"I must have posed for that when I was stoned!"
Whoever thought the Marxes would work in a cartoon!? Kind of an obvious idea, but they were already kind of too quick for that, and the eventual result actually feels slower than the earliest Marx bits. And their humour would be going right over the kids' heads — well the heads that were not blown off by having a gun shot right in their face…!
I don’t think that’s actually Groucho; not sure if he would have been approached (he died in '77, so would have been around), or if he threatened to sue over his likeness being used (he did a lot of that, so celebrity licenses were indeed a Thing even then), but it’s a pretty good copy — though something of an odd choice to imitate Groucho's slower delivery from the 60s onwards rather than just go with the 20s and 30s heyday…it’s like no-one here had seen the Paramount movies or even later MGMs…!
Dick Digit is all kinds of bonkers. Why are they saying these things!? Why is this all happening!? I kind of like the totally nonsensical nature of it. This is more like what a real Buzz Lightyear would have been like… At least we know what happened to Alderaan's sister planet…!
King Arthur is kind of what a joke version of this would be like if made in the Filmation style now, but it’s actually quite well done. Boy, the guy can sure throw an arrow, eh? Also loved how big it kind of felt was in places (good use of library score music too!), and the Filmation take on Disney's Merlin, basically. I guess they got their own back by nicking Tarquin for the Gummi Bears.
Motor Scouts' opening was weird and depressing! And waaay too long and talky! Points for the diversity as far back as then, but it felt more late 60s than mid-70s and ran out of gas before it got going. As dated as it was maybe forward-thinking, but I struggled with this! I’ve seen a lot of the other ones before, not that they aren’t worth looking at again for the sometime jaw-dropping nature, including Superboy's total lack of super-charisma and WW's lack of identifiable tone!
I do remember Captain Zoom, though, from when it aired on SciFi here in the UK! There was a whole raft of these quasi-cheesy B-picture homage TV movies in the 90s, when video effects basically replaced the bad mattes of 1950s schlockers, though I could never quite reconcile the modern look with the antiquated content; they kind of weren't one thing or the other to me. I did remember liking the set and costume references and nods in Zoom, though, even if skimming through it again today reminds me of a "modern" kind of Ed Wood movie!
