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| Roger Ramjet | |
|---|---|
| Genre | animated |
| Written by | Gene Moss, Jim Thurman |
| Directed by | Fred Crippen |
| Voices of | Gary Owens, Bob Arbogast, Dick Beals, Gene Moss, Jim Thurman, Joan Gerber, Paul Shively, Ken Snyder |
| Narrated by | Dave Ketchum |
| Theme music composer | Charles Koren (music), Paul Shively (lyrics) |
| Composer(s) | Ivan Ditmars |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Language(s) | English |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Kenneth C.T. Snyder |
| Producer(s) | Fred Crippen |
| Editor(s) | Dee Futch |
| Camera setup | Roger Brown, Jerry Smith, Larry Hogan |
| Running time | 30 minutes(incl. commercials) |
| Production company(s) | Pantomime PicturesHero Entertainment |
| Distributor | Image Entertainment |
| Broadcast | |
| First shown in | 1965 |
| External links | |
| Website | |
Roger Ramjet is an animated American children's television comedy series that first ran in 1965 and has aired in syndication since. Starring Roger Ramjet and the American Eagle Squadron, the show was known for its crude animation, frenetic pace, and frequent references to popular culture, which allowed the show to entertain various age groups.
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Roger Ramjet is a patriotic and highly moral — if not very bright — hero, who is typically out to save the world, with help from his Proton Energy Pills ("PEP"), which give him "the strength of twenty atom bombs for a period of twenty seconds". The world is invariably saved by dispensing violence towards the various recurring criminals who populated the series.
On government missions assigned by General G.I. Brassbottom, Ramjet encounters various nemeses during his missions. Typically he is caught, and must be rescued by his crew of sidekicks, the American Eagles: Yank, Doodle, Dan and Dee (a play on Yankee Doodle Dandy). Although his Eagles appear to be children, each of them, except for Dee, flies his own individual ramjet aircraft expertly, and are obviously much more savvy than their leader.
The various recurring criminals include:
Most of the criminals had nearly identical bands of three or four henchmen who all mumbled different phrases at once, resulting in incomprehensible chatter.
Along the way, Lance Crossfire, Ramjet's rival for the affections of Lotta Love, is also likely to get in the way. Lance's face looks like (and his voice sounds like) actor Burt Lancaster. Inevitably when Lance and Roger cross paths neither wins (in one cartoon Lotta ends up going out with General Brassbottom, who promises the two men that he will take care of her). As is his way, Roger does not realize that they have both lost. Unlike Lance, who inevitably ends these cartoons with the phrase, "Oh, Roger — shut up!"
Roger Ramjet first aired on syndication in 1965, then on NBC in 1978 to 1986, then on Nickelodeon in 1988 to 1994 and on Cartoon Network in 1994 to 1997. The show was also on the BBC from 1979 to 1994 in the UK and Europe wide on Sky Channel from 1985 to 1989. In Australia, in 1966 the show appeared on the ABC in the afternoon, and has been shown regularly on Australian television ever since. Selected Minisodes of the show are available to view for free on Crackle.
On February 8, 2005, Classic Media (distributed by Sony Wonder) released Roger Ramjet: Hero Of Our Nation (Special Collector's Edition), a 3-Disc box set containing 119 of the 156 episodes of the series (although the box incorrectly states that 120 episodes are included). Another company, Image Entertainment, previously issued two single DVDs (Roger Ramjet: Hero Of Our Nation and Roger Ramjet: Man Of Adventure), each including 15 cartoons not featured in the three-disc set. This leaves seven cartoons unreleased on DVD (as of November 2007): #36 (Scotland Yard), #125 (Bunny), #128 (Jolly Rancher), #152 (Air Devil), #154 (Dry Dock), #155 (Machines), and #156 (Stolen).
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