Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn anthology of live-action fantasy/adventure shows hosted by musical group Kaptain Kool and the Kongs.An anthology of live-action fantasy/adventure shows hosted by musical group Kaptain Kool and the Kongs.An anthology of live-action fantasy/adventure shows hosted by musical group Kaptain Kool and the Kongs.
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This show was wonderful. It had a variety of characters in different scenarios. I loved "Dr. Shrinker" and "Electra Woman". The band was great too. I remember "Wonder Bug" as fun, and wasn't there a segment with Big Foot?
I was 14 when this played on Saturday mornings. I had younger siblings who loved it so I decided to watch it once. It was as stupid as can be...but I loved it! Full of VERY bad jokes, extreme overacting and mediocre songs but put over with lots of energy, color and a quick pace. I remember "Magic Mongo", "Dr. Shrinker", "Electra Woman and Dyna Girl". The "special" effects were laughably done but at the age of 14 you didn't care. This was in no way a good show but it aimed at kids not adults and, back then, kids were watching Saturday morning cartoons and such religiously. Hey--it beat doing homework! I'm glad I saw it back then but have no desire to see it now. Childhood memories die hard and I'm afraid I'd hate it now.
Wow - these postings really brought about a flood of memories. I spent my youth watching Saturday morning cartoons and the Krofft Supershow.
I've been feeling nostalgic lately, so I guess that's why I'm here.
Remember the Fall Cartoon preview shows they used to have? Each network would literally preview the coming fall Television Cartoon schedule and I would try to watch every show! I would get so excited about the upcoming cartoons! I remember the show that premiered Kaptain Kool and the Kongs!! I was about 9 or 10 and thought that Kaptain Kool and the Kongs, well DID look really cool! So, I just remember the excitement of those days when Saturday morning cartoons meant everything and how much I loved to watch Krofft shows. I loved to watch Dr. Shrinker, Elektra Woman and Dinah Girl, Land of the Lost, and thanks to the guy above who reminded me of "Far Out Space Nuts." I haven't thought of that show in 30 years...
Everybody here is right - Saturday mornings as a kid in the early and mid to late 70's were awesome. Nothing was better than all of the cartoons and Krofft shows.
The only time in my life I would get up at 7 am when I didn't have to!
I've been feeling nostalgic lately, so I guess that's why I'm here.
Remember the Fall Cartoon preview shows they used to have? Each network would literally preview the coming fall Television Cartoon schedule and I would try to watch every show! I would get so excited about the upcoming cartoons! I remember the show that premiered Kaptain Kool and the Kongs!! I was about 9 or 10 and thought that Kaptain Kool and the Kongs, well DID look really cool! So, I just remember the excitement of those days when Saturday morning cartoons meant everything and how much I loved to watch Krofft shows. I loved to watch Dr. Shrinker, Elektra Woman and Dinah Girl, Land of the Lost, and thanks to the guy above who reminded me of "Far Out Space Nuts." I haven't thought of that show in 30 years...
Everybody here is right - Saturday mornings as a kid in the early and mid to late 70's were awesome. Nothing was better than all of the cartoons and Krofft shows.
The only time in my life I would get up at 7 am when I didn't have to!
The Krofft Supershow was a live action program for kids. There was no animation but all the Krofft shows played out like cartoons. I remember being the only person awake in my house watching this show early on Saturday mornings as a kid in the 70's. At the time I remember my favorite segment as being Bigfoot and Wildboy. Somehow most of my friends at school missed out on this because few people ever knew what I was talking about when I mentioned this show. There was another segment called Far Out Space Nuts, about a couple of astronauts one of which was Bob Denver who played Gilligan. If I remember correctly, their space ship wasn't working properly and every week they ended up on a new planet where they would be chased by some Muppet looking monster that wasn't really scary but was always funny. There was the popular Electra Woman and Dynagirl that was like a female version of the Adam West Batman series. Another segment featured Wonderbug about a talking car like the animated cartoon Dune Buggy. The Lost Saucer was another space show, this one was similar to the 60's hit show Lost in Space. There were others that I don't remember but I'm sure if I saw this again it would all comeback to me. Sid and Marty Krofft have been releasing their Saturday morning shows on DVD at a steady if not rapid rate. We have seen Land of the Lost be released in season sets, H.R. Puffnstuff in its entirety, Sigmund and the Seamonsters complete first Season, Lidsville with Butch Patrik, now the Bugaloos are coming. Heres to hoping that the Krofft Supershow in all its seasons and versions will be next.
"The Krofft Supershows" was an anthology of cheerfully absurd television series, nothing incredibly deep but a rather sweet introduction for the single-digit age to both slapstick and social commentary.
The various series were a wonderfully child-friendly introduction to the history of shtick and vaudevillian broad comedy. Jay Robinson and Billy Barty took glorious delight in hamming up their mad scientist characters, so that I had a more skeptical perspective years later as a teenager when watching those over-serious SF films that tried futilely to be profound. Ruth Buzzi brought some of her brilliant shtick, honed in live theatre and Laugh-In, to her role in The Lost Saucer, and many of the one-shot characters were played by retired comic actors whom the Kroffts had somehow convinced to ham it up one more time on a children's television show. Most of the actors playing villains in Electra Woman and Dyna Girl were clearly having the time of their lives.
The slapstick and social commentary are important: at that age, Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton and Danny Kaye are a bit too sophisticated even in their slapstick for small children, but the slapstick comedy of the various Krofft series helped prepare a child for a later appreciation. Similarly, while the social commentary was over-obvious by adult standards (particularly in The Lost Saucer), it helped prepare a child to notice the social commentary in other programs.
Also, compared to 1980s "And knowing is half the battle" moralizing, even The Lost Saucer was comparatively subtle! Finally, I knew many teens who watched the series not only for the leisurely goofiness but because they enjoyed watching sexy Deidre Hall in her tight Electra Woman costume and watching cute blond Joseph Butcher in his half-Tarzan half-surfer dude costume as Wildboy.
The various series were a wonderfully child-friendly introduction to the history of shtick and vaudevillian broad comedy. Jay Robinson and Billy Barty took glorious delight in hamming up their mad scientist characters, so that I had a more skeptical perspective years later as a teenager when watching those over-serious SF films that tried futilely to be profound. Ruth Buzzi brought some of her brilliant shtick, honed in live theatre and Laugh-In, to her role in The Lost Saucer, and many of the one-shot characters were played by retired comic actors whom the Kroffts had somehow convinced to ham it up one more time on a children's television show. Most of the actors playing villains in Electra Woman and Dyna Girl were clearly having the time of their lives.
The slapstick and social commentary are important: at that age, Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton and Danny Kaye are a bit too sophisticated even in their slapstick for small children, but the slapstick comedy of the various Krofft series helped prepare a child for a later appreciation. Similarly, while the social commentary was over-obvious by adult standards (particularly in The Lost Saucer), it helped prepare a child to notice the social commentary in other programs.
Also, compared to 1980s "And knowing is half the battle" moralizing, even The Lost Saucer was comparatively subtle! Finally, I knew many teens who watched the series not only for the leisurely goofiness but because they enjoyed watching sexy Deidre Hall in her tight Electra Woman costume and watching cute blond Joseph Butcher in his half-Tarzan half-surfer dude costume as Wildboy.
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- CuriosidadesTom Hanks auditioned for the role of Kaptain Kool.
- ConexõesFeatured in ABC's Saturday Sneak Peek (1976)
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