The Bluffers Explained

Genre:Cartoon series
Creator:Gene Deitch (original idea)[1]
Frank Fehmers (concept)
Director:Frank Fehmers
Voices:Allen Swift
Kees ter Bruggen
Richard Felgate
Gene Deitch
Eric Jan Harmsen
Narrated:Gene Deitch
Theme Music Composer:Eric Jan Harmsen
Country:Netherlands
United States
Language:Dutch
English
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:13
Executive Producer:Frank Fehmers
Producer:Frank Fehmers
Runtime:25 min.
Network:AVRO

The Bluffers is a 1986 children's cartoon series created by Frank Fehmers. The stories revolved around the inhabitants of the fictitious land of Bluffoonia and their ongoing struggle against the evil tyrant Clandestino and his plans to destroy the forest in which they live.

The series was based on an idea by Gene Deitch, who also wrote the lyrics. Michael Jupp, who also created The Dreamstone and Bimble's Bucket, was art director for the series and created the characters.

The show's opening strapline is:

Bluffoonia once was a beautiful country before the crazed maniac Clandestino took over. Clandestino turned that beautiful place into this. Why? Because Clandestino is afraid the Bluffers will get his secret — the secret of getting it all!

Characters

Heroes

Villains

Other characters

Episode list

01. Memory Forever - Clandestino builds a memorial gallery of his greatness as Zip and Sharpy hope to get Clandestino’s secret.

02. The Present of Time - Time stops on the 29th night of February.

03. Things That Go Bluff in the Night

04. Where on Earth Are We?

05. Digging Archaeology

06. Satellite State

07. Is Friendship Sinking?

08. Down With Gravity

09. Colour Mix-up - Zip infiltrates Clandestino’s Castle to get some paint for Honeyboy.

10. Follow the Bio-Brick Road

11. Evolution Isn't What it Used to Be

12. Over Bluffoonia in My Balloonia

13. Minerology

Format

Each episode is approximately 25 minutes long. Most of the stories are centered on Clandestino doing or plotting something that will either destroy Bluffoonia's last forest or otherwise disrupt the Bluffers' lives, and the Bluffers' attempts to thwart him. Some of the stories are centered on the Bluffers' plans to steal Clandestino's "Secret of Getting It All" so they can use it to remove him from power. This secret, which plays a major part in most episodes, is never successfully stolen or even revealed throughout the series. The closest of it seen is the door to the secret, locked and vaulted with chains, a skull and stylish lights around its frame. Only Clandestino is allowed to see it, and if anyone tries and dares, even by his servants, are to be killed. That's why he always carries to keys to the locks of the door. In the final episode of the entire series, whilst digging his courtyard with his machines for minerals, ended up disrupting the moat, thus causing the entire castle to be flooded, and the lower parts sunk, taking the secret with it, despite his futile attempts of rescuing it.

Each episode contains two musical numbers.

Availability

In the late 1980s, the series was released on VHS videocassettes in the United States (by Celebrity Home Entertainment's "Just For Kids label) and most European countries, each containing one or more episodes. There was also a videocassette of collected musical numbers from the series.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ‘Tom and Jerry’ director Gene Deitch dies at 95. April 20, 2020. The Business Standard.