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7,3/10
1048
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Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe adventures of a boy searching for his mother with his only companion being a large Pyrenean mountain dog falsely accused of being dangerous.The adventures of a boy searching for his mother with his only companion being a large Pyrenean mountain dog falsely accused of being dangerous.The adventures of a boy searching for his mother with his only companion being a large Pyrenean mountain dog falsely accused of being dangerous.
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I have been trying to identify this cartoon years after it stopped airing on Nickelodeon in the late 1980's. I won't restate the plot and indeed the show had a pretty strightforward premise, but what a change of pace it was to a seven year old to whom shows like Double Dare and the VERY mundane "Hey Dude" and "Salute Your Shorts" did not cater.
I was never able to see all the episodes from beginning to end but this was a very memorable show inasmuch as the raw mood and tone it set. I never followed the story, but never having seen the conclusion left the characters of the young boy, Sebastian, his big white dog and the Inspector crystalized like ghosts in my mind. In my own interpretation, that is how Belle and Sebastian will always be: like a pair of ghosts roaming the French countryside. A boy who can never find his mother-- perhaps an apparition herself.
To suggest that a show like this was dull or useless is inconceivable to me. I realize what I have described is mostly what I have brought to the TV show from my own imagination but I was only able to do that because the show took its time with a very simple story and allowed me to do with it as I wished.
I was never able to see all the episodes from beginning to end but this was a very memorable show inasmuch as the raw mood and tone it set. I never followed the story, but never having seen the conclusion left the characters of the young boy, Sebastian, his big white dog and the Inspector crystalized like ghosts in my mind. In my own interpretation, that is how Belle and Sebastian will always be: like a pair of ghosts roaming the French countryside. A boy who can never find his mother-- perhaps an apparition herself.
To suggest that a show like this was dull or useless is inconceivable to me. I realize what I have described is mostly what I have brought to the TV show from my own imagination but I was only able to do that because the show took its time with a very simple story and allowed me to do with it as I wished.
As a child, "Belle and Sebastian" was the first show that I eagerly awaited each episode. It was far from dull or disgraceful. The cartoon followed a boy named Sebastian traveled through Spain, Andorra and France in search of his mother. He traveled with his dog Belle and puppy Poochie.
That was all it needed to be entertaining.
That was all it needed to be entertaining.
How well I remember the shows from my childhood, with 'Belle and Sebastian' being one of my favorites.
'Belle and Sebastian' was a very nicely done, very non-violent look at a young boy (Sebastian) searching for the mother (Isobelle) who had left him long ago, and the Pyrenean mountain dog that accompanies him and protects him, and the tiny puppy he himself protects. Unfortunately, it would not fare well in today's world, where it's virtually a requirement that cartoons contain violence, bloodshed, sarcasm, and death. Very few are suitable for a wide audience, and the ones that are suitable are reruns from earlier times.
This was one of the best series of the early eighties (I also have some very fond memories of Osamu Tezuka's 'Astroboy'), and one of the very fond memories I will always carry with me of my childhood.
'Belle and Sebastian' was a very nicely done, very non-violent look at a young boy (Sebastian) searching for the mother (Isobelle) who had left him long ago, and the Pyrenean mountain dog that accompanies him and protects him, and the tiny puppy he himself protects. Unfortunately, it would not fare well in today's world, where it's virtually a requirement that cartoons contain violence, bloodshed, sarcasm, and death. Very few are suitable for a wide audience, and the ones that are suitable are reruns from earlier times.
This was one of the best series of the early eighties (I also have some very fond memories of Osamu Tezuka's 'Astroboy'), and one of the very fond memories I will always carry with me of my childhood.
This show is yet, another piece from my childhood. Like many shows I watched in my younger days, I watched this on Nickelodeon. It was about a boy named Sebastian who was trying to find his Gypsy mother who had abandoned him years earlier. He was protected by his dog Belle, whom also protected its puppy Poochie. I think there was another character as well who was a fellow Gypsy who had taken care of Sebastian since his mother left him.
This is another wonderful show of a Euro-Japanese coproduction which was evident in the 80's. Other recommendations in this sort include "Mysterious Cities of Gold", "Spartacus", and "Ulysse 31". Why these countries don't do shows together anymore is a mystery. This show gets a 10.
This is another wonderful show of a Euro-Japanese coproduction which was evident in the 80's. Other recommendations in this sort include "Mysterious Cities of Gold", "Spartacus", and "Ulysse 31". Why these countries don't do shows together anymore is a mystery. This show gets a 10.
They say childhood lasts forever. It certainly often seemed that way when this interminable cartoon series was screened on Children's BBC in the Eighties.
The premise was simple. Belle was a large furry white dog, a cross between Digby and Stephen King's Cujo. Sebastian was a socially maladjusted village boy. Sebastian befriended Belle (who lived in the mountains) and would ride upon his back for fun and generally lark about.
The local villagers, however, were generally a bit reactionary and Jean de Florette-esque, disapproved of this relationship and attempted to shoot the dog. Sadly, they never succeeded.
That was it - stretched over numerous episodes. Unlike Dogtanian and Willy Fogg, Belle and Sebastian didn't even have a catchy theme tune to redeem it. Poor, even if the cool Nineties indy band did take their name from it.
The premise was simple. Belle was a large furry white dog, a cross between Digby and Stephen King's Cujo. Sebastian was a socially maladjusted village boy. Sebastian befriended Belle (who lived in the mountains) and would ride upon his back for fun and generally lark about.
The local villagers, however, were generally a bit reactionary and Jean de Florette-esque, disapproved of this relationship and attempted to shoot the dog. Sadly, they never succeeded.
That was it - stretched over numerous episodes. Unlike Dogtanian and Willy Fogg, Belle and Sebastian didn't even have a catchy theme tune to redeem it. Poor, even if the cool Nineties indy band did take their name from it.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe show is about a boy named Sebastian and his huge white dog, Belle.
- VerbindungenReferenced in Matzav Ha'Uma: Folge #3.7 (2011)
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