Planet Sketch
Planet Sketch | |
---|---|
Genre | Children's, Animated, Sketch comedy |
Written by |
Nicholas Barber Annie Caulfield Marc Haynes Jono Howard |
Directed by |
Andy Wyatt Vamberto Maduro |
Voices of |
Morwenna Banks Paul Bazely Clare Corbett Johnny Daukes Mark Evans Teresa Gallagher Lucy Jules Gordon Kennedy Burt Kwouk Adam Longworth Alan Marriott Felicity Montagu Lucy Montgomery Tom Parkinson Rob Rackstraw Paul Shearer John Sparkes Lizzie Stables Emma Tate Tabitha Wady Keith Wickham Jo Wyatt |
Composer(s) | Eggplant LF, Inc. |
Country of origin |
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Original language(s) |
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No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 40 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | |
Producer(s) | Helen Brunsdon |
Editor(s) | Richard Hanson |
Running time | 15 minutes |
Production company(s) | |
Distributor | Moonscoop |
Release | |
Original network | |
Original release | 2005 – 2006 |
External links | |
Distribution website |
Planet Sketch is a children's animated television series produced by Aardman Animations and Decode Entertainment. The show first aired on CITV,[1] and later began airing on Teletoon starting on November 19, 2005.[2]
Overview
Each episode features an assortment of sketches. The show typically begins with a Nose Picker sketch, in which a girl named Olivia pulls out an object from her nose. From then on, several sketches (typically one of each type of sketch) are then played out to fill the remainder of the show, culminating with the June Spume and Melville sketch, in which a girl named June Spume uses her body parts to produce music, such as her teeth as a piano, which accompanies the show's theme music as the show ends.
In the second series, however, only Melville appears, featuring in a dance clip before the credits roll. The Nose Picker sketch still appears though. In this series the 2D sketches didn't return, and the show went completely 3D. Also, the 3D format is slightly different from the previous, because of the different shape of the characters' eyes, the short depth of their heads and the huge shading on them not showing the glossy surface of their appearance.
Season 1 (2005)
3-D sketches
- Ninja Handyman: A family resorts to the help of a ninja to solve everyday mundane problems (such as using a rolling pin to squeeze the last few dollops of toothpaste from its tube). In the first season, the family liked Ninja Handyman, but in the second season, the family sometimes gets really annoyed and irritated when he appears in their home. In the first season, Ninja Handyman works very hard in anything he does, but in the second season, he is rather lazy, a bit careless, somewhat insane and accident-prone.
- Japanese Fighting Fish: Three fish (claiming to be "real hard" Japanese fighting fish) who bully another (typically much larger) fish that is cohabiting in the same tank, or another sea creature or an item, only for the other fish, object or sea creature to retaliate in kind.
- Parping Ponies: A horse named Horace and his aunt Hortense try to avoid the embarrassment that usually results from Horace's flatulence problem. Sometimes (but rarely) Hortense also has flatulence.
- Timbo and Mr. Hives: A boy named Timbo tries to avoid his teddy bear Mr. Hives, which he claims to have outgrown. Mr. Hives inevitably reappears with his ominous catchphrase "Huggy, huggy!". He appears in all manner of places, including in a ketchup bottle, behind garden gnomes and on TV.
- Napkin Squirrel: A storyteller tells the story of a paper (origami) squirrel and what it considers fun — the things that harm the squirrel in any way, shape, or form are said to be "no fun at all".
- Dr. Inosaur: A dinosaur doctor who tries to eat his patients, but fails.
- Captain Gagtastic: The namesake supervillain, who terrorizes a family by telling anti-jokes.
- Rude Limerick Boy: A boy who shows up on stage to perform a limerick, in which the limerick's last word is typically unsuitable for the audience, so he is interrupted before saying it, usually by an object from his limerick.
- Mad Dad Scientist: A father who pretends to be a mad scientist about to finish an invention, only to be interrupted by his son Kirk, which at the same time reveals that the father was simply repairing a common household item, or doing a household task, such as getting a spider out of the bathtub.
- Gnaughty Gnomes: An elderly lady is enamoured by a set of lawn gnomes, only to faint in shock when discovering that the three gnomes are alive and acting in a typically destructive manner.
- News Reporters: News anchors Mike Today and Sally Van have gender wars by taking shots at the opposite gender. At the end of the sketch it is revealed that the two have a crush on each other. In the second season, this changes with the characters sharing the same views as their news reports.
- Street Rappers: A group of three street rappers do something in a manner that is completely different from their image (mostly childish things), only to be caught by an innocent bystander, who is one of the members of the Ninja Handyman family. In the second season, they would rap like normal, one of them would say something dumb, and the other two would exclaim.
- Why the Dinosaurs Died Out: A humorous take on why dinosaurs became extinct "60 million years ago last Tuesday".
- June Spume: A girl who plays instruments with various parts of her body.
2-D sketches
- My Mother the Armchair: A teenage girl consistently becomes embarrassed by her mother: a yellow armchair with a purse.
- Swapsy: The same teenage girl from My Mother the Armchair tries to swap an array of miscellaneous objects for an item that she sees with a random person (e.g.: the mother of a small boy)
- Only Joking: A young boy asks his father why something happens (e.g.: why bees collect honey) and his father jokingly replies with fictional comments (e.g.: Only honey bees collect honey, it's the brain bees you should look out for) which usually results with the boy running away screaming and the father saying "Only joking, son! Dear, oh dear". However, the father's "joke" turns out to be true during the last sketch shown in each episode, and it backfires on him.
- Arla and Larla: Two girls tell their mother a crazy fake story about why one of them, for example, poured water on the other, only to be caught out for a small detail such as where a certain bus stops.
- Okay Coach, I'm Ready: A boy named Nathan dresses up in a sports costume only to find he's doing the wrong sport as indicated by his coach.
- Alien Game Show: An extraterrestrial game show featuring aliens that talk gibberish alien language. The host gives a question to the four alien contestants, and when they got the answer right, they get a point. If they got it wrong, they lose a point and get tortured.
- Dragon Burping Contest: Another game show, where two dragons must overpower each other and gain points by burping.
Season 2 (2006)
The second season adds new characters. 2D segments and other 3D characters disappeared, such as the Gnaughty Gnomes and Timbo and Mr. Hives. In addition, characters dance between segments, or the Planet Sketch sign is shown with a gag.
New sketches
- The Two Astronauts: These two men are always in the cockpit of their spaceship and have problems with their computer who acts like a human or acts stupidly.
- The Hypno Poodle: A poodle who always gets what he wants, because he hypnotizes people, and mostly its owners into doing animal things or bizarre things.
- Master Handyman: Ninja Handyman's counterpart, white-dressed and really more helpful than the normal Ninja Handyman.
- Melville: He replaces the June Spume sketch. He is a cat working as a janitor, but when the lights turn off, he starts dancing. The music always differs each episode.
Broadcast
Both series have aired on CITV in the UK. The second series aired on Saturdays at 9:40am on CITV on ITV1. Now the series is finished, but there are still minisodes showing on CITV.
- Australia
- Brazil
- Britain
- Canada
- Croatia
- Denmark
- France
- Ireland
- Latin America
- Mexico
- Netherlands
- Philippines
- Scandinavia
- Sweden
- Turkey
- USA
- Nicktoons (airs segments and end credits on Shorts in a Bunch)
- Poland
- Romania
- Russia
References
- ↑ "Sold » Playback". Playbackonline.ca. 2006-07-24. Retrieved 2013-12-01.
- ↑ "Cartoon conference stresses characters, stories » Playback". Playbackonline.ca. 2005-10-10. Retrieved 2013-12-01.
External links
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