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BraveStarr: The Movie

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BraveStarr: The Movie
Directed byTom Tataranowicz
Written byBob Forward
Steve Hayes
Produced byLou Scheimer
StarringCharlie Adler
Susan Blu
Pat Fraley
Ed Gilbert
Alan Oppenheimer
Edited byLudmilla P. Saskova
Music byFrank W. Becker
Production
company
Distributed byTaurus Entertainment
Release date
March 18, 1988
Running time
91 min.
LanguageEnglish

BraveStarr: The Movie (released in Europe as BraveStarr: The Legend) is an animated Space Western released on March 18, 1988 by Taurus Entertainment.[1] The film was based on Filmation's television series and Mattel's action figure of the same name, and was also among the first animated features to use computer graphics. The film tells the story of the original discovery of Kerium (a fictional ore that serves as the main plot element of the TV series), and how the Galactic Marshall Bravestarr came to battle Tex Hex (a wanted outlaw) and his master Stampede (an evil spirit in the form of a bull skull) on the planet of New Texas. It also introduces his allies: J.B. (a female judge), Thirty/Thirty (his talking horse, who can become bipedal and fight on his own), Deputy Fuzz (one of the Prairie People, the original indigenous people of New Texas), and the Shaman (BraveStarr's mentor who helps him discover his animal-based powers). The PAL-based European version of the movie has been released to Region 1 DVD as a bonus feature in the July 3, 2007 release of The Best of BraveStarr from BCI Eclipse. The movie received its own single DVD release on May 6, 2008.

Unlike The Secret of the Sword (which was later edited into the first five She-Ra episodes), the BraveStarr movie was produced and released following the conclusion of the TV series.

Sharing the same fate as the toy and TV show, it was not a box-office success, playing only to weekend matinées in limited markets. A year after its release, Filmation closed down for good; its last full-length production, Happily Ever After, did not premiere until 1993.

Plot

The final Filmation show got its start with this little-seen feature. Far out in space on New Texas, a single marshal protects a frontier people from the evil machinations of Stampede and his lackey, Tex Hex.

Cast

Reception

The movie gained a positive response from critics despite flopping at the box office. [1]

References

  • Beck, Jerry (2005), pp. 41–2. The Animated Movie Guide. ISBN 1-55652-591-5. Chicago Reader Press. Accessed April 8, 2007.

Notes

  1. ^ a b "'Bravestarr': Neo-Western Saddled by Its Design". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-10-04.