Saturday Supercade: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Television series]]
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[[Category:Saturday Supercade|*]]
[[Category:Saturday Supercade|*]]

Revision as of 14:11, May 8, 2022

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Saturday Supercade
Saturday Supercade title card as seen in the opening.
General information
Format Children's television series
Opening theme "Supercade"
Country of origin United States of America
Original language English
Seasons 2
Episodes 97
Production
Production company Ruby-Spears Productions
Distributor(s) CBS Broadcasting, Inc.
Runtime 50 minutes
Broadcast
Channel(s) CBS
First aired September 17, 1983[?]
Last aired December 1, 1984[?]
Status Ended

Saturday Supercade is an animated television series based on several arcade games, including Donkey Kong and Donkey Kong Jr. Each episode is approximately one hour long and comprises four shorter, self-contained segments based on one arcade game each. The show originally aired on Saturday mornings on CBS Broadcasting Inc. television network beginning on September 17, 1983. After two seasons, the show's original run ended on December 1, 1984. Ruby-Spears Productions produced the series. While the Donkey Kong segments appeared in both seasons, the Donkey Kong Junior segments ended after the first season. In total there are nineteen Donkey Kong segments and thirteen Donkey Kong Junior segments.

Since the show's end, the Donkey Kong and Donkey Kong Junior segments have ceased to air on television. Additionally, the series has yet to be reproduced in any format, and as such only homemade recordings of the segments made during the show's television airing are currently available to the public. Music Corporation of America Inc. was the last known holder of the segments, but the company is now defunct. The copyright to the segments (minus the Space Ace segments) were assigned to the owner of the source materials, including the Donkey Kong and Donkey Kong Junior segments; it appears the segments are owned by Nintendo of America. [1] When questioned by a fan on Facebook, the Warner Archive Collection team stated that the accessible segments of the show may be released on DVD in 2011, with "cool vintage footage" replacing any unavailable segments.[2] As of 2022, no segments from Donkey Kong or Donkey Kong Junior have been released on home media.

Predating Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyushutsu Dai Sakusen! by nearly three years, Saturday Supercade marked the first animated adaption of any Mario-related series. A few months before the series aired, however, TV commercials for Donkey Kong Cereal and Game & Watch included animated Mario characters.[3][4] It also marked the first television series featuring either Mario or Donkey Kong, both of whom would later star in their own television series with The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! in 1989 and Donkey Kong Country in 1996 respectively. The show also marked the currently only televised appearances of Donkey Kong series characters Pauline, Donkey Kong Jr., and Stanley.

Plot synopsis

Donkey Kong

Similar to the premise of Donkey Kong Circus, the introduction to the Donkey Kong segments show that Mario apparently owned the circus along with his animal trainer Pauline and the star of the show, Donkey Kong. However, the giant monkey escaped and made his way down a dock on a motorcycle, pursued by Mario and Pauline in their circus van. Exiting the van, the pair gave chase on foot until Mario slipped on a banana peel laid by Donkey Kong as a trap. The tables turned, the pair fled from the approaching ape. However, Mario and Pauline quickly resumed pursuit with a net and followed him up the stairway of a building. Their resultant chase is outlined in the Donkey Kong segments.

Most stories had the trio happening on crime, with criminals usually involved in schemes involving theft, fraud, and deceit. Often, the crooks would realize Donkey Kong's slow-wittedness and try to get him to do their dirty work, but in the end, Donkey Kong would either realize the truth himself or Mario and/or Pauline would reveal the facts to the ape, and in the end, the bad guys' plot was foiled. The chase then continued.

Donkey Kong Junior

Outlined in the introduction to the Donkey Kong Junior segments, Donkey Kong Jr. traveled from the jungle to Mario's circus to see his father, Donkey Kong. Realizing that his dad has escaped and without means of finding him, Donkey Kong Jr. is reduced to tears. Bones approached Junior and consoled him. After hearing his story, Bones suggested they follow after Donkey Kong in his motorcycle. Overjoyed, Donkey Kong Jr. joyously yelled his catchphrase, "Monkey muscle!" and took the drivers seat. With Bones in the sidecar covering his eyes, the two sped off on the first of their adventures which are outlined in the Donkey Kong Junior segments.

Episodes

Donkey Kong

Season 1

Season 2

Donkey Kong Junior

Voices

Theme song

"Supercade"

Well, Saturday Supercade,

Gather 'round,
We'll get your video friends together.
Yeah, Saturday Supercade,
It's time for fun,
And no one else can do it better.
And it feels so right,
Because it's Supercade time!
Let's have some Supercade fun!
Yes, it's Supercade time,
Let's have some Supercade fun, fun, fun!
Come on, to Supercade time,
Join all the Supercade fun.
Yes, it's Supercade time,
Let's have some Supercade fun, fun, fun!
Come on, to Supercade time,
Join all the Supercade fun.
Monkey Muscle!
(Monkey Noises)
Let's have some Supercade fun.

(It's Saturday Supercade!)

Staff

Main article: List of Saturday Supercade staff

Gallery

External links

References

  1. ^ Copyright listing for Saturday Supercade : no. 1, copyright registration number PA0000222759
  2. ^ Saturday Supercade - Could the '80s Coin-Op-Based Cartoons be Coming Home? Warner Says... (Archived)
  3. ^ William Marshall Donkey Kong Commercial (1983).YouTube. Retrieved December 25, 2021.
  4. ^ Nintendo Game And Watch (Commercial, 1983). YouTube. Retrieved December 25, 2021.

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