decahertz (30 Hz).
Al's Waiter (Front Counter)
Never named in the series, he is a binome that stands behind the counter at Al's Diner.
Al's Waiter (Roller Skater)
Also never addressed by name, he is falamboyant one-binome who acts stereotypically homosexual. Has made Bob a bit uncomfortable on a few occasions.
Nibbles (or Nybbles)
Megabyte's pet null, whom he refers to as "Father" several times throughout the series. Nibbles' identity as a Sprite does not become clear until the fourth season.
His name is a reference to an old DOS game called 'Nibbles', as well as a nibble or nybble, 1/2 of a byte
Welman Matrix
Scientific genius and father of Dot and Enzo Matrix. He designed a gateway device that would have allowed Mainframers to connect to outside systems. Unfortunately, his experiment backfired and he was nullified in the explosion that destroyed Mainframe's sister city, the ruins of which were later to be known as Lost Angles.
Fax Modem and Data Nully
are CGI special agents. They are one-binomes modelled on Fox Mulder and Dana Scully from the X-Files, and their names are references to the fax modem and null data. Gillian Anderson, who plays Dana Scully, also provided the voice for the character Data Nully.
Cecil
A video screen with a pair of arms, waiter at Dot's Diner before it was destroyed. Stereotypical French waiter complete with small moustache.
Dixon
Bob's partner when he was in the Guardian Academy as a cadet. She was Glitch's original owner.

Villains

File:ReBoot Megabyte.jpg
Megabyte

Megabyte

Megabyte is a virus operating out of the Silicon Tor in Sector 1000. Megabyte plots constantly to corrupt and control Mainframe in order to turn it into his own domain, "Megaframe." Megabyte is a malignant virus, with the ability and the desire to infect other programs. He commands an army of infected binomes. Megabyte possesses great physical strength and an exceedingly cunning intellect. In many ways he is a megalomaniacal dictator; his only purpose is the amassing of power and control. Megabyte has no scruples and constantly takes advantage of other characters in order to achieve his own ends. He has a brutal, almost psychopathic nature and speaks with a deep British accent. In the fourth season he becomes a Trojan Horse virus, gaining the ability to look and sound like any sprite or binome he is able to steal code from. Both Megabyte and Hexadecimal were at one point part of the larger virus Gigabyte. It split into two effectively opposite parts, Megabyte representing order and Hexadecimal representing chaos.
His name is a reference to a unit of computer memory.
Hack & Slash
The red (Hack) and blue (Slash) funky sprites resemble bizarrely constructed robots. The pair originally served Megabyte, but adjusted their loyalties to the side of Mainframe after being asked to kill Cyrus. They are frequently torn apart, although they seem to take it in stride. Their names are both keyboard keys Hack (\) and Slash (/). Contrary to popular belief the "\" Hack, is not called "back-slash"
Herr Doktor and his assistant
Megabyte's pair of one-binome evil scientists whose practices are disturbingly unethical. The Herr's hands are unlike any other binomes'; instead of mitten-like hands, he has actual fingers. This distinction is continually featured as comic relief in the series. The Doktor's fingers will be run over or somehow damaged, he will shout, "Mein digits!", and his hands will appear in bandages for the rest of the episode. The Herr's assistant is, in relation to other binomes, anatomically dishevelled, with his eye portion in the middle (he is a one binome rather than a zero binome) and has a brick as a foot.
Cyrus
A one-binome that works for Megabyte on his own free will without having been infected. In season 1 he tried to steal all of the PIDs in a sector, and in season 3 he led a propaganda campaign against Enzo’s ability to act as guardian.
File:ReBoot Hexadecimal 1.jpg
Hexadecimal

Hexadecimal

Hexadecimal is an insane virus operating out of Lost Angles and who has a not-so-secret crush on Bob. She has a cat-like pet named SCSI (which stands for Small Computer System Interface, and is pronounced "Scuzzy"). Hexadecimal has the ability to control nulls (sprites downgraded to slug-like status for losing to the User in a game), which has earned her the title "Queen of the Nulls." 'Hex' has transfinite power -- meaning that, though her power is not infinite it continues to regenerate even as she exhausts her power; so Hex can be weakened and takes time to restore herself to full power. During the Daemon Rising feature, she absorbed some of Mainframe's core energy, giving her power levels comparable to Daemon's. She is a benign virus, meaning she doesn't infect other entities, thoegh her power and insanity still make her dangerous. Both Megabyte and Hexadecimal were at one point part of the larger virus Gigabyte. It split into two effectively opposite parts, Megabyte representing order and Hexadecimal representing chaos.
Her name is a reference to hexadecimal notation, which programmers sometimes use rather than binary notation.
Scuzzy
Hexadecimal's familiar. A cat-sized animal with a video screen on its back. Name after SCSI, which stands for Small Computer System Interface.

Daemon

A super-virus, far more powerful than Gigabyte. Bent on infecting the entire net, she succeeded in infecting the entire Guardian Collective -- with the exception of only Bob and Matrix -- and turned the Super Computer into her base of operations. She is religiously worshipped by those she infects, and known to them as "The Word" and addressed as "My Lady". Though she claims to strive for peace and unity in the Net, her true malicious intent shines through her veil of benevolence. Daemon is different from other viruses in that she does not seem to believe that what she is doing is wrong. She sees herself as a messiah trying to "save" the Net. She speaks in a French accent and calls Mike the TV "Michel", and is depicted in the style of Joan of Arc, a petite female holy warrior.
Revealed by Turbo in "The Episode With No Name" to be the one who sent the Web creature to attack Mainframe in the first place.
Her name is a reference to services running on Unix systems in the background. "The Word" may be a reference to a unit of memory called a word, which is equal to 4 bytes in most modern computers.
In her final scene she reveals that The Word is "Cron" ("I am not an entity, I am a time. My time is now. The Word is Cron."), and Bob realizes that she is a "cron virus" (possibly just an entry in a Unix system's "crontab" file, which is used by the "cron" process to run jobs at preselected times, chronologically).
Daecon
Daemon's main advisor and assistant, and under the influence of The Word. Not much else is known about him. His name is intentionally similar to deacon with religious implications.

Other Viruses

Gigabyte
A Class-5, malignant, extremely powerful, energy-absorbing super-virus. The upgraded version of Kilobyte, a virus who is seen in only two episodes. Gigabyte was formed when Kilobyte received an upgrade before his deletion program was completed. A signal from Wellman Matrix's experimental gate locked onto Gigabyte (because he was the most powerful) and brought him to Mainframe. The gate overloaded, and when it exploded, Gigabyte was separated into Megabyte and Hexadecimal. He was briefly reformed in Season 2 when Megabyte, possessed by a Web Creature, merged with Hexadecimal.
His name comes from the unit of computer memory, measuring approximately one billion bytes (1,024 megabytes).
Kilobyte
Kilobyte was a virus that had been captured and was waiting for deletion. Moments before his demise, Kilobyte received an upgrade and band escaped his bonds. Bob attempted to subdue the upgraded Kilobyte, but was unsuccessful and he lay unconscious as the virus drained Guardian Dixon Green. (Guardian Dixon Green was operating the deletion program) (Dixon Green is taken from the British TV show Dixon of Dock Green). Gigabyte (the upgraded version of Kilobyte) was then pulled from the Super Computer, only to be torn apart and separated into Megabyte and Hexadecimal on arrival in Mainframe. Kilobyte’s escape seems have been Bob’s fault, because he engages Dixon Green in conversation during the deletion process, unwittingly stalling it until the upgrade. (Ref: Reboot 4.03 "What's Love Got To Do With It?")
His name comes from another unit of computer memory, measuring approximately one thousand bytes.

History and summary

Template:Spoiler

The first season of ReBoot was highly episodic, with a single 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 "nullified," and the Sprites and binomes who were caught within are turned into energy-draining, worm-like parasites called Nulls.

File:ReBoot Cast2.jpg
season 2 cast

The second season contained a deep story arc that began with the 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 infected Megabyte and forced him to merge with Hexadecimal, forming a super-virus called Gigabyte, Destroyer of Systems. When the Web creature was cornered, 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 and sending him into the Web portal before closing it.

File:ReBoot back cover.jpg
ReBoot back cover
File:ReBoot AndrAIa 2.jpg
AndrAIa

The third 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 rest of the season follows older versions of Enzo and AndrAIa as they travel from system to system in search of Mainframe. The older Enzo only acknowledges the name "Matrix," carries a gun called Gun, the damaged Glitch, an eternal hatred of Megabyte, and looks like Dolph Lundgren in The Punisher. Enzo and AndrAIa are also shown to have become romantically involved by this time. As the season progressed, Matrix and AndrAIa 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 Enzo, respectively. All final problems in Mainframe were dealt with by The User restarting the system, setting everything right again for our heroes, with one major exception: Younger and older Enzo now exist simultaneously, though AndrAIa remains an adult.

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 a fearsome foe in a cliff-hanger ending that has yet to be resolved. The two movies, broken up into eight episodes in its US run on Cartoon Network's Toonami, also reveal much of Mainframe's history, including the creation of Lost Angles, Bob's arrival in the system, and the creation of Megabyte and Hexadecimal.

ReBoot the Ride

There have been two IMAX Ridefilms based on ReBoot. The first, "ReBoot™ - The Ride," opened at Sega City@Playdium in Mississauga, Ontario on October 17, 1997. Viewers sit in an 18-passenger vehicle mounted on an orthagonal motion base. The film is projected at 48 frames per second onto a 14 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.

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.

Humour & Trivia

ReBoot is full of computer and popular culture in-jokes that few people get the first time around. Among the most notable references are found on the episode Talent Night, the finale to the first season.

In that episode, Dot and a cubistic binome called Emma Fee are giving auditions for the birthday party show. Emma Fee is a prog sensor (presumably to be heard as "program censor") who keeps rejecting nearly every act for trivial reasons or to preserve morality or prevent depictions of violence. She heartily approves, however, of a group of male binome singers and dancers called the Small Town Binomes, who sing, in the style of YMCA, "It's fun to play in a non-violent way, with the B, S and P." The "Small Town Binomes" are also dressed in the same "macho" costumes the Village People wore on stage. In addition, "BS & P" happens to be the initials of the Broadcast Standards and Practices, ABC's censors. "BS & P" was used in a first-season episode to move Bob through a stained-glass window rather than shattering it, a technique the BS & P felt children would emulate. Further references to the American networks dropping ReBoot were inserted in the "Web World Wars" episode when Megabytes's Armored Binome Carriers ("ABCs") betrayed the Mainframe CPU fighters in mid-battle ("The ABCs have turned on us! Treacherous dogs!") and in the first episode of the third season, on a tombstone inside the "Evil Dead" game cube that read "Here lies the Mainframe joint venture, an unholy alliance."

"Talent Night" also featured "Johnny O. Binome," whose binary joke translates as "Take my wife, please,", a cyclops-like 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 William Shatner impersonation who did the first verse of Rocketman in the style Shatner himself used at the 1980 Science fiction awards ending with Quirk bowing, his tupee falling off, and disappearing in the style of a Star Trek transporter.

The show occasionally featured a penguin that resembled Feathers McGraw from the Wallace and Gromit feature The Wrong Trousers. This may be a reference to Linux mascot Tux.

Later episodes featured direct parodies of films (the 'James Bond' oeuvre; Toy Story; Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) and TV classics such as Thunderbirds, Star Trek and The Prisoner. Other binomes to have had quick cameos included KISS, Sailor Moon, Indiana Jones, an Elvis Impersonator, and most famously, Fax Modem and Data Nully (the latter of which was voiced by The X-Files actress Gillian Anderson). In fact, in one episode when Mainframe is under going a system crash, Modem is looking at two signs, one saying "B.C." and the other "L.A." This lampoons the fact that David Duchovny moved the X-Files from Vancouver (where ReBoot was produced) to Los Angeles.

Although the "User" opponents featured in early episodes were usually invisible or designed with a minimalist appearance, increased computer generation power allowed the third and fourth season game cubes to feature users who were parodies of known game characters and actors. These included a Sonic the Hedgehog/Crash Bandicoot hybrid ("Rocky Raccoon," a Beatles reference, no less), Elmer Fudd (whose form Enzo reboots into), Bruce Campbell (in the "Evil Dead" game), Mike Myers (in an "Austin Powers"-style game), Brendan Fraser (in a game reminiscent of "The Mummy"), Scorpion (of Mortal Kombat fame), a Pokémon parody (of which Matrix become a Gym Leader resembling Ash Ketchum, Frisket rebooted into a Pikachu lookalike, and Bob was trapped in a little dodecahedron that was supposed to be a Poké Ball of sorts) and a variety of action figures from G.I. Joe to Barbie.

A running gag on the show is the crushing of Herr Doktor's hands in odd ways, causing him to yell out "Mein digits!" in a German accent and adopt bandaged fingers for the remainder of the episode. Another gag is based on the short execution times characters experience: the Mainframe analog to "Just a second" is "Just a nano," while characters consider one second a hyperbolically long period of time.

In the episode Crouching Binome, Hidden Virus, Mike the TV asks the rhetorical question "Is that really your pussy, Mrs. Slocombe?!". This is in reference to the British television series Are You Being Served?, in which the character Mrs. Slocombe owns a cat that she always refers to as her pussy.

One of the brands in the city of Mainframe is "Calvin Spline."

The Gateway command is identical in shape and effects to the one from the movie and series Stargate. Also, the father of Dot bears several similarities to the character Dr. Jackson in the Stargate movie (such as having theories about life off-world).

Since ReBoot precedes the Nintendo GameCube game console by several years, the "game cubes" are not meant to refer to them, despite being purple, which was one of the GameCube's prominent launch colours. However, also likely to be just a coincidence, the first ReBoot movie, "Daemon Rising", first aired on YTV on November 18, 2001, the very same day that the Nintendo GameCube launched in North America. On a related note, a PlayStation controller is visible in the episode "Gigabyte".

See also

External links

Official Sites

Unofficial Sites and Fan Sites