Roger Ramjet
Roger Ramjet
| 01 January 1965 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
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  • Reviews
    r-brasher

    It was only a matter of time before ROGER RAMJET was released on DVD, just like most every classic TV show that ever existed (MY MOTHER THE CAR, anyone?). The bad animation and goofy dialog(much of which appeared in words on screen- often misspelled on purpose)add to the appeal of this lost classic cartoon series. I can more fully appreciate the humor now than when I was eight years old and took cartoons more seriously. I would highly recommend this series to anyone who feels the same way I do-believe me, it's that much better 40 years later.You won't escape the awful fate of proton's mighty fury! Rating: ***** out of *****

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    Brian Kistler

    Very interesting that the author of the commentary at the very top of the page (at least at the top of the page as of late December 2002) is from the same city as I! Equally interesting that none of the commentaries go back any earlier than 2001 or 2002. As far as what this author from my hometown said about Rocky and Bullwinkle and Jay Ward----Roger Ramjet was not produced by Jay Ward and Bill Scott who put together Rocky and Bullwinkle. This was produced by Patomime Pictures, headed up by Fred Crippen. I am reading the "bible" of Jay Ward cartoons right now, "The Moose That Roared" and this book clearly states which cartoons were and were not part of Jay Ward (and this one was not). I also took a gander at the cast of voices. None of them were used on Rocky and Bullwinkle.I do not remember this cartoon extremely well. I caught it in re-runs one to three years after it debuted. I think that by 1968 or 1969, it just totally disappeared from the viewing area where I grew up (Southeastern Pennsylvania; not far from Philadelphia).I do recall really loving the animation. Perhaps part of this was because it reminded me of the animation for Jay Ward cartoons (which I always liked). It is possible that some of the artists who worked for Jay Ward also worked for Pantomime Pictures (I know that some of Ward's artists had worked for Total Television Cartoons---which brought us Tennessee Tuxedo and Underdog).Since I was under 10 years old (when Roger Ramjet re-runs were apparently permanently banished from my area), it is possible that some of the folks, with the more negative reviews, may be correct. All I know, however, is that I THOROUGHLY enjoyed this cartoon at the time. I loved the voices and I remember really relishing the story lines back then. For a long time it came on late afternoons Monday through Friday. Eventually it was moved to Sunday mornings. It was a welcome, very pleasant diversion for me, right before I was whisked off to church by my parents.I just could not believe, for the rest of my life, that I could never find it anywhere on TV again. Over the last few decades I have thought, many times, that I would love to see Roger Ramjet at least one more time. Perhaps it appears on cable, occasionally, but I have not had cable in years.

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    Smartt

    Roger Ramjet was created in 1965 by Ken Snyder and brought to cel life by director Fred Crippen and voice actor Gary Owens. And, even if the animation was so static it became the butt of jokes to this very day, Roger´s adventures still owe more to the anarchy of Jay Ward and Bob Clampett than, say, Sam Singer. Roger Ramjet, the `Daredevil, Flying Fool and All-Around Good Guy' is an obvious parody of super-hero antics AND patriotism itself, including the cold war paranoia. At first glance, it´s pure formula: our hero is assigned to some mission, always gets in trouble so the kids from the American Eagle Squadron can rescue him, and ends up kicking the villains´ badly animated behinds by ingesting the Proton Energy Pill, that grants him the power of twenty atom bombs for twenty seconds. But the similarities end here, cause RR is filled with clever puns, cultural references, Hollywood in-jokes and a LOT of adult-aimed dialogue which often went over kids´ heads. I´ll give you only one example, and that will be enough to lure you into the zany, adorable world of Roger. Let´s take the `The Shaft' episode from `Hero of Our Nation'. It´s about Roger creating a super-rocket that´s more powerful than… uh, anything else. Problem is, the rocket backfires and burrows a hole through the Earth. The ENTIRE darn planet. What we Earthlings do? Oh, not much. Just watch were we walk, to avoid falling in the hole and getting a free trip to China. Aye, we can live on a donut-shaped planet, no problem sir. The ONLY thing that bugs people is when winds runs through the hole, creating an annoying whistle. THEN the nations decide to join forces to fix the problem! See what I mean?

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    acswecker

    Animaniacs is in my opinion the best cartoon ever made, but Roger Ramjet comes right behind it. The animation is not smooth and continuous like most cartoons; it is stop-action animation that makes it seem like the animators weren't any good. But it was done that way on purpose. This form of animation adds a lot to the cartoon's humor. All the characters are well done and have good voices. I love the way some of the dialogue and narrative just come up as words on the screen (and sometimes some misspellings done on purpose). You should definitely check out the DVDs. Roger Ramjet should be every kid's hero.

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