Skip to primary content

Prime-WoW

My site, my way, no big company can change this

Prime-WoW

Main menu

  • Home
  • Discord
  • Forums
  • Games
    • 7DtD
      • 7DtD Map
      • 7DtD Official Forums
      • 7DtD Wiki
    • Minecraft
      • Survival Map
      • Vanilla Map
      • FTB Map
      • FTB Wiki
      • Download FTB Client
    • NWN
      • NWN Wiki
      • NWN Lexicon
      • NWN Vault
      • NWNX
      • NWN Info
      • Rhun Guide
    • Terraria
      • Terraria Map
    • WoW
      • Prime-WoW Site
      • WoW Armory
  • Unfiltered RSS
    • Bikes
    • Games
      • Kotaku
      • PS4 News
      • VR
    • Nature
      • TreeHugger
      • Survival
    • Technology
      • Hardware
        • Hot Hardware
      • Linux
        • Linux Today
        • LWN.net
        • LXer
        • Phoronix
        • RPi
      • LifeHacker
      • Akihabara News
      • AnandTech
      • Ars Technica
      • Engadget
      • Gear & Gadgets
      • Geekologie
      • Gizmodo
      • [H]ardOCP
      • io9
      • Slashdot
      • TG Daily

Post navigation

← Previous Next →

The Animaniacs reboot, reviewed: Zany is harder to pull off in 2020

Posted on November 23, 2020 by Xordac Prime
Promotional image for Hulu's reboot of Animaniacs.

Enlarge / Come join the Warner Brothers (and the Warner Sister, Dot). (credit: Hulu)

The Warner Brothers—and the Warner Sister—are back, thanks to Hulu. The streamer has rebooted the Emmy-winning, enormously popular Animaniacs, stalwart of 1990s afternoons, for a new generation and a new era.

Animaniacs first hit the small screen in 1993, part of a cohort of cartoons that tried to reach young audiences in a whole new way. At the highest level, Animaniacs was an animated variety show, with the main plot, such as it was, centered on Yakko, Wakko, and Dot Warner, animated creations from the 1930s who spent most of the 20th century locked up in a water tower until their escape in the 1990s. The show’s artistic DNA seemed to be equal parts Looney Tunes and Laugh-In, with a Dadaist streak and a heavy dose of Mel Brooks-style parody woven through.

Animaniacs was, in the end, a pretty weird show, equal parts absurdist and educational. And that suited me perfectly because I was, frankly, a pretty weird kid.

Read 20 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – The Animaniacs reboot, reviewed: Zany is harder to pull off in 2020

This entry was posted in Ars Technica, Unfiltered RSS and tagged Ars Technica by Xordac Prime. Bookmark the permalink.
Proudly powered by WordPress