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The Adventures of Blinky Bill

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The Adventures of Blinky Bill
Genre
Based onBlinky Bill, by Dorothy Wall
Developed byJonathan M. Shiff Productions
Written by
  • Sally Farrell Odgers
  • Susan Beak
  • Geoff Beak
  • David Witt
  • Carol Witt
  • Ray Nowland
  • John Palmer
  • Phil Sanders
Directed byYoram Gross (Season 1–2)
David Evans (Season 3)
Voices of
Theme music composerGuy Gross
Opening theme"Hey, Hey, Blinky Bill", performed by Keith Scott (Season 1) and Ric Herbert (Season 2–3)
Ending theme
  • "I'm Blinky Bill" (Season 1)
  • "Yahoo Didgeridoo" (Season 2)
  • Instrumental version of "Hey, Hey, Blinky Bill" (Season 3)
Composers
  • Guy Gross
  • Clive Harrison (additional music, Season 3 only)
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes78 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Sandra Gross
  • Tim Brooke-Hunt (Season 1–2)
  • Siegmund Grewenig (Season 3)
  • Yoram Gross (Season 3)
  • Geoff Watson (Season 3)
Producers
  • Yoram Gross (Season 1–2)
  • Manuela Lumb (Season 3)
  • Rodney Whitham (Season 3)
  • Andre Kussmaul (Season 3)
  • Martina Mosner (Season 3)
Editors
  • G.Y. Jerzy (Season 1)
  • Kouichi Kashiwa (Season 1)
  • Sally Fitzpatrick (Season 2)
Running time26 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network
ReleaseJanuary 1, 1993 (1993-01-01) –
July 5, 2004 (2004-07-05)

The Adventures of Blinky Bill is an Australian animated television series based on Dorothy Wall's books about Blinky Bill. The series is produced by the Yoram Gross[1] companies: Yoram Gross Film Studio (from 1993 to 1995) and Yoram Gross-EM.TV (from 2004 to 2005), with the main co-production of EM.TV and WDR. Finally, all three seasons were animated at Colorland Animation Productions Ltd.. Set in Greenpatch, a fictional Australian town, the series presents stories of conservation and nature through the activities of Blinky Bill and his family and friends.

Series

Series 1

In the first series of The Adventures of Blinky Bill (1993–1994, 26 episodes), Blinky Bill and his friends rebuild the buildings and the community in Greenpatch, following its destruction by humans. They also come to terms with their new neighbours, the ill-famed Dingo family.

The series first aired on ABC Television in 1993. Yoram Gross (with his first studios Yoram Gross Film Studio) co-produced the first series with: EM.Entertainment (Germany), WDR/ARD (Germany), ABC (Australia), and BBC (UK). It is the series closest to the original book in character and setting.

Series 2

In this series, also known as Blinky Bill's Extraordinary Excursion (1995–1996, 26 episodes), Blinky Bill and his friends become lost while on a school excursion in the bush. Finding their way home across different parts of Australia, they have many adventures helping out other animals in need, including a crocodile, penguins and farm and circus animals.

The second series was a Yoram Gross Film Studio co-production with: EM.Entertainment (Germany), WDR/ARD (Germany), ABC (Australia), VIDEAL (Germany), and Beyond Distribution (Australia). It was aired on ABC in Australia.

Series 3

In series three, Blinky Bill’s Extraordinary Balloon Adventure also known as Blinky Bill's Around the World Adventures (2004, 26 episodes), Blinky Bill, Nutsy and Flap travel around the world in a hot air balloon that takes them on exciting adventures being chased by 2 humans named Basil and Cyril who are the Circus Bros.. The animals he rescued were: Ling Ling the Panda, Slippery the Seal, Yoyo the Monkey, Princess Penelope the Poodle, Leo the Lion, and Tico the Toucan (who originally works for the Circus Bros.). They went to Antarctica, the African Plains, China, the Amazon Rainforest, India and Paris, and it was shown in high definition.

The series aired on 10 June 2004 on the Seven Network. The third series was a Yoram Gross-EM.TV co-production with EM.TV (Germany), WDR (Germany), ABC (Australia), and Wavery (Netherlands).

Spin-off

Two spin-off pilot episodes, Flap's Family and Flap's Island, both following the story of supporting character Flap after he is stolen by zookeepers, was developed by Yoram Gross with the assistance of the Australian Film Commission and the New South Wales Film and Television Office in 1996, but the pilots were not picked up.

Telemovie

In 2005 a telemovie entitled Blinky Bill’s White Christmas was produced by Yoram Gross-EM.TV,[2] with the co-production of WDR (Germany). The telemovie first aired on the Seven Network on 24 December 2005. The theme song from the telemovie, "Christmas in Australia", was sung by Christine Anu.[3]

Films

Blinky Bill: The Mischievous Koala

In 1992, Blinky Bill on this original animated film Blinky Bill: The Mischievous Koala by Yoram Gross Film Studios since Dot and the Kangaroo film series. Greenpatch was destroy by the two Lumberjacks named Harry and Joe so the bushland animal groups are to find some places the caves so Blinky Bill has to go find his mother along with some friends Nutsy, Flap, Splodge, Marcia. with some sing-a-songs on the film along the animated characters on the live-action backgrounds.

Blinky Bill the Movie

In 2015, Blinky Bill returns on this new CGI animation produced by Flying Bark Productions, Assemblage Entertainment, Telegael and Distributed by StudioCanal. Blinky Bill is a koala with a big imagination. An adventurer at heart, he dreams of leaving the little town of Green Patch and following in his explorer father’s footsteps. Mr Bill went missing in the Outback sometime ago and Blinky is the only one who believes his father is still alive. When Blinky discovers a mysterious marker that hints at his Dad’s whereabouts, he embarks on a journey that takes him beyond the boundary of Green Patch and into the wild and dangerous Outback. He quickly makes friends with Nutsy, a zoo koala, and Jacko, a nervous frill-necked lizard. Pursued relentlessly by a vengeful feral cat who has a personal score to settle with Blinky, the trio must learn to work together if they ever want to survive the rugged Australian landscape and find Blinky’s father!

Video games

In 1997, Forest Interactive and Roadshow Interactive created an edutainment software called "Blinky Bill's Ghost Cave" based on the episode of the same name.[4]

In 1999, Forest Interactive and Roadshow Interactive created an edutainment software called "Blinky Bill and the Magician" based on the episode of the same name.

Forest Interactive and Tribe Interactive created three activity edutainment software CDs titled "Play & Learn with Blinky Bill". The first CD was for preschool usersm the second CD was for kindergarten users and the third CD was for first graders.

Music

In 1994, Blinky BIll and Friends Singing Songs Based on the TV Series with narration by Paul Lyneham on the ABC Music.

In 1999, Blinky and the rest Greenpatch group on this Christmas songs in Blinky Bill and his "Extraordinary" Christmas Sing-Along!.

In 2002, Blinky Bill along with Don Spencer in Don and Blinky's Outback Adventure-The Lost Cooee.

Characters

Broadcasting history

International broadcasts

Forest industry controversy

The theme of the first series carried a strong anti-woodchip message, with the second line saying "Save us from that woodchip mill", together with scenes of forest destruction. There were also obvious environmental messages in most episodes. Some forest industry groups lobbied the ABC arguing that the opening scene showed illegal wood chipping, which was not fair to the timber industry. In the following two series, these song lyrics and the opening credits sequence were different (the line in the theme became "You'll never catch him standing still"), reflecting the change in storylines and locations.[5]

Reception

The Adventures of Blinky Bill received generally positive reviews. It received an average rating of 6.6/10 on IGN based on 318 reviews.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Marsupial Madness: The Success of Yoram Gross". Animation News Network. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  2. ^ "Blinky Bill's White Christmas". IMDb. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  3. ^ "Xmas TV battle hots up". Sydney Morning Herald. 20 December 2005. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  4. ^ "Blinky Bill's Ghost Cave - Review". Rosemary Young. 1998. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  5. ^ Blinky Bill’s Fire Brigade (1992) curator's notes on ASO - Australia's audio and visual heritage online
  6. ^ "User ratings for "The Adventures of Blinky Bill"". IMDB. 25 April 2016.