M.A.S.K._(TV_series)

<i>M.A.S.K.</i> (TV series)

M.A.S.K. (TV series)

American 1985–1986 animated television series, part of the M.A.S.K. media franchise


M.A.S.K. is a 1985 animated television series produced by DIC and ICC TV Productions, Ltd.[2] The series was based on the M.A.S.K. action figures produced by Kenner Products.[3] It was animated in Japan by Ashi Productions, Studio World and K.K. DiC Asia (later known as K.K. C&D Asia).

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Overview

M.A.S.K. (an acronym for "Mobile Armored Strike Kommand") is a special task force led by Matt Trakker, who operate transforming armored vehicles in their ongoing battle against the criminal organization V.E.N.O.M. (an acronym for Vicious Evil Network of Mayhem) with an emphasis on superpowered helmets (called "masks") worn by the characters of both factions.[4]

V.E.N.O.M.'s primary goal was obtaining money through either robbery, extortion, counterfeiting, kidnapping, or attempting to steal historical artifacts, but M.A.S.K. always found a way to foil their plans.

Cast

  • Doug Stone – Matt Trakker, Hondo MacLean, Dusty Hayes, Bruce Sato, Nash Gorey, Bruno Sheppard, Boris Bushkin, Maximus Mayhem
  • Brendan McKane – Miles Mayhem, Alex Sector, Floyd Malloy, Jacques LaFleur, Nevada Rushmore
  • Graeme McKenna – T-Bob, Brad Turner, Julio Lopez, Calhoun Burns
  • Mark Halloran – Sly Rax, Buddy Hawks, Cliff Dagger, Ace Riker, Duane Kennedy
  • Sharon Noble – M.A.S.K. Computer, Gloria Baker, Vanessa Warfield
  • Brian George – Lester Sludge, Ali Bombay
  • Brennan Thicke – Scott Trakker

Crew

Season 1 (1985)

  • Story editors: Terrence McDonnell and Gary Warne
  • Writers: Jina Bacarr, Rod Baker, Creighton Barnes, Patrick Barry, Jack Bornoff, Del Bruckman, Barbara Chain, Kerry Ehrin, Herb Engelhardt, Mel Gilden, Ralph Goodman, David Gottlieb, Barbara Hambly, Trevor Meldal-Johnson, Fred Ladd, Chuck Lorre, Ali Matheson, R. Patrick Neary, Dianne Nezgoda, Jack Olesker, Glen Olson, Alfred A. Pegal, Jessica Radcliff, Ginger Roth, Jeffrey Scott, Chris Weber & Karen Willson, S. S. Wilson, Erica Byrne
  • Directors: Bruno Bianchi and Bernard Deyries

Season 2 (1986)

  • Story editor: Jack Olesker
  • Writers: Ray Dryden, Jack Olesker
  • Director: Michael Maliani
  • Animation Production: Ashi Production (credited as Ashi Pro.), Studio World (Only the season two end credits gave credit to these studios on screen)

Episodes

A total of 75 syndicated episodes over two seasons were broadcast from September 1985 to November 1986. The first season consisted of 65 episodes. The second season, whose theme deemphasized crimefighting in favor of auto racing, lasted only ten episodes.

Season 1 (1985)

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Season 2 (1986)

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Production

One of many cartoons produced during the 1980s as a vehicle for toy merchandising, M.A.S.K. was a hybrid of popular era cartoons G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero and The Transformers.[citation needed] When originally broadcast, M.A.S.K. was the first closed-captioned series to air in first-run syndication.[5]

Home video

Several episodes of the series were released under Karl-Lorimar's "Kideo Video" branding on VHS in the 1980s, with two episodes per tape. The "racing" second season was distributed by Tempest Video.[citation needed]

In the United Kingdom, two releases titled M.A.S.K The Movie, and M.A.S.K The Movie II were released by Tempo Video, featuring episodes edited into a feature-length format. Several episodes of season one were distributed by The Video Collection in association with Karl Lorimar's Kideo Video, then a lot of these episodes would be distributed on later VHS tapes by Castle Vision. While episodes from season two would be distributed by Golden Book Video.[citation needed]

M.A.S.K. episodes have been released on DVD in three different regions:

  • USA: Shout! Factory acquired the Region 1 DVD rights and released a "Complete Series" set on 9 August 2011[6] containing only the episodes from the first season of the original series (65 episodes), as well as a separate 2-disc collection of the first 11 episodes, called "Volume 1" and released the same day.[7] The second season, which consists of 10 episodes, are owned by WildBrain and are not part of the acquisition.[8]
  • UK: A single DVD set containing the first 5 episodes was released by Maximum Entertainment (under license from Jetix Europe) in August 2004. In November 2007, Maximum released Collection 1, containing the same number of episodes as the Australian set. Collection 1 was re-released on 31 August 2009, and Collection 2 was finally released on 28 September the same year. Both sets (the re-issue Collection 1 and Collection 2) are distributed through Lace DVD, replacing Maximum Entertainment, and both sets are in Region 2 PAL format. All 75 episodes were released across both sets.[citation needed]
  • Australia and New Zealand: Madman Entertainment released the complete series over two DVD collections for the first time in Australia and New Zealand. Collection 1 was released in November 2006 and contains episodes 1–38, while Collection 2 was released in March 2007 and contains episodes 39–75 which includes the season 2 episodes.[9]

Reception

While certain critics criticized the show for showing the weaponry and vehicles "at the expense of anything deeper in terms of plotting and characterization",[10] the show was quite successful. IGN voted M.A.S.K. the 99th-best animated series in 2009, calling it one of the most popular cartoon/toy marketing franchises of the 1980s, stating that it took many of the strengths of G.I. Joe and Transformers while taking few of their flaws.[11]

In other media

In 2015, Hasbro and Paramount were planning a cinematic universe combining Micronauts with G.I. Joe, Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light, M.A.S.K. and Rom.[12] A group of writers consisting of Michael Chabon, Brian K. Vaughan, Nicole Perlman, Lindsey Beer, Cheo Coker, John Francis Daley, Jonathan Goldstein, Joe Robert Cole, Jeff Pinkner, Nicole Riegel and Geneva Robertson-Dworet was formed in April 2016 to create a writer's room to develop a storylines for the film.[13] F. Gary Gray was attached to direct the live-action adaptation,[14] while the writer Chris Bremner was hired to pen the script.[15]

Notes

  1. The first season was produced by DIC Audiovisuel while the second season was produced by its American branch DIC Enterprises.

References

  1. Reddish, David (1 September 2016). "15 Animated Superhero TV Shows You Completely Forgot about". Screen Rant. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
  2. Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 532–533. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  3. "Battle of the Fun Factories". Time. 16 December 1985. Archived from the original on 24 April 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  4. Engelhardt, Tom (1986). "Children's Television: The Shortcake Strategy". In Gitlin, Todd (ed.). Watching Television: A Pantheon Guide to Popular Culture. Pantheon Books (Random House). p. 94. ISBN 0-394-74651-1.
  5. "MASK – The Complete Series". TV Shows on DVD. 9 August 2011. Archived from the original on 15 August 2016. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
  6. "MASK – Volume 1". TV Shows on DVD. 9 August 2011. Archived from the original on 28 June 2011. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  7. "M.A.S.K. DVD news: DVD Plans for M.A.S.K.". Tvshowsondvd.com. Archived from the original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  8. "M.A.S.K. Collection 2 (Mask)". Madman.com.au. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  9. Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 380–381. ISBN 978-1538103739.
  10. "99, M.A.S.K." IGN. 23 January 2009. Archived from the original on 19 January 2009. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  11. Kit, Borys (21 April 2016). "Hasbro Cinematic Universe Takes Shape With Michael Chabon, Brian K. Vaughan, Akiva Goldsman (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 10 June 2016.
  12. Couch, Aaron (18 April 2018). "F. Gary Gray to Direct Hasbro's 'M.A.S.K.' Movie". The Hollywood Reporter.
  13. Kit, Borys (28 February 2020). "'M.A.S.K' Movie Finds Its Writer (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.

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