(no subject)
Jan. 19th, 2004 11:17 pm
How evil are you?
Just had to tear myself away from Fox Kids in order to check email and take stupid quizzes before I go to bed. This was not as easy as it sounds - apparently they have taken to showing THE BEST SHOWS IN THE WORLD after 10pm. Mask, Ulysses 31, Jayce And The Wheeled Warriors. SO COOL.
Also I find myself interested in trying to catch the newest incarnation of the Power Rangers - Ninja Storm. Not only are they colour-coded ninjas, being trained by a diminutive hampster, but the fight scenes look to be of reasonably high quality (bullet time!) and the dialogue looks to be hamfisted sub-Buffy nonsense. (Power Ranger: "Uh - hello? One of you, lots of us." Evil: "Oh, please!")Should be good for a giggle, if nothing else.
no subject
Date: 2004-01-20 02:21 am (UTC)Oh yes, and it had a beginning and an end, which was (and is) quite rare for a kids program. If I remember correctly, wasn't Jace and the Wheeled Warriors written by J. Michael Straczynsci? I remember it had a "story arc" and everything, for all that it never really seemed to go anywhere.
no subject
Date: 2004-01-20 03:30 am (UTC)Fun fact: I spotted from the credits that the English translation of the program (it was apparently a French programme, animated by a Japanese or possibly Korean animation house) was courtesy of Haim Saban and Shuki Levy, who later brought us the Power Rangers.
As I recall, JMS wrote about 14 episodes of Jayce (and the series bible for The Real Ghostbusters, as well as a substantial run on Murder, She Wrote). It had an opening episode, but I think you're right that it never wound its way to a conclusion. It wasn't so much a story arc as an ongoing quest; they would occasionally appear to get a step closer to finding Jayce's father but it would inevitably turn out to be a false lead, or a clone, or something. I'm not sure how much continuity there was between episodes, either - I don't recall them using elements from or referring to past episodes very much. As toy tie-ins go, Jayce was something of a triumph - the original toy line ("Wheeled Warriors" - never really released over here) was just the vehicles, all the characters and plot were developed purely for the series.
Ah, the IMDB doesn't list any individual episodes for his work on Jayce, so maybe he did write it all...
no subject
Date: 2004-01-20 03:56 am (UTC)Oh.. hang on... thats most cartoons like that.
Did Dungeons & Dragons ever resove itself?
no subject
Date: 2004-01-20 04:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-01-20 05:01 am (UTC)Do you know how many seasons they actually made?
no subject
Date: 2004-01-20 05:20 am (UTC)While we're on the subject ...
You are Diana the Acrobat. You are very agile and down to earth, practical. You have a magical quarterstaff that can expand or contract at
your will.
Which Dungeons and Dragons Cartoon Character Are You?
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Definitely cool
Date: 2004-01-20 05:28 am (UTC)I enjoyed Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors too. The wizard in it is far more impressive than Gandalf in LOTR; he could do with a new tailor though.
Re: Definitely cool
Date: 2004-01-20 05:40 am (UTC)See you tonight!
Re: Definitely cool
Date: 2004-01-20 07:15 am (UTC)Not what I expected...
Date: 2004-01-20 07:26 am (UTC)You are Hank the Ranger, leader of the group. You
have a nifty magic bow.
(http://quizilla.com/users/Betelgeuse/quizzes/Which%20Dungeons%20and%20Dragons%20Cartoon%20Character%20Are%20You%3F/)
Of course, it does mean your my biitch Andy! See you later.
Woot!
Date: 2004-01-20 08:17 am (UTC)You are Venger, the Force of Evil. You have tons of
magic powers, ravening hordes of minions, and a
different Dark Tower in every corner of the
Realm. Life is good.
Which Dungeons and Dragons Cartoon Character Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla
Excellent - I'm the gayest villain since the lipstick bloke off Battle Of The Planets
Re: Woot!
Date: 2004-01-20 08:20 am (UTC)