The New Adventures of Jonny Quest explained

Genre:Animation
Adventure
Action
Sci-fi
Runtime:22 minutes
Director:Ray Patterson (Supervising)
Oscar Dufau
Don Lusk
Rudy Zamora
Executive Producer:William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Producer:Berny Wolf
Theme Music Composer:Hoyt Curtin
Composer:Hoyt Curtin
Starring:Scott Menville
Granville Van Dusen
Rob Paulsen
Vic Perrin
Don Messick
Jeffrey Tambor
Company:Hanna-Barbera Productions
Country:United States
Network:Syndication
Num Episodes:13
List Episodes:
  1. Episodes

The New Adventures of Jonny Quest is an American animated series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions, and a continuation of the 1964–65 television series Jonny Quest. It debuted in 1986 as part of The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera syndication package, being the seventh and final Hanna-Barbera cartoon of the four and a half weekday/weekend morning line-up. While it is a continuation, the series can be seen as the second season to the original series.

Plot

This series features Dr. Quest and his group as they go on adventures while thwarting different villains, such as the mad scientist Dr. Zin. Some episodes had a stone man named Hardrock as their ally.

Voice cast

Main

Additional cast

Production and history

In the late 1970s, Hanna-Barbera produced concept art for a new series entitled Young Dr. Quest: The Adventures of Jon Quest, featuring an older Jonny, Hadji, and an adopted Japanese girl.[1] They would be accompanied by pets Bandit II and Oboe (an unspecified species of monkey), and receive support from Benton Quest and Race Bannon at times (with Race having since married Jade). According to Disney historian Jim Korkis, Doug Wildey later pitched the concept as simply named Young Dr. Quest to Joseph Barbera, featuring Jonny as a 22-year old MIT graduate going on adventure with Race and Hadji.[2]

By the mid-1980s, the edited episodes of the original Jonny Quest series (each episode was missing about five minutes of footage edited for time constraints and content) were part of The Funtastic Worlds second season lineup, alongside Yogi's Treasure Hunt, Paw Paws and Galtar and the Golden Lance. Thirteen episodes were produced in 1986[3] to accompany the original in the Funtastic World programming block. These episodes were referred to simply as Jonny Quest on their title cards, and were noticeably less violent and more “kid-friendly” than the 1960s version.

This was followed by two television films, Jonny's Golden Quest in 1993 and Jonny Quest vs. The Cyber Insects in 1995, with Don Messick, Granville Van Dusen and Rob Paulsen voicing Dr. Quest, Race and Hadji. The 1980s Quest series introduced a new character named Hardrock, an ancient man made of stone. He did not return in later versions of the program.

Home media

On April 8, 2014, Warner Archive released Jonny Quest: The Complete Eighties Adventures on DVD in region 1 as part of their Hanna-Barbera Classic Collection. This is a Manufacture-on-Demand (MOD) release, available exclusively through Warner's online store and Amazon.com.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Jonny Quest Retrospective . 1995 . Television Chronicles . 23 . 2 .
  2. Secrets of Jonny Quest . 1995 . Hogan's Alley . 15 . 22 .
  3. Web site: The New Jonny Quest Episode Guide. https://archive.today/20120724035529/http://www.bcdb.com/cartoons/Hanna-Barbera_Studios/D-F/The_Funtastic_World_of_Hanna-Barbera/Jonny_Quest/The_New_Jonny_Quest/index.html. dead. July 24, 2012. 2023-01-08. Big Cartoon DataBase. en-US.
  4. Web site: 'The Complete Eighties Adventures' are Now on DVD: Cost, Details, Package. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140409141146/http://tvshowsondvd.com/news/Jonny-Quest-The-Complete-80s-Adventures/19666. 2014-04-09.