The Extras - Celebrating Hanna-Barbera's Animated Legacy with the Superstars 10 Blu-ray Collection
Episode Date: March 9, 2024George Feltenstein joins the podcast for a fun-filled look at the Hanna-Barbera Superstars 10 Blu-ray collection and a full review of what it has to offer HB fans. Prepare to be whisked away on a nost...algic journey, celebrating iconic characters and discussing how these films were ingeniously reintroduced to capture hearts across new generations. We're not just retracing animated history; we're exploring the meticulous efforts by the Warner Archive to polish these classics for high-definition glory, diving into special features, pricing strategies, and the ultimate value for die-hard fans. From Yogi Bear's pic-a-nic escapades, the stone-age shenanigans of The Flintstones, those meddling kids from Scooby-Doo, and everyone's favorite family of the future in The Jetsons, this collection is designed to dazzle both the character loyalists and those devoted to the entirety of Hanna-Barbera's magical universe. Purchase Links:HANNA-BARBERA'S SUPERSTARS 10 Blu-ray Box SetTHE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE HUCKLEBERRRY HOUND Blu-ray TOP CAT AND THE BEVERLY HILLS CATS Blu-ray THE JETSONS MEET THE FLINTSTONES Blu-ray ROCKIN' WITH JUDY JETSON Blu-ray YOGI'S GREAT ESCAPE Blu-ray YOGI BEAR AND THE MAGICAL FLIGHT OF THE SPRUCE GOOSE Blu-ray YOGI AND THE INVASION OF THE SPACE BEARS Blu-ray SCOOBY-DOO MEETS THE BOO BROTHERS Blu-ray SCOOBY-DOO AND THE RELUCTANT WEREWOLF Blu-ray SCOOBY-DOO AND THE GHOUL SCHOOL Blu-ray Links to win a FREE Blu-ray of one of the INDIVIDUAL film releases:Sign up for our mailing list at our website Or email the correct answer to the question "What is the most popular Hanna-Barbera release from the Warner Archive?" to info@theextras.tv The Extras Facebook pageThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog GroupOtaku Media produces podcasts, behind-the-scenes extras, and media that connect creatives with their fans and businesses with their consumers. Contact us today to see how we can work together to achieve your goals. www.otakumedia.tv
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm animation historian Jerry Beck, and you're listening to The Extras.
Hello and welcome to The Extras, where we take you behind the scenes of your favorite TV shows, movies and animation,
and their release on digital DVD, Blu-ray 4K, or your favorite streaming site.
I'm Tim Lager, host and joining me is George Feltonstein
to review the Hanna-Barbera Superstars X Blu-ray release
from the Warner Archive.
Hi, George.
Lovely day today to talk about Hanna-Barbera.
I know that a lot of people were looking forward
to this release, myself included.
So it's gonna be fun to chat about these today.
And there's just so much, I don't know, nostalgia,
I guess might be the word wrapped up around these shows
because so many of us remember them from our childhood.
And I know I have a lot of good memories
of these characters, though I haven't seen
all of these movies previously.
I'm so familiar with all of the characters
from the Hattie Barbara Library.
So this was a lot of fun. This was a very interesting project to embark on because basically as Hanna-Barbera was
nearing their 30th year of being an independent animation production company after having
left a Metro Golden Mirror where they were making the Tom and Jerry cartoons, they started their own studio, which we've talked about before.
But what they did here, which I thought was very clever, was they utilized many of their
characters, especially from the early days, in a way to try to introduce them to a new generation, but also in creating these
telefilms which were made for syndication, they were creating kind of event programming.
And the idea was that parents who knew these characters would be able to, you know, expose their kids to them because the generation
that grew up with Huckleberry Hound certainly had children of their own by 1988.
And so for 1987 and 88, it was Bill Hanna who created the concept of the Studio Building 10
made for television features that would have
a little bit of a higher budget than what they were
normally doing for Saturday morning work.
And it was sort of a coming home for a lot of the adults
who remembered these characters from their childhood,
and they really hadn't been seen very much.
And it was also Hannah Barbera,
rightly acknowledging all the different characters
they had brought throughout the years.
And the most popular characters
have the most input here, or some of the most popular characters have the most input here or some of the most popular characters
in that you've got three Scooby-Doo telefilms and you have three with Yogi Bear.
And at the time this was being done, they were doing a reboot of the Yogi Bear Show.
So there's many, many different things floating around.
The concept of this initiative that made it, I think,
really appropriate to release to our consumers,
we had released most of these 10 years ago or so as DVDs, and we wanted to be able to
release them on Blu-ray. And it seemed like a perfect opportunity to do so. But I wanted to
make sure we released them as they were created and marketed, and that's all 10 of them. And that posed a little bit of a problem
because they produced eight of them
under normal circumstances,
finishing them with a 35 millimeter negative.
And for the very last two,
Yogi and the Evasion of the Space Bears
and Scooby-Doo and the Relectant Werewolf,
the latter being extremely popular with fans, they completed their animation work.
They were using Digital Ink and Paint and finished onto one-inch analog videotape. And normally I would never allow any kind of
uprising for a Blu-ray of ours. It would seem like there's no point to it.
However, technologically, things have improved in being able to make some of
those videotape-based programs, not just ours, but throughout the industry,
there has been improvement in being able to work from these basically worst possible scenario
elements and bring them into something that's decent and watchable.
And if we hadn't included them, then it wouldn't be the superstars 10. So what I tried to do to sweeten the pot was add our long true HD from film specials, if you will, with Yogi Bear. We had Yogi's arc lark from the Yogi's gang TV series,
and then we had Scooby Go's Hollywood.
So all in all, we're covering basically a history
of Hanabarbara creations from 1958 up through 1969
and how they morphed over the years.
Because it's kind of funny, at this point,
when these were made, Scooby-Doo was nearly 20 years old.
And Scooby-Doo still continues today
as a powerful character in the pantheon
of Hannah Barbera characters. We're really
delighted the way this turned out. It's a beautiful sturdy package, but we also
made sure that each of the films got their own release because certain people
don't like all these characters. There are Huckleberry Hound and Yogi Bear fans
who don't have an affinity for Scooby-Doo.
There are Scooby-Doo fans who aren't interested
in Huckleberry Hound.
So this way we give consumers a choice
and that's what we've always tried to do.
As I spoke to you when we announced this,
the suggested retail price of the singles is $14.98.
Certain retailers have been charging much more than that,
which is really disappointing.
There's nothing we can do about that.
Retailers free to charge whatever they want,
but it sort of undermined the intention of this being a good value proposition, whether you bought
a single for 15 bucks or whether you bought 10 movies for $69.98, $7 a movie. I wanted there to be value inherent because also these are not big budget, you
know, they're not like a feature animation that added millions of dollars poured into
it. But nonetheless, they are what they are. And a lot of them are exceptionally well made and entertaining and are a salute to the animation studio that
Han of Arbara put together. Yeah and why don't we just kind of go through each of them briefly
to just kind of let people know what they are or give our you know input to on them individually
because it is a terrific package if you get the 10. And just before we dive into
them, you have the box and then inside you have the two Blu-ray cases with five discs in each,
just so that people kind of know how that is delivered there. But to go back to the movies,
I thought we could just kind of start with maybe the oldest because
Huckleberry Hound, if I have it correct, the Huckleberry Hound show was the first animated
series from Hannah Barber.
No, it was the second.
Is that right?
The first was Rough and Ready.
Second.
Okay.
Rough and Ready was put together very quickly and finished it on 16 millimeter camera positive.
Rough and Ready was really their, I want to say their test project to get something on
the air.
And Huckleberry Hound was really their first superstar.
And the Huckleberry Hound show was put together
with sponsorship from Kellogg's serials.
And there was talk of it maybe being sold to a network,
but the ad agency for Kellogg's had a better idea
of syndicating to local stations.
So it was a kind of a strip along with Adventures of Superman and other series that the ad agency
was kind of driving on Kellogg's behalf what they were sponsoring.
But people with long memories remember that Kellogg's rooster opening every episode of the Huckleberry Hound show.
And Huckleberry Hound, his voice is very recognizable to animation fans.
Of course, it's the great Dawes Butler who voiced Huckleberry Hound and Yogi Bericic, John McGraw, so many things, but you can hear his voices in the MGM cartoons.
You know, a lot of the MGM Tom and Jerry cartoons
and the Tech Savory cartoons feature his voice.
So that's a very, very cool thing that, you know,
he moved with Joe and Bill from MGM
to Hanna-Barbera Productions.
And he was just incredibly talented.
He did so much for so many animated characters.
And a lot of people have tried to imitate the voice that he did, but there's only one
Dawes Butler, just like there's only one Mel Blank.
Right.
Well, with the film that's included here, The Good, The Bad, and Huckleberry Hound, there's
a kind of a poignant element to it too.
I mean, it's a great parody of Westerns. So it's very amusing and very fun.
And I think it holds up pretty well.
It's one of my favorites on the set.
Today.
Yeah, it's really good.
You know, it's co-written by Tom Ruger,
who created the Tiny Tunes, Animaniacs.
So you get that, some of that humor
that Tom brought to his creations over the years.
But it's poignant because it was the last film
that Daz Butler voiced before he came.
Yeah, I mean, they were so fortunate to get him.
It's almost an emotional thing to talk about
because his voice was such an important factor
in the childhood of so many millions of people.
It was great to see Huck get a little bit of a prime focus
because what happened was the Huckleberry Hound Show
was originally Huckleberry Hound, Pixie and Dixie
and Yogi Bear.
That's how it was for the first two seasons.
Yogi eclipsed Huckleberry Hound in terms of
audience popularity. Yogi was given his own show and started appearing in all sorts of things.
He had his own feature film.
Hey there, it's Yogi Bear, which we released on Blu-ray a couple of months ago.
There were Yogi series throughout the 1970s and 80s.
Huck had a supporting role in some of them, but there was no real Huckleberry Hound centric
production until this.
And it is very poignant that it was his last major contribution that I'm aware of.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, the film itself is a riot.
And you can rewatch this one, I think,
because it is so well-written and so well-produced,
and the timing and the humor and everything
is so good in this one.
So it's a great one and and fun one to start off with.
It's really well written. I think that's really the important part of it. And they even make
reference to the Dalton gang and there were episodes of Huckleberry Hound where he was
going up against Dinky Dalton. So, you know, they really had, they had a lot
of fun with this.
Yeah. Yeah, they did. Then you just mentioned Yogi Bear, obviously becoming so popular.
So I thought we would maybe then talk about these Yogi Bear films because he had his own
show, I guess, Huckleberry Howen premieres in 58,
the Yogi Bear Show premieres in 61.
So, you know, it's pretty soon after that.
But these three, I thought, were all very, very entertaining.
I thought Yogi's great escape with the,
I think the three orphan bears or whatever,
was really quite fun and very entertaining.
They're all great. And they're quite fun and very entertaining.
They're all great and they're all very, very different.
You also have kind of all star casts in some of them
where a lot of Hanna-Barbera characters pop up
and help propagate the story or propel the story,
I should say, and they're very enjoyable. But it was just
another testament to Dawes Butler that he could create all these different voices that were very
distinctly different. I remember when I was very, very, very little and I was watching, you know,
Huggaburah and Yogi Bear, I certainly thought they were voiced by different people.
You know, I didn't think it was the same voice,
but that's what a talented voice actor, Dawes Butler, was.
Well, the three that are in there are Yogi's Great Escape,
Yogi Bear and the Magical Flight of the Spruce Goose,
which is highly entertaining because they are traveling all over the world
without one.
And then you mentioned Yogi and the invasion of the space bears and the
extra on their Yogi's arc lark, which I thought was pretty entertaining as well.
And that one looks beautiful.
Yeah.
Again, because Yogi and the invasion of the space bears was not finished to 35
millimeter film as it should have been for protection
and finished on videotape of the era, which is pretty ghastly.
We did everything we could to improve it.
We didn't want to not include it because then it wouldn't be the superstars 10
and therefore by adding Yis ArcLark,
which was the pilot film for what landed
the Yogis Gang series.
And bringing that here in HD from the film
just helped to give us feel like
we're giving the consumer a little more value.
Yeah, yeah, it's a great way to round that one out.
Hi, Tim Lard here. And I just wanted to let you know that the
Extras is running a special promotion for Hanna Barbera fans.
Well, you can win a free Blu-ray of one of the 10 films we
discussed in this podcast. All you have to do is subscribe to
our mailing list via our website at www.thexruss.tv.
Or if you have previously subscribed to the mailing list, just email me at info at theexruss.tv
and tell me the correct answer to the question, what is the all-time best-selling Hanna Barbera
Blu-ray release from the Warner Archive?
You'll need to listen to the full episode to hear that answer. As George mentioned in this
podcast, each of the 10 films is being sold individually, so the winner gets to choose
which one of the 10 you want. So even if you already purchased the box set or you plan to,
you can still get another one of the individually sold films to add to your collection or give away
as a gift. The winner will be picked at random by March 23rd,
so be sure and do this right away.
You must be a resident of the U.S. or Canada to win.
And now back to our episode.
Well, the other extremely popular show
that kind of aired between Huckleberry Hound and Yogi is The Flintstones, which debuted
in 1960. And that was the first animated show in prime time. I'm a big fan of The Flintstones. I
remember watching that in reruns with my mom, and I just have great memories of that show. So when I
saw The Jetsons made The Flintstones, I was really looking forward to seeing that movie and I really enjoyed it. I thought it was terrific.
It's interesting that they kind of like they waited so long to come up with that concept
and make a film out of it.
And yet I found a comic book that was made around the time of the New York World's Fair
in 1964 or so. That was the Jetsons meet the Flintstones at the New York World's Fair.
So someone was thinking about bringing the two worlds together,
but it never happened in animation until 20-some odd years later.
And the way they did it was very, very cool and very well written and all the characters
kind of melded together very well.
The story is very well told.
The animation is actually quite impressive and we were very fortunate.
We as the audience, George O'Hanlon, the voice of George Jetson
was near death at this point.
And it was one of the last things that he got to do.
And so you have basically the original
Flintstones voice cast with the exception of Alan Reed
who played Fred Flintstone died in the late 70s.
By this time, Henry Gordon, who had replaced him as the voice of Fred, had been doing it
for over 10 years.
The voice of Betty Rubble, the original voice, B. Benadiric, She was replaced halfway into the run on the network series
because she went off to do Petticoat Junction.
So Betty was voiced by another person
for the rest of the series on ABC.
And then anything else, Flintstone,
when they needed Betty Rubble,
it was a myriad of different actresses
that did the voicing.
But on the Jetsons, you have George O'Hanlon as George Jetson, Penny Singleton as Jane
Jetson, Janet Waldo, of course, as Judy Jetson, who has her own movie.
And it's really, really terrific to have everybody basically providing their own voices.
To hear Mel Blank as Barney Rubble, that's the only person you want to hear do Barney
Rubble.
Nobody else could do it like Mel Blank.
I think it's a great deal of fun and all of these are now 35 years old or more or less
around that vintage, they are as old or older now
than these were when they were brand new, reaching back to those old characters.
So it's really fascinating in that respect.
I always am amused that the Jetson still looks futuristic.
We still haven't achieved it.
Oh, for sure.
We haven't achieved it.
But with all the talk of AI and with all of the developments of artificial intelligence,
you watch the Jetsons and you see it in action there.
You see the robots and you see the computers being so smart and
they're part of the villain in these films as well. When I say villain, maybe I should
say that in George's case, his computer there has been giving away secrets because he's
infatuated with another computer. I mean, it's very clever and it's very entertaining. Yeah. And once again,
a guy mentioned Dawes Butler. He was the voice of Elroy Jetson. Well, you just mentioned
the other movie too that is in that world. And that's The Rocking with Judy Jetson. And
that came out in 88. So that must have been a spin-off just because that character was so popular.
Is that why she got her own movie? Absolutely. And it harkens back to a Jetsons episode,
you know, where Judy has a date with Jets screamer and they sing the song Eep Up Ork,
ah-ah. I think that kind of laid the groundwork for this film because it just seemed like a perfect extension.
And they actually wrote original music for this.
They really tried to make these films very, very special.
Well, the next film I thought we would talk about is a standalone.
And that is the Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cat from 1988.
You know, this is a lot of fun.
It's got their traditional storyline
of how they have their antics
and then the policeman comes to chase them and everything.
But it's really clever and really fun to watch.
Well, Top Cat was the second Hannah Barbera series.
I wanted to say sitcom,
but it was a sitcom series that just
happened to be anime.
Yeah, yeah.
And Topcat only ran for one season on ABC, and then for the next 20 plus years jumped
from CBS to NBC to ABC to NBC to CBS.
It was always on that one season's worth of content.
It was always on Saturday morning television.
I think they may have pulled it for a year or so
to go with the syndication.
Not sure about that, but I think that might have happened.
But Topcat was always around.
And what they were able to do here
was that they were able to bring back some
of the original voice cast.
Most importantly, Arnold Stang as Topcat.
That was really critical.
And Leo DeLion was Brain, and Marvin Kaplan was Choo Choo.
But what you don't have is Officer Dibble.
Alan Jenkins, who was the voice of Officer Dibble,
had passed away several years before.
And also Maurice Gosfield, who was the voice of Benny the Ball.
He had passed away.
So I think they did a good job with the voice casting and you could kind of hear the age
of some of the actors.
It's pretty close to the way things were 27 years before.
I always thought Top Cat was a little bit more edgy and sophisticated than Flintstones or Jetsons because there is a lot of inhumor.
It was kind of, just as the Flintstones was unofficially taking a little bit of adaptation
from the honeymooners, Topcat is obviously influenced by Sergeant Bilko at Phil Silver Show and even to the
point where Maurice Gosfield, who played Benny the Ball, his voice on Topcat, he was Doberman
on Bilko.
So they were basically saying, okay, let's take these soldiers and their sitcom and make them alley cats.
Despite only one season being made, the character continued to popularity and
especially had a popularity in Latin America.
So much so that I would say maybe 15 years ago or 10 years ago,
there was a Topcat 3D movie made specifically for that market.
And while there was no interest here in the US,
there was definite interest in Latin America.
And from what I understand,
the reason for that partially is that the voice cast that did the dubbing down there
was somewhat famous.
So someone who's a Hannah Barbera expert,
which I'm not could confirm this,
but I think that that's the situation.
But it was great that they brought the characters back.
I was delighted to see that.
And I enjoyed, I hadn't watched it in a while.
I enjoyed watching this one very much.
Well, the last three films are all Scooby-Doo.
And I worked on many of the current Scooby-Doo releases
when I was there at Warner Brothers.
I think Warner Animation was putting out two, sometimes
even three films a year.
The quality of these films is usually pretty high because they have very good writers on
them.
The ones that they have done more recently, some of the ones I worked on were like Scooby
Doo meets Kiss and Scooby Doo interacts with WWE.
They keep trying to keep Scooby DooDoo with, you know, interacts with WWE. I mean, they keep trying to keep Scooby-Doo relevant for the kids.
So it was fun to kind of go back and see these.
And these to me are all, I would say, classics.
And I'm sure they're very popular.
Very popular.
And that's why it was kind of deflating to find out that,
especially the reluctant werewolf,
because that's a favorite of the fans,
and that that one wasn't finished to film.
I was really disappointed in that.
So we've got the Boo Brothers, that looks terrific,
but reluctant werewolf is a little bit on the deficient side.
School we do in the Ghoul school was also great looking.
What I'll say that all three films have in common, they're super popular with the Scooby
Cult.
There is an enormous Scooby Cult, just like we deal with the DC fans and the Hammer film fans and the Looney Tunes fans.
There's a subset within Hanna-Barbera fans. They may not even be a subset. They may be separate.
They may not care about anything else Hanna-Barbera, but they're Scooby-centric.
The release of these films has led to people asking for more Scooby on Blu-ray.
So we're looking into that little hint there. I think that will be possible for us to bring
some of the very highly requested Scooby telefilms that have yet to appear on Blu-ray, on a beautiful disc celebrating the glories of physical media.
Well, those were highly entertaining and that's kind of fun for Scooby-Doo fans to get just a
little tease there. But before we wrap up, George, I thought I'd throw a few questions at you only
because this is March and it's the 15th anniversary. So I have a couple questions about
the Warner Archive and Hanna-Barbera releases over the years. So are you okay with that?
All right. Well, do you remember the very first Warner Archive Hanna-Barbera release that you
did? We did them like in clumps. So I can tell you some of the earliest ones that we did, but I can't tell you exactly
the specific one because they came out in groups.
Well, I know that probably the regular Warner Brothers home entertainment was still doing a lot
of the Flintstones and Jetsons. Oh, for sure. We couldn't go near that. We weren't allowed to.
We couldn't go near that. We weren't allowed to.
Yeah.
Those were core home entertainment titles.
So I wasn't sure if there was some other ones that were.
Well, what we did was we were looking at, okay, what's been ignored, what came out on
VHS that wasn't on DVD.
I will tell you the first Hanna-Barbera release as a One Archive DVD that really made an
impression and sold very well was Yogi's first Christmas.
And that was one of our earliest releases.
Gotcha.
Well, along those lines, do you recall what has been the most popular Hanabara release
over the last 15 years? I would say without question is the Johnny Quest Blu-ray set that we worked on about four or five
years ago and that opened the doorway for people to realize how important it was
to have the Hanna-Barre library looking great.
You and I have mentioned this on previous podcasts,
but I did work on some of the extras for that one.
So I remember how much fun that was,
creating some feature ads for that release.
So that was a lot of fun.
Well, then one last question I want to ask you about this
is, is there a title that has been requested a lot that you have not yet
released on Pluray that you hope to someday? How long amount of time do we have to discuss this?
That would take several hours. Okay, all right. Well, there's, you know, there's just so many things between the Jetsons, the
Flintstones, the Yogi Bears, and just so many great characters. So it's probably the possible
question, but I thought I'd add that.
Well, my feeling is I could give a more descriptive answer or even a descriptive hint, but until something has assigned a piece of paper that shows
an approval, I'm not going to hint at anything that could necessarily fall off the schedule
and disappoint a lot of people.
I don't want to do that.
Yeah.
Well, as always, George, you do drop us little hints here, which I appreciate, and I know
the fans do as well.
So, Scooby-Doo fans, keep a lookout, as you mentioned there.
But there's just such a great, great, great library there for Hannah Barbera that eventually,
hopefully, we'll get out.
So thanks for coming on and talking about these.
Absolutely.
And when we start talking about our birthday, which is coming up in a few weeks,
maybe we can get into more details of what the future will bring this year because it's going
to be an exciting year. And I'm happy to share that. For those of you interested in ordering
the releases we discussed today, there are links
in the podcast show notes and on our website at www.thexteris.tv.
So be sure and check those out.
If you're on social media, be sure and follow the show on Facebook or Twitter at The Xtrous
TV or Instagram at TheXtrous.tv to stay up to date on our upcoming guests and to be a
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