Agrega una trama en tu idiomaCartoon series produced by UPA, in which Dick Tracy (voiced by the distinguished film and stage actor Everett Sloane) played more or less of an incidental role. Most of the crime fighting wa... Leer todoCartoon series produced by UPA, in which Dick Tracy (voiced by the distinguished film and stage actor Everett Sloane) played more or less of an incidental role. Most of the crime fighting was left to his assistants, all originals created for the series: Hemlock Holmes (an English... Leer todoCartoon series produced by UPA, in which Dick Tracy (voiced by the distinguished film and stage actor Everett Sloane) played more or less of an incidental role. Most of the crime fighting was left to his assistants, all originals created for the series: Hemlock Holmes (an English bulldog who talked like Cary Grant), the calorically challenged beat cop Heap O'Calorie (... Leer todo
Opiniones destacadas
What made this show interesting were the voices. Everett Sloane [Citizen Kane] was Tracy...but it also had such greats as Mel Blanc and Paul Frees, Jerry Housner [I Love Lucy] and Benny Rubin [Citizen Kane]...
I don't recall this show being shown since the mid-sixties. I hope they bring it back.
Oh, and by the way. Despite what others may have said, the show was NOT faithful in any way to the cartoon strip. It wasn't even close!
The "Dick Tracy" comic has been around since 1931, and if you have ever read any of the strips, you would soon realize it was aimed at an adult audience. It was filled with grotesque criminals who often met their end in a gruesome manner such as a bullet through the head, impalement, or being burned alive. The creator, Chester Gould, had no qualms about visually depicting the grisly demise of these villains. It was definitely not for young children.
So who thought Dick Tracy would make a great concept for a kids' show? Or what drugs were available in 1960 when this series was being developed? And why would Chester Gould allow his characters to be so trivialized? He is actually credited in the opening title sequence; if I were him I would have been embarrassed to have my name attached this horrible program.
Yes, it is horrible. Minus the opening and closing credits, each episode runs less than four minutes, and Dick Tracy only appears for a total of about 30 to 50 seconds. We see him in the opening scene at his desk finishing up a phone call from his superior. "Okay, Chief, I'll get on it right away. Dick Tracy calling ________." This same footage and dialogue is recycled in every single episode. Yes, EVERY SINGLE EPISODE. Tracy assigns the case to one of four assistant detectives, then is not seen again until the wrap-up at the end. So, why is this called "The Dick Tracy Show"?
"The Lame Assistant Detective Show" would be a better description. Other reviewers have commented on these pathetic characters, so I won't recap what they have already described. However, I will re-emphasize the fact that two of the detectives are racist stereotypes. That alone should be enough to make viewers want to avoid this series, but there is more.
The animation is atrocious. There is a lot of reused footage, flopped (reversed) images and other cost-cutting measures that make it obvious this was made on an extremely limited budget. A handful of classic villains from the comic strip have been transformed into overly- cartoonish children's characters, and these same villains are used over and over. The dialogue is filled with groan-inducing puns that first- or second-grade schoolkids might find funny. Sight gags consist of tired overdone rehashes from other cartoons. The "Hold Everything!" joke (where a character in a predicament freezes the surrounding action) gets really old when it appears in every, yes EVERY, episode, although we do get to see an extra ten seconds of Dick Tracy on screen when the assistant detective calls for help.
This series is available on DVD. Unbelievable. I can't see anyone actually spending money on such mind-numbing material.
And to top it off, I don't even remember seeing any of the original Chester Gould villains in any of the episodes I saw.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThere are three known versions of the opening titles. Other than the music and visuals seen on most TV airings and home media releases, there is also a version on some episodes that use the same visuals but with the faster and more chaotic theme heard over the end credits. There is also a completely alternate visual opening, which begins with the squad car coming down the alley as the voice-over announces the title (cutting out the aerial view of the city traffic jam parting for the squad car completely). After the title flashes up, this then cuts to a shot of Tracy in the moving car's passenger window, who turns and points his gun at the viewer and fires three individual shots, with each shot revealing a different set of three regular villains in the zoomed-in hole of the gun barrel. Tracy then puts his gun away and the sequence ends as the car drives away (the usual shots of the startled pedestrians are not used in this version). This version is rarely seen on TV or on any of the episodes released on home media as it appeared to be used only on select episodes, and most home media releases omit multiple opening and closing sequences between episodes.
- Citas
[repeated line]
Headquarters: Six-two and even, over and out.
- Versiones alternativasSome airings delete all of the segments featuring Joe Jitsu and Go-Go Gomez due to protests over the ethnic stereotypes portrayed in them.
- ConexionesFeatured in TV's Illest Minority Moments Presented by Ego Trip (2004)
Selecciones populares
- How many seasons does The Dick Tracy Show have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- 더 딕 트레이시 쇼
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución23 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 4:3