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Le croque-monstres Show (1970)

User reviews

Le croque-monstres Show

11 reviews

Come on everybody, join the Goolies!

Sabrina and the Groovie Goolies was both an off-shoot of the Archies, and a cartoon version of Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. Although Sabrina had her fans, the Goolies were the main attraction.

The Goolies were Frankie, Count Drac, Wolfie, Bella, Hagatha, Mummy, Bonapart, Dr Jekyll-Hyde, Batzo, Ratzo, and Hautleroy. There were joined by musical groups the Bare Bones Band and the Mummies & the Puppies. Frankie, Drac, and Wolfie were cartoon versions of the Universal monsters, with a few twists. Frankie was big, but dimwitted. Drac was pretty much himself, if a bit inept. Wolfie was a cool cat for a wolfman, with a t-shirt and baggies and a skateboard. He spoke in a hipster fashion while skating into castle walls. Bella was a vampire, probably named for Bella Lugosi, and bore a strong resemblance to Vampira. Hagatha was a witch, mummy a , well, mummy. Bonapart was a skeleton with a Napoleonic hat. Dr Jekyll-Hyde was one man with two heads; one Jekyll, one Hyde. Batzo and Ratzo were twin vampire troublemakers and Hauntleroy was a ghostly practical joker and coward.

The gang got together for jokes, many lame, but still funny to this (then) 4 year-old. They varied between sketches and quick gags, with recurring catch phrases; such as when Frankie would be struck by lightning and utter, in a Boris Karloff-like voice, "I needed that!" There was a wall with various doors and windows for pop-up appearances and jokes, as on Laugh-In. There would be musical numbers, in a breezy pop style, much like the Archies (they were actually pretty good for that kind of bubblegum pop).

The show was fun as a kid and I always enjoyed it. A few years back, I found a couple of videotapes with episodes of the cartoon. It didn't hold up as well, but was still funny in parts. It was a Filmation cartoon, so there was plenty of stock footage. It featured great voicework by Larry Storch (F-Troop) and Howard Morris (Andy Griffith Show, Sid Ceasar). You could do a lot worse than this show. Besides, you gotta love that theme song!
  • grendelkhan
  • Mar 5, 2003
  • Permalink
9/10

A Saturday morning classic is now on DVD!

You remember the Grovie Goolies from the early 1970's don't you? They were a variation on Rowin and Martin's Laugh-In but with monster characters instead of a vast array of comedians. The show took place at Horrible Hall, a kind of hotel/boarding house for monsters. The three main characters were leader Drac, stupid but lovable Frankie, and hippie werewolf Wolfie. Other characters were witch Hagatha, the Mortica Addams-like Bella, Mummy, the two headed Dr. Jeckle and Hyde (with one head being Jeckle and the other Hyde), skeleton Boneapart, Ghoulahand (a giant hand), flesh eating plant Orvile, as well as three brats named Ratso, Batso,and Hauntleroy. Ratso and Batso were always causing trouble for the other residents and were always getting caught and punished, except for the times when the whiny tattletale Hauntelroy was involved and who got it instead.

Each episode had two songs sung by such bands as the Mummies and the Puppies (with Mummy Cass - get it? - playing bongos), The Rolling Headstones, and the main characters own band with Drac on keyboards, Wofie on guitars, and Frankie on drums and percussion. All the songs had a definite 60's bubblegum feel (still prevalent sounding today)with all the lyrics having to do with monsters. Some of the songs, such as Cling Clang, Darkness, and Chick-A-Boom (a song that actually made it into the Billboard Top 40 by one of the shows songwriters who went under the name Daddy Dewdrop!) are pretty catchy, while others such as 1,2,3 and Where Are You Going, Little Ghoul? are bland and inane sounding.

Still this show was a lot of fun to watch with the impressive voice talent behind the characters (Larry Storch as Drac, using the same voice he used for Phenneus J. Whoopee on those Tennesee Tuxedo cartoons, comedy pro Howard Morris as Frankie, Wolfie, and Mummy) and the never ending barrage of one-liners, silly jokes, and sight gags (all done to a laugh track and canned applause no less!)

The recent release on DVD by the company that obtained the rights from Filmation, Entertainment Rights (out of England), have done a fine job in bringing back all 16 episodes and digitally remastering each one. For any self-respecting member of Generation X who grew up watching this on Saturday mornings with a bowl of, well, whatever their favorite cereal was, will have a flood of great memories come back to them. This one is very much a must on your TV DVDs collection.
  • atomicpunk40
  • Nov 7, 2006
  • Permalink
10/10

Been for ever and a day!

I thought I was one of the few folks on this earth that remembered this cartoon show! I don't feel as daft anymore! I remember waking up in time to watch it on Saturday mornings, then it was moved to Sunday mornings. I wish they would bring these good shows back. Seems like todays shows lack the imagination that it took to create shows like this one. I realize that a lot of the original people that created the voices of a lot of these beloved characters have passed on, and will be greatly missed. I wished I could go back in time to record these shows for todays youths to see, and also to look at when I am sad and need to be reminded of a better time.
  • colonyhatch
  • Apr 3, 2008
  • Permalink
10/10

The DVD is here!

The DVD is out! It's about time! Every show plus extras! This is the best Halloween gift ever! Here's a list of the extras from Amazon.com. Available Audio Tracks: English (Dolby Digital 2.0) Commentary by: Creators and experts (two episodes)Dolby Digital 2.0 16 episodes on three discs Sing-along: "Goolie Get Together" Candid story from producer Lou Scheimer about The Creation of Filmation Liner notes by TV writer/producer Shawn Sheridan DVD-ROM extras: Scripts and the original series bible for The Kookie Spookies A brand-new 45-minute "docu-comedy" featuring interviews with Alice Cooper, Forrest J. Ackerman, Ron Chaney, and more Music video with the punk band Groovie Ghoulies Image galleries Well what are you waiting for?!?! Go get it already!
  • gdrew5
  • Oct 23, 2006
  • Permalink
10/10

Not so alone now

I loved all these shows as a kid. Sadly now they are gone, and there is no real substitute for today's kids. Most everything today is just the same pseudo futurist tech junk cloned and copied under different names.

On a side note, how many of you true fans of GG had all the little flexible action figures? I wish I still had them or the breakfast cereal spoon, bowl and cup set each cast member was commemorated on.

The cartoons of our days were so relevant. They would teach and inform children (sometimes adults, too!), and we learn without even realizing it.

If there was really a Time Machine that would go back in time, I be the first to volunteer to be a test subject.
  • boogeyman-32385
  • Dec 30, 2023
  • Permalink

I Needed That

This show will always be one of my favorites. The thing I liked about this show was that it mainly played like a kids version of Laugh-In, especially the "Weird Window Time" segment. The main thing that made this show great were the novelty tunes that Frankie, Wolfie and Drac played, especially the novelty classic "Chick-A-Boom (Don't Ya Jes Love It). Too bad this show isn't shown in reruns anymore so that a lot of younger kids could be exposed to this cult classic.
  • Sargebri
  • Jun 24, 2003
  • Permalink
10/10

TIME FOR THE GOOLIES' GET-TOGETHER!

This Saturday morning cartoon started off as part of the "Sabrina the Teenage Witch" series, but later the Goolies were syndicated with most of the Sabrina footage edited out.

The Groovie Goolies were a spoof of old Universal monster movies, which were then being shown repeatedly on broadcast television. It is quite a good spoof, in my opinion, and I think the only reason it didn't become popular like "The Munsters" and "The Addams Family" did was solely because it was a Saturday morning cartoon, which limited its audience.

Today, if you find the Groovie Goolies on YouTube, they hold up quite well for their age. In some ways, they were ahead of their time---their episodes also contain rock music videos which are actually quite good---an entire decade before the MTV revolution made music videos a household name.

The Goolies did it right. Too bad they didn't become more popular.
  • parkerr86302
  • Dec 30, 2020
  • Permalink

Adventures of A Teen Witch

Sabrina was part of "The Archies" universe, and her popular comic book spawned this Saturday morning cartoon. Sabrina lived in a creepy house with her two aunts, who were also witches. She was also surrounded by friendly monsters (a werewolf, a vampire, etc.) who stayed in and out of misadventures. I remember that the show focused more on Sabrina's monster friends then her.
  • hillari
  • May 7, 2002
  • Permalink

I LOVED this cartoon!!!!

I have never met anyone who remembers this show. Don't know if it was only show certain places, or if the people I meet just didn't watch it. Whatever the case, I so wish I could find copies of it. I still remember the skeleton playing the xylophone w/his bones and them chasing each other through the house and the way cool music! Frankie and Wolfie, oh, I just loved them all!!!!

I find myself sometimes singing some of the songs (Chickaboom) and actually picturing the silly characters. I wonder if it was a West Coast/Southwest thing. Living in Northern Texas and everyone looks at me like I'm a nut when I talk about the show.

Cartoon Network, hear my calls and find this wonderful show and put it on!!
  • medobo
  • Apr 9, 2005
  • Permalink

Heard of the show...

I didn't know Sabrina was in the series of "Groovie Goolies" matter fact haven't heard of the Groovie Goolies 'til I saw Prince's video for "Girls and Boys"(1986) & at the end Jerome was laughing at Prince saying "Boo!" & he was like "What he think this is the 'Groovie Goolies' or something?". I asked what it was & looked it up here. Be cool 2 see it on TV again & see what it was all about. I wonder if there was a Gem Stone in this series like the new-sorta Animated Series? And seeing monsters play instruments would be cool..& funny. Bring this show back!!! Perhaps Boomerang or maybe even TV Land channel that'll be better-IMO.
  • PJaMz4eva
  • Jan 13, 2005
  • Permalink

They are coming out on DVD...

According to http://www.kidzworld.com/article/7211-groovie-goolies-cartoon-facts there is a DVD coming out. It is called "Groovie Goolies Saturday "Mourning" Collection DVD. Can't wait for it. Has all 16 original shows plus extras. I too loved this show dearly and can find few people who remember it. This was one of my weekly must-sees on Saturday morning. I am definitely going to be getting the DVD. I want to share this show with everyone who doesn't remember it, or was too young to have watched it when it was on TV. I have always enjoyed puns and groaners, and this show was full of them! Plus, it features the voice of one of my favorite character actors, Larry Storch. I definitely recommend Groovie Goolies to anyone who has a silly sense of humor and enjoys puns and plays on words.
  • painlessjen
  • Jul 12, 2007
  • Permalink

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