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Bonkers (TV series)

For other uses of the term Bonkers, please see Bonkers (disambiguation).

Bonkers was an animated television series that aired from November 191993 to December 211995 on The Disney Channel, produced by Walt Disney Television.

Bonkers (TV series):Sega Genesis cover of the video game Bonkers
Sega Genesis cover of the video game Bonkers

Inspired by the film Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, the show created original characters in a world where "toons" and humans co-exist. Unlike the film that inspired it, however, Bonkers was entirely animated and featured no live action.


Contents

Premise

The premise of the series was that Bonkers D. Bobcat, a popular toon movie star (he appeared in Disney's Raw Toonage shorts in the fictional world of Bonkers as well) had washed out of show business and became a cop. Unfortunately, he was made the junior partner of Detective Lucky Piquel, a grim and ill-tempered human who hates toons (obviously based on the character of Eddie Valiant from Who Framed Roger Rabbit). Throughout the series, the pair work together to solve crimes in the Hollywood, California region. Bonkers repeatedly tried to win Piquel's praise, but usually just ended up messing things up with his antics.

After several years of working with Bonkers, Piquel was given an FBI job in Washington, DC, and with great glee was finally able to leave Bonkers, but finally realized that after all the times he hated Bonkers, he took a liking to him at the end of the "Lucky" episodes. Bonkers was given a new partner, the attractive Sergeant Miranda Wright, who although also human, was far more patient and tolerant of his antics than was Piquel.

Series history

The series played 65 episodes, as part of The Disney Afternoon. They were not created in chronological order: The "Miranda" episodes were actually produced first, excluding the two-part series premiere, which featured Piquel and Bonkers meeting for the first time. This discrepancy becomes evident when observing the look of the main character in both sets of episodes. In the Raw Toonage shorts, Bonkers was orange with one brown spot, golf-club-like ears, and an undone tail. When the Lucky Piquel episodes (produced by Robert Taylor) were made, the character had a major overhaul: skinnier ears, two black spots on each his tufts, black Tigger-like stripes on his tail, and a different uniform. The Miranda Wright-era episodes (produced by Duane Capizzi & Robert Hathcock) use Bonkers's original look from Raw Toonage. The series also occasionally featured episodes of "cartoons" from Bonkers's pre-police actor days, all lifted from the Raw Toonage series.

The Raw Toonage shorts were an after-thought of production. While the Bonkers series was in pre-production, the Raw Toonage team, headed by Larry Latham produced 12 "He's Bonkers" shorts. These shorts were, in the context of Bonkers, explained to be some of the shorts Bonkers made at Wackytoons Studios before he was fired. A short entitled Petal to the Metal was originally shown with the movie 3 Ninjas, while the rest were shown on the program Raw Toonage. In syndication, the shorts were collected into four full episodes with fillers of new material in between.

Meanwhile, Duane Capizzi, making his producing debut, was brought into the fold and teamed with animation veteran Robert Hathcock and charged with making 65 episodes (a full season's worth in syndication). The episodes theoretically would feature Bonkers with Wright as his partner. These episodes came back from overseas animation studios looking less than spectacular, causing considerable concern at Disney. Ultimately, the original team was replaced, and a team headed by Robert Taylor came in. Only 19 of the original-order shows survived to air; they are what is known as the "Miranda Wright episodes" of Bonkers, shown toward the end of the series in the official continuity. Greg Weisman (co-creator of Disney's Gargoyles) worked on the Miranda episodes, and Bonkers's relationship with Miranda inspired Goliath's relationship with Elisa Maza.

Taylor threw out the old premise of the show. He replaced it with the Lucky Piquel scenario, but his episodes were retconned to occur before the original episodes. 42 episodes of the "Piquel Era" were made, including one (New Partners On The Block) which attempted to bridge the gap between the two somewhat contradictory storylines.

The syndicated version of the series (which omits several of the original episodes that survived first-run) was last seen on Toon Disney, but due to bad scheduling and the addition of JETIX, it has vanished completely off the network. Along with a number of other shows it was removed from schedules in November 2004 and has not been seen since. It is unknown if it will ever return, and Disney currently has no plans to release the series on a DVD set.

New Partners on the Block

New Partners on the Block was a transition episode that showed how Bonkers went from having Lucky Piquel as a Partner to having Miranda Wright as his newest partner.The episode was much like the pilot episode/movie:"Going Bonkers", using the CGI rain and bringing back the characters that were associated with Bonkers, those characters being Fawn Deer, Jitters A. Dog, and Grumbles Grizzly and unlike the pilot had more speaking and screen time.

But in the end of all this, Bonkers along with Miranda and Lucky captured the main villain Fireball Frank, thus making Bonkers and Miranda a team and giving Lucky a job as an FBI Agent in DC. Piquel, his family Dyl (wife) and Mayrlin (daughter), Fall-Apart Rabbit, Toots and Brodrick the toon radio all subsequently relocated to Washington, DC, allowing them to be written out of the show.

However, this episode has not been seen in between 4 1/2 to 10 1/2 years, perhaps due to sensitivity related to 9/11 and the Oklahoma City bombings in 1995. (The episode's villain was portrayed as a bomber/terrorist.)

Characters

Many Disney characters created prior to the show made cameo, and sometimes unseen, appearances, including Goofy, Donald Duck, Darkwing Duck, Mickey Mouse, Dumbo, Marsupilami and Ludwig Von Drake.

Bonkers (TV series):Start screen of the Bonkers video game for Super NES.
Enlarge
Start screen of the Bonkers video game for Super NES.

Video games

Three Bonkers-themed video games were produced, one for the Super Nintendo, one for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, and one for the Sega Game Gear.

DVD Release

At this time, there is no information about a possible DVD release of the series but there is speculation due to the releases of Darkwing Duck and Ducktales from Disney.


The Disney Afternoon
AladdinBonkersChip 'n Dale Rescue RangersDarkwing DuckDisney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears
DougDuckTalesGargoylesGoof TroopHercules: The Animated SeriesThe Lion King's Timon and Pumbaa
Mighty Ducks101 Dalmatians: The SeriesQuack PackThe Schnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon ShowTaleSpin  
Bonkers (TV series):The Disney Afternoon

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Articles to be split | The Disney Afternoon | 1993 television program debuts | 1990s TV shows in the United States | Animated television series | Disney Channel shows | Television series by Disney | Fictional cats | Syndicated television series | Television spin-offs | Sega Mega Drive/Sega Genesis games | Super NES games | Fictional police officers

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