The Incredible Crash Dummies (TV special) explained

Genre:Animated TV Special
Developer:Savage Steve Holland
Bill Kopp
Director:Mark Mariutto
Voices:John Stocker
Dan Hennessey
James Rankin
Michael Caruana
Lee MacDougall
Richard Binsley
Paul Haddad
Susan Roman
Theme Music Composer:Jim Morgan
Ray Parker
Tom Szczesniak
Composer:Acrobat Music
Country:United States
Canada
Language:English
Executive Producer:Michael Hirsch
Patrick Loubert
Clive A. Smith
Larry Lamb
Producer:Pam Lehn
Stephen Hodgins
Animator:Mark Mariutto
Ron Pitts
Editor:Al Maciulis
Runtime:22 minutes
Company:Nelvana
Lamb&Company
Tyco Industries
Channel:Fox Kids

The Incredible Crash Dummies is a 1993 animated television special. It was produced in 1993. In the United States, it originally aired on Fox Kids.[1] It was later repacked as a video to be sold with two of the Crash Dummy action figures (Ted and a "purple/gold" repainted Junkman) as well as a mail-in offer to order. Like the TV ad the series was based on the "You Could Learn a Lot from a Dummy" PSAs, episodes would have the characters announcing at the end "Don't you be a dummy, buckle your safety belts...and leave the crashing to us!" It was the first full-length television cartoon created using computer graphics.[2] [3]

Plot

Dummyland is a fictional world inhabited only by living crash dummies. Many make a living testing cars, just like the real ones.

The story begins with crash dummy professor Dr. Zub has creating a new "uncrashable" prototype armor called the Torso 9000 and is testing it with the help of crash dummy Ted. Unfortunately the initial trial run goes awry and Ted's head is severed from his body. The following night however, Ted is accidentally replaced with the head of the evil Junkman, who can now harness the power of the Torso 9000 and manages to break free from the Crash Test facility.[4]

Plotting to destroy the crash dummies, the Junkman sets up his base near an abandoned scrap heap and creates an army of killing machines out of spare car parts. When a valuable disc of information on the Torso 9000 is stolen, and finally Dr. Zub himself is kidnapped, heroes Slick & Spin step in to save the day.

Cast

Production

Computer Hardware & Software

Silicon Graphics workstations were used in production utilizing Wavefront Technologie's modeling and animation software

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lenburg . Jeff . The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons . 2009 . Checkmark Books . New York . 978-0-8160-6600-1 . 3rd . 322.
  2. Book: Cortada . James W. . The Digital Hand: Volume II: How Computers Changed the Work of American Financial, Telecommunications, Media, and Entertainment Industries . November 3, 2005 . Oxford University Press . 0190290188 . 27 June 2019.
  3. Book: Baker . Christopher W. . Computer illusion in film & TV, Volume 5 . 1994 . Alpha Books . 1567614221 . 93 .
  4. Web site: Cartoon Car Spotlight: Falling to Pieces over 'The Incredible Crash Dummies' . The News Wheel . 27 June 2019 . 8 August 2017.
  5. Book: Terrace . Vincent . Encyclopedia of Television Pilots, 1937-2012 . February 12, 2013 . McFarland . 978-0786474455 . 138.