The Real Ghostbusters

This article is about the television series. For other uses, see The Real Ghostbusters (disambiguation).
The Real Ghostbusters

Logo displayed at the opening title
Created by Dan Aykroyd
Harold Ramis
Developed by Columbia Pictures Television
DiC Enterprises[1]
Starring Lorenzo Music (seasons 1–2)
Maurice LaMarche
Frank Welker
Arsenio Hall (seasons 1–3)
Dave Coulier (seasons 3–7)
Buster Jones (seasons 4–7)
Laura Summer (seasons 1–2)
Kath Soucie (seasons 3–7)
Theme music composer Ray Parker, Jr.
Opening theme "Ghostbusters"
by John Smith
Composer(s) Haim Saban
Shuki Levy (1986–89)
Thomas Chase Jones
Steve Rucker (1990–91)
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 7
No. of episodes 140
33 (Slimer! Spin-off shorts) (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Joe Medjuck
Micheal C. Gross
Producer(s) Jean Chalopin
Andy Heyward
Richard Raynis
Tetsuo Katayama
Running time 14–24 minutes
Production company(s) Coca-Cola Telecommunications
DiC Enterprises
Columbia Pictures Television
Distributor Sony Pictures Television
DHX Media
Release
Original network ABC[2]
Syndicated
Picture format 480i SDTV
Audio format Stereo
Original release September 13, 1986 – September 5, 1992[3][4]
Chronology
Followed by Extreme Ghostbusters

The Real Ghostbusters is an American animated television series, a spinoff of the 1984 movie Ghostbusters. The series ran from September 13, 1986 to October 5, 1991, and was produced by Columbia Pictures Television, DiC Enterprises, and Coca-Cola Telecommunications. J. Michael Straczynski was story editor, and wrote episodes for every season except four and seven. "The Real" was added to the title after a dispute with Filmation and its Ghost Busters properties.[5] The series continues the adventures of paranormal investigators Dr. Peter Venkman, Dr. Egon Spengler, Dr. Ray Stantz, Winston Zeddemore, their secretary Janine Melnitz and their mascot ghost Slimer.[6]

There also were two ongoing Real Ghostbusters comics, one published monthly by Now Comics in USA and the other published weekly (originally biweekly) by Marvel Comics in the United Kingdom, and a popular toy line manufactured by Kenner (the toyline lasted longer than the television series itself).

Plot

The series follows the continuing adventures of the four Ghostbusters, their secretary Janine, their accountant Louis, and their mascot Slimer, as they chase and capture rogue spirits around New York and various other areas of the world.

Production

A short pilot episode was produced, but never aired in full. The full four-minute promo was released on Time Life's DVD set in 2008. Scenes of the pilot can be seen in TV promos that aired prior to the beginning of the series. Among differences seen in the promo pilot, the Ghostbusters wore the beige jumpsuits they had worn in the film instead of the color-coded jumpsuits they would wear in the finished series, and the character design for Peter Venkman bore more of a resemblance to actor Bill Murray than the character design seen in the finished series. When he auditioned for the voice of Egon Spengler, Maurice LaMarche noted that while he was asked not to impersonate Harold Ramis, he did so anyway and eventually got the part.[7] LaMarche also noted that Bill Murray had remarked off-handedly to producers that Lorenzo Music's voice of Peter Venkman sounded more like Garfield (who was also voiced by Music at the time.) Bill Murray went on to voice Garfield in Garfield: The Movie after Music died. A different explanation for the change of actor for Peter Venkman came from Dave Coulier, who took over the role of Venkman from Music, who explained that Joe Medjuck a producer on both the original 1984 film and the animated series, wanted the character to sound more like Bill Murray.[8] Ernie Hudson was the only actor from the films who auditioned to play his character in the series; however, the role was given to Arsenio Hall.[9]

At the same time The Real Ghostbusters was being created, Filmation was making a cartoon known simply as Ghostbusters, which was a revamp of Filmation's 1970s series The Ghost Busters. The character designs by Jim McDermott were dramatically redesigned from the way the same characters looked in the movie.[10]

Although the Ghostbusters concept was tinkered with, the finalized show does feature many tie-ins from the films. The Stay Puft Marshmallow Man made numerous appearances. During the third season, Walter Peck, the Environmental Protection Agency antagonist from the original film, reappeared. The uniforms and containment unit were redesigned, and Slimer was changed from a bad ghost to a resident and friend, events which are explained in the episode "Citizen Ghost" that flashes back to what happened to the Ghostbusters right after the movie's events. Gozer is also mentioned repeatedly throughout the series, usually in comparison to a ghost they are currently battling (e.g. "Cthulhu makes Gozer look like Little Mary Sunshine").

In the third season, some of the character designs were modified. Ray's character design was slimmed down to give the character a less overweight appearance and Slimer was given a tail instead of the formerly rounded bottom. The biggest change was to the character of Janine, whose hair was completely changed from being short and spiky to long and straight. Her overall design was softened, as was her personality. Her voice was also softened with Kath Soucie taking over the voice role from Laura Summer. ABC also went back, and redubbed Peter and Janine's dialogue in several episodes of the show with Dave Coulier and Kath Soucie respectively.[11] Changes to Janine's character were eventually addressed (and resolved) in the season 6 episode (#118) entitled, "Janine, You've Changed".

At the start of the series' fourth season in 1988, the series was retitled to Slimer! and the Real Ghostbusters. The opening was completely redone to center around Slimer. Eventually the episodes were expanded from their original half-hour format to last an hour, and the overall feel of the show was changed to be more youthful, with episodes having a lighter tone to be less frightening.[12]

Voice acting and animation

Recording for the show took place in Los Angeles, California. The cast always recorded together, instead of separately.[13] After recording of the dialogue was completed, sound tapes, storyboards, backgrounds, and character designs were then shipped to KK C&D and similar studios in Tokyo, Japan (South Korean animators during the final two seasons) for animation and filming.[14]

Voice cast

Broadcast

The show originally aired on ABC for its full run, except for the second season which ran on syndication at the same time as the third season ran on ABC. Later, reruns of the show appeared on the USA Network's USA Cartoon Express from September 16, 1991[15] to September 11, 1994.[16] Fox Family Channel also reran the series from August 17, 1998[17] to October 1, 1999.[18] Fox included the series as part of their Fox Kids block on Saturday mornings in 2001-02. In August 2012, reruns began airing on Fearnet during the weekends, part of their "Funhouse" block.

Media

The Real Ghostbusters Soundtrack was released in 1986 on CD, records, and cassette by Polygram Records. All songs were performed by Tahiti (Tyren Perry & Tonya Townsend.) [7]

From 1986 to 1989, several episodes were released by Magic Window, the children's imprint of RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video. The episodes on the cassettes were from the first season of syndication.

In 2004 and again in 2006 Sony released bare bones episode compilations in the United Kingdom and United States respectively. The DVD release of Ghostbusters II also included two episodes of the series as bonus features, "Citizen Ghost", a story focusing on events set immediately after the first movie, and "Partners in Slime", which featured the psycho-active slime from Ghostbusters II and a brief mention of its villain Vigo the Carpathian.[19][20][21]

On May 27, 2008, Time-Life announced they would be responsible for the complete series' release on DVD in the Fall of 2008.[22] That July they allowed fans the chance to vote between two variations of an outer box for the set[23]—one designed to look like the main characters firehouse headquarters and the other all black with different images on each side. Both featured lenticular printing, the firehouse version to show the Ecto-1 and the black version to have oozing "slime".[24] Released on November 25, 2008,[25] in the "firehouse" casing,[26] the set spans 25 discs containing all 147 episodes of the series.[27] The company began releasing the individual volumes on March 31, 2009.

The complete first season was released on DVD in Australia on June 3, 2009,[28] and in the U.K. on June 15, 2009.[29]

Spin-offs

Slimer!

At the start of the fourth season in 1988, with the series' renaming, it was given a one-hour time slot. In addition to the regular thirty-minute Real Ghostbusters episode, a half-hour Slimer sub-series was added that included 2–3 short animated segments focusing on the character Slimer. Animation for the Slimer! cartoons was handled by Wang Film Productions. At the end of its seven-season run, 147 episodes had aired, including the syndicated episodes and 13 episodes of Slimer, with multiple episodes airing out of production order.[30] The segments added several characters as friends of Slimer, plus an antagonist, Professor Norman Dweeb, an archetypical mad scientist usually accompanied by a sidekick pink poodle named Elizabeth. Dweeb wants to capture Slimer to experiment on him and to gain personal glory. Dweeb also made three appearances in the main series, one a clip show from the last two seasons. One of the ghosts from the Slimer cartoons, the Sleaze, also reappeared in The Real Ghostbusters to be captured a second time.

Extreme Ghostbusters

Main article: Extreme Ghostbusters

In 1997, a sequel cartoon entitled Extreme Ghostbusters, was created by Columbia TriStar Television and Adelaide Productions. It premiered on September 1, 1997 and ran for forty episodes until its conclusion on December 8, 1997. Set several years after the end of The Real Ghostbusters, the series opened by saying the team has disbanded due to a lack of supernatural activity. Only Egon remains in the firehouse, along with Slimer, to care for the containment system while teaching classes at a local university. When supernatural events begin occurring in New York, Egon recruits four of his university students as a new team of Ghostbusters, and Janine, also one of Egon's students, returns to manage the office. The original Ghostbusters return for the two-episode season finale to celebrate Egon's 40th birthday, leading to them reluctantly working together with the younger generation to solve one last case.

See also

Notes

  1. Winston's last name was alternately spelled Zeddemore, as in the movies, and Zeddmore.

References

  1. Adelson, Andrea (December 30, 1987). "BUSINESS PEOPLE; For Maker of Cartoons, A Chance to Go Public". The New York Times. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  2. "Top 100 animated series". IGN. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
  3. "Interview: Lou Scheimer: A Candid Conversation with Filmation's Founder". The Trades. Retrieved October 21, 2009.
  4. "The Real Ghostbusters Complete Collection". DVD Talk. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  5. 1 2 Ken Plume (January 1, 2007). "Quick Stop Interview: Maurice LaMarche". Quick Stop Interview. Retrieved August 13, 2007.
  6. "Episode 90 Dave Coulier (Live Ustream)". Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  7. Harris, Will (June 13, 2012). "Ernie Hudson talks Oz and losing out on the Ghostbusters cartoon". The A.V. Club. Retrieved June 19, 2012.
  8. Solomon, Charles (September 18, 1986). "Animated Shows For Kids". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
  9. "Spook Central - The Real Ghostbusters Alternate Episodes". Theraffon.net. 1988-10-18. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  10. Plume, Kenneth (September 6, 2000). "Interview with J. Michael Straczynski (Part 2 of 4)". IGN. Retrieved October 18, 2009.
  11. Time-Life's The Real Ghostbusters complete collection DVD set special features
  12. Slimer Won't Do That! The Making of The Real Ghostbusters (television film). ITV. 1990.
  13. TV Guide – September 14–20, 1991
  14. Tyrone Daily Herald's TV Week – September 9–16, 1994
  15. TV Guide – August 15–21, 1998
  16. TV Guide – September 25 – October 1, 1999
  17. "The Real Ghostbusters: Spooky Spirits". DVD Talk. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  18. "The Real Ghostbusters: Slimefighters". DVD Talk. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  19. "The Real Ghostbusters: Creatures of the Night". DVD Talk. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  20. Gord Lacey (May 27, 2008). "Time-Life to Release Complete Series This Fall!". The Real Ghostbusters.
  21. "Vote for the Complete Series Artwork". The Real Ghostbusters. TVShowsOnDVD.com. July 21, 2008. Retrieved August 2, 2008.
  22. "Help Select the Box Art". The Real Ghostbusters. TVShowsOnDVD.com. July 21, 2008. Retrieved July 21, 2008.
  23. Lambert, David (November 10, 2008). "Small Date Change for Time Life's Complete Series Set is Made Up by FedEx Shipping". The Real Ghostbusters news. TVShowsOnDVD.com. Retrieved November 10, 2008.
  24. "The Real Ghostbusters - Cover Art 'Winner' Plus Release Date Update". The Real Ghostbusters. TVShowsOnDVD.com. August 11, 2008. Retrieved August 18, 2008.
  25. "Formal press release for The Real Ghostbusters — The Complete Series". The Real Ghostbusters. TVShowsOnDVD.com. July 25, 2008. Retrieved August 2, 2008.
  26. Real Ghostbusters, The – The Complete 1st Season (2 Disc Set) @ EzyDVD
  27. hmv.com: dvd: Real Ghostbusters: Season 1: 2dvd (2009)
  28. The Real Ghostbusters Complete Collection (Booklet). Fairfax, Virginia: Direct Holdings Americas, CPT Holdings. 2008. 80083-Z.

External links

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