Reptar on Ice

"Reptar on Ice"
Rugrats episode

A cartoon large, green dinosaur angrily smashes through a fake volcano in an ice show.

Reptar sings during the ice show "Reptar on Ice." The play is a parody of real ice shows such as "Disney on Ice," while the plot of it is referent to Beauty and the Beast.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 10
Directed by Howard E. Baker
Written by Peter Gaffney
Original air date November 8, 1992
Guest actors

"Reptar on Ice" is the tenth episode of the second season of the animated television series Rugrats. It is the first segment of the twenty-third episode for the entire series. The episode was written by Peter Gaffney and directed by Howard E. Baker. It was originally broadcast on November 8, 1992. "Reptar on Ice" followed the infant main characters, Tommy, Chuckie, Phil, and Lil going to an ice show with their parents that follows the love story of the babies' favorite monster, Reptar. There, the babies attempt to return a lizard to the actor, assuming it is his child.

"Reptar on Ice" continued Rugrats' employment of the character Reptar, a satirical parody of Godzilla. The episode included several other cultural references; the basic theme lampoons the commercialization of children's media products and its plethora of merchandise tie-ins. The ice show the children see is referent to real-life ice shows, such as "Disney on Ice," and its plot centers around a Beauty and the Beast-style love story.

The episode was released on the DVD and VHS compilation "Decade in Diapers," which included the "favorite episodes" of Rugrats in their respected category as voted on by fans on Nick.com, and was celebratory of the show's tenth anniversary. "Reptar on Ice" in particular was categorized as the "Favorite Reptar-Rageous Episode." Gord Lacey of TVShowsOnDVD described it as one of his favorite episodes from the compilation, tied with "Vacation Special." It was adapted into an audio story, which was featured prominently on the CD and cassette tape "In Search of the Mighty Reptar".

Plot

The babies discover a tiny lizard in Tommy Pickles' backyard that they are convinced is the offspring of Reptar, a fictitious green dinosaur and main character of many action movies of which the Rugrats are fond. After learning about the extinction of the dinosaurs, Tommy decides to return the lizard to Reptar just as his family has purchased tickets for a musical ice show based on the character. After Tommy's parents and grandfather have fallen asleep, the babies sneak into the ice rink and present the lizard to Leo, the actor portraying Reptar, who coincidentally happens to possess a phobia of lizards. Stu Pickles, Tommy's father, sees the rugrats and must retrieve them from the ice rink.

Production

John Schuck guest starred in the episode.

"Reptar on Ice" was written by Peter Gaffney and directed by Howard E. Baker.[1] It was the tenth episode of season two of Rugrats,[2] which was created by Arlene Klasky and Gabor Csupo, along with Paul Germain, founders of the self-titled company Klasky-Csupo.[3][4] "Reptar on Ice" was originally broadcast on November 8, 1992 on Nickelodeon.[5] John Schuck guest starred as Reptar.[1] In the episode, Reptar is played by a man named Leo, who was used during season one's "Reptar's Revenge" dressed as Reptar for a state fair. "Reptar's Revenge" was also written by Gaffney.[6]

Themes

Reptar had been used since season one, episode three, "At the Movies," as a satirical parody of the fictional Japanese monster, Godzilla.[7] Despite being a green dinosaur, he still embodies the character, and though he is portrayed comically, his name is referent to the way a child would pronounce "Velociraptor," made famous for its appearance in Jurassic Park,[7] though that film is highly unlikely to have been the inspiration since it was released after Reptar's début. Reptar is used to demonstrate and subsequently lampoon the ever growing domination of Japanese culture into children's society.[8]

"Reptar on Ice" continues this satirical tradition, heavily displaying the over commercialization where media is dragged on into several merchandising tie-ins. Angelica is insistent on only eating Reptar brand cereal, which Stu states has "no actual food in it." The ice show the babies attend mocks several different real life ice shows, including "Disney on Ice" and "Barney on Ice." Another reference in the episode is the subsequent joke about Beauty and the Beast in the romantic plot of the entire "Reptar on Ice" performance.[9]

Reception and home media releases

"Reptar on Ice" was originally broadcast on November 8, 1992.[5] The 1997 VHS tape "Return of Reptar" was the first home video release with this episode. Four years later in 2001, the episode is featured on a VHS and DVD compilation for the show's tenth anniversary entitled Decade in Diapers. It included ten episodes that were voted by fans on Nick.com as their favorites in specific categories - "Reptar on Ice" was listed as the favorite "Reptar-Rageous Episode."[2][10][11] The Decades in Diapers video had originally been released as a VHS in 2001, and though Paramount Studios intended to concurrently put it as a DVD as well, they "opted to wait a year".[10] The episode was most recently re-released to DVD in June 2009 as a part of the Rugrats Season 2 DVD set.

Gord Lacey of TVShowsOnDVD named the episode one of his favorites on the compilation, tying with the episode "Vacation Special," which followed the families going to Las Vegas to relax.[2] "Reptar on Ice" was adapted onto a CD entitled In Search of the Mighty Reptar. It features a story-time set of two "adventures" the babies have; the second story features another Reptar story, entitled "Journey to the Center of the Basement," where they venture to their basement in order to "rescue" their "Reptar, Jr." toy.[12][13] The CD was as well made for cassette tapes, both being released on July 20, 1999. In Search of the Mighty Reptar was a part of Nickelodeon's "Rugrats Go Reptar!" event that published several different other merchandise types for Rugrats, including direct-to-video releases and magazines.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Rugrats → Episode Guide → 1992 → ReptarOnIce/FamilyFeud". Klasky Csupo. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
  2. 1 2 3 Lacey, Gord (2002-10-03). "I dunno Tommy...it doesn't look safe". TVShowsOnDVD. Retrieved 2009-08-08.
  3. Susina and West (2009), pp. 7
  4. Susina and West (2009), pp. 8
  5. 1 2 "Reptar on Ice Cartoon". Big Cartoon Database. Retrieved 2009-08-08.
  6. "Rugrats → Episode Guide → 1991 → More → Fluffyvs.Spike/Reptar'sRevenge". Klasky Csupo. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
  7. 1 2 Susina and West (2009), pp. 9
  8. Susina and West (2009), pp. 10
  9. Susina and West (2009), pp. 13
  10. 1 2 Sherber, Anne (2002-08-17). "DVDs aren't just for movies now". Billboard. p. 59. ISSN 0006-2510.
  11. "Rugrats: Decade In Diapers DVD and VHS". Turner Classic Movies. Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2009-08-08.
  12. 1 2 Laudati, Cindy (1999-07-16). "Nickelodeon and Kid Rhino Join the Rugrats". TimeWarner. Archived from the original on 2011-06-12. Retrieved 2009-08-08.
  13. McCormick, Moira (2000-03-11). "Paramount's Rugrats to 'Discover America' in new multi-feature title". Billboard: 68. ISSN 0006-2510.

References

External links

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