Garbage Pail Kids

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Garbage Pail Kids
Adam Bomb (Series 1 #8a) became iconic of the trading card franchise; the image was used on the first five series' packs.
TypeTrading Cards
Inventor(s)Mark Newgarden[1]
CompanyThe Topps Company[2]
CountryUnited States
Availability1985–Present
Official website

Garbage Pail Kids (also known as "The Garbage Gang" in Australia and New Zealand and later United Kingdom versions, "La Pandilla Basura" [The Garbage Gang] or "Basuritas" [Trashlings] in Latin America, "Gang do Lixo" [Trash Gang] in Brazil, "Sgorbions" [Snotlings] in Italy, "Les Crados" [The Filthies] in France, and "Die total kaputten Kids" [The Totally Broken Kids] in Germany) is a series of trading cards produced by the Topps Company, originally released in 1985 and designed to parody the Cabbage Patch Kids dolls created by Xavier Roberts which were immensely popular at the time.

Each sticker card features a Garbage Pail Kid character having some comical abnormality and/or suffering a terrible fate, with a humorous, word play-rich character name such as Glandular Angela or Half-Nelson. Two versions of each card were produced, with variations featuring the same artwork but a different character name denoted by an "a" or "b" letter after the card number. The sticker fronts are die-cut so just the kid with its nameplate and the GPK logo can be peeled from the backing. Many of the card backs feature puzzle pieces to form giant 9-card murals; other back subjects vary greatly among the series, from humorous licenses and awards to comic strips and, in more recent releases, "Fakebook" profiles.

15 original series of regular trading cards were released in the United States, with various sets released in other countries. Two large-format card editions were also released, as well as a set of fold-out posters. All-New Series sets were introduced in 2003, Flashback re-releases began in 2010, and a Brand-New Series was announced for 2012.[3]

History

The series was the brainchild of Topps consultant and Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Art Spiegelman, who came up with the product idea after the success of his earlier creations, Garbage Candy and Wacky Packages. The concept originally began as an unreleased Wacky Packages title,[4] but the management at Topps thought it would be a good idea for a separate spin-off series. Spiegelman and fellow cartoonist Mark Newgarden worked together as the editors and art directors of the project, Len Brown was the manager, and the first run of the cards was drawn exclusively by artist John Pound.[5] They were first issued in 1985.[6][7] Following the initial success of the cards, several additional artists and writers were brought in to contribute to the series, including Jay Lynch, Tom Bunk, and James Warhola, among others.

Variations

A smaller card format version was released in Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. Each pack contained three stickers and the "peel here" indicator pointed to the top left area since there was no die-cut scoring. Initially in New Zealand a 6th series of the Garbage Pail Kids was released as a market test (this version was a mix of the United States series 6 and 7). After this success, Series 1 was released in Australia and New Zealand known as "The Garbage Gang" and were identical to the United States version (albeit smaller). The first series was released in Australia and New Zealand in 1989 with different versions: the Australian stickers were darker, had a different banner, and some of the names were changed to reflect cultural differences. From Series 2 onward, the same version was released in Australia and New Zealand. Series 4 was the last release of "The Garbage Gang".

Commercial success

The commercial success of the trading cards led to the production of a live-action movie, The Garbage Pail Kids Movie,[8] in 1987. An animated television series was also created, but its initial scheduled broadcast in the US was postponed due to parental complaints.[9] The show did make a brief appearance on US television years after it was originally intended to air and was also briefly aired in Europe.[10] The movie was released on DVD by MGM Home Entertainment on July 12, 2005 (the original VHS had been distributed by Paramount), and the cartoon series was later also released on DVD by CBS Home Entertainment on April 4, 2006 (coincidentally with distribution by Paramount).

Controversy

School ban

During the height of the card series' popularity, Garbage Pail Kids were banned in many schools.[11] One of the main reasons for the ban was that teachers cited them as distractions during class.[12]

Trademark infringement lawsuit

Topps was sued by the makers of Cabbage Patch Kids, Coleco, for trademark infringement.[13][14] As part of the out-of-court settlement, Topps agreed to modify the appearance of the Garbage Pail Kids to remove the resemblance between the characters, and to change the logo design. Production of the cards themselves continued, but by 1988 sales had dwindled and a planned 16th series was never produced.

All-New series sets

In 2003, Topps reintroduced Garbage Pail Kids with all-new artwork, dubbed the All-New Series ("ANS"). ANS1 was largely made up of artwork intended for release in the 1980s, but 2004's ANS2 featured brand new concepts. Unique numbers on the backs of silver- and gold-foil insert cards could be redeemed online at the official Garbage Pail Kids website where visitors build and "gross out" their own Garbage Pail Kids; as the number of unique code numbers applied to the character increases, the more gross it becomes. Less than six months later, ANS3 was released.

In 2005, Topps celebrated the 20th anniversary of the GPK franchise with special "Sketch Card" original art inserts for its ANS4 set.[15] These were limited to one randomly inserted card per hobby-exclusive box (available only from specialty retailers) and featured original artwork by series regulars John Pound, Tom Bunk, and Jay Lynch, as well as guest artists Strephon Taylor, John Czop, Don Perlin, and Justin Green. Although a regular to the series with over 35 paintings, Luis Diaz was not involved in the sketch cards.

In 2006, ANS5 was released with 40 more new kids (each with an a/b twin), followed by ANS6 in early 2007. January 2008 saw the release of ANS7 which expanded the base set to 55 new characters and was the last set to feature new artwork until 2010's Flashback Series 1 subset of six previously unpublished kids.

The ANS cards differ from the original series ("OS") in a number of ways, the most obvious being the upgraded quality of cardstock with a glossy protective surface. The ANS releases also changed the card numbering format: OS cards used a continuous numbering pattern so that each new set would pick up where the last one ended (e.g. OS1 ended at 41a/b and OS2 picked up at 42a/b while ANS reset the numbering back to 1a/b with each subsequent release). Each ANS also featured special "chase cards" randomly inserted in packs; for example, Foil Cards show characters from the original series (with modified artwork due to the lawsuit), Scratch 'n Stink cards, Collectible Card Game cards, Temporary Tattoos, 3D Pop-Up cards, Alphabet cards, Activity cards, Magnets, lenticular Loco Motion cards, and die-cut Jigsaw Puzzle cards, along with special bonus cards available only at participating retailers in either "bonus boxes" or rack-packs; these bonus stickers were the first cards not to have a twin set.

Flashback re-releases

Topps released a 25th anniversary Flashback set on February 24, 2010, featuring reprints of characters from the original 1985-87 GPK series (8 each from OS1 to OS8) plus six previously unpublished "Lost" characters and 10 "Where Are They Now?" cards showing classic GPKs drawn as they would appear today. Packs contained randomly inserted chase cards including lenticular Loco Motion, authentic Printing Plates, four levels of Parallels, and hand-drawn Artist Sketches by pop-culture artists including Layron DeJarnette, Brent Engstrom, Dave Gross, Mark Pingitore, Joe Simko, Colin Walton, Fred Wheaton, Jeff Zapata, and veteran GPK artists Tom Bunk and Jay Lynch.

A second Flashback set was released on February 23, 2011, with 65 more OS reprints from series 1 to 9 plus five more "Lost" kids, 10 new "WatN?" cards, five 3D cards (resembling holograms but in full color), one-of-a-kind Artist Sketches, and 10 "Adam Mania" cards showing variants of Adam Bomb's iconic mushroom cloud, plus Parallels of the base and Adam Mania sets.[16]

GPK Flashback Series 3 followed on November 2, 2011, with 65 OS reprints, four "Lost" kids, 10 "WatN?" cards, five 3D cards, 10 Adam Mania cards, Artist Sketches, and Parallels.

Brand-New series sets

In 2012, Topps announced it would reboot the Garbage Pail Kids franchise with new character and content themes more reminiscent of the original 1980s series in a set called "Brand-New Series 1" (BNS1) scheduled to be released on October 24, 2012. BNS1 will feature new GPK characters, a reality TV subset, motion cards, mix 'n' match stickers, parallels, artist sketch cards, and code cards redeemable for a chance to be painted as a GPK in the next BNS.

Movies

The Garbage Pail Kids Movie

On August 21, 1987, a live-action film based on the card characters was released.[17] Its campy production made it both a critical and commercial flop, opening poorly in 374 theaters with an initial draw of only $661,512 and total gross receipts of $1,576,615. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 0% critic rating and 35% audience rating. Topps featured advertisements for the movie on the original series 9 and 10 box-topper poster and variant wrapper.

Future film

On March 12, 2012, it was announced that former Disney CEO Michael Eisner's Tornante Company would be producing a new movie based on the Garbage Pail Kids, likely with computer-generated character imagery. Michael Vukadinovich has been hired to write the screenplay for the film and PES has been hired to direct.[18]

See also

References

  1. ^ Dery, Mark (March 19, 2006). "A Cartoonist in Despair? Now That's Funny". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
  2. ^ "Sticks to the Teeth, Not to the Ribs". The New York Times. August 17, 1988. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
  3. ^ About Garbage Pail Kids Garbage Pail Kids Online
  4. ^ Wacky Packages Garbage Pail Kid Pound Art
  5. ^ Garbage Pail Kids Index Pound Art
  6. ^ Pound, Louis. "Garbage Pail Kids". Poundart. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
  7. ^ "WTF Hollywood: The Garbage Pail Kids Movie". January 22, 2012.
  8. ^ Garbage Pail Kids Movie Internet Movie Database
  9. ^ Garbage Pail Kids TV Series Parental Complaints Child of the 1980s
  10. ^ Garbage Paiids TV Series Airs in Europe Wharble
  11. ^ "Garbage Pail Kids Rage Stirring Up Controversy". Sun Sentinel. February 19, 1986. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  12. ^ Garbage Pail Kids Distracting to Schoolchildren Skool Days
  13. ^ "Copyrights: Trouble in the Garbage Pail". Time. March 17, 1986. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  14. ^ "Around the Nation; Judge Rules in Case Of Garbage Pail Kids". The New York Times. August 30, 1986. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
  15. ^ Garbage Pail Kids ANS4 Review Trader Crack's
  16. ^ Garbage Pail Kids Flashback Series 2 Master Checklist The Collectibles Workshop
  17. ^ Garbage Pail Kids Movie Trailer YouTube
  18. ^ "The Garbage Pail Kids Return to the Big Screen". ComingSoon.net. March 12, 2012. Retrieved 2012-03-12.

External links

Template:Tornante company Template:Link GA