Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Turkey Time / Floundering Fathers - (Rocko's Modern Life Season 4 Episode 12) - 'Toon Reviews 44

If you like this review and want to stay updated for what else I have in store, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on TwitterNow on with today's review:

Turkey Time

As the last season nears the end, it’s a very good turn of events that it gets to have one more holiday cartoon, this time on Thanksgiving.  In my experience, there aren’t a lot of well-known works to commemorate the day despite it being seen as a big event for many.  This is probably because you can’t do much more than dinners gone wrong or Mayflower retellings, at least when it comes to TV and film.  This cartoon seems to be proof of this as it follows the expected dinner gone wrong plot.  However, with the right frame of mind to connect it to the theme of this particular series, it can also serve as a solid allegory for animal rights.  

Driving everything is the innocence of Rocko, with this being his very first Thanksgiving.  With that in mind, you have to wonder exactly how long he’s been in the states and see how confusing how he even came to America is.  Sometimes you hear that he was living in America and knew all his friends when he was younger, and other instances show him to have come when he grew older.  What's even the true story, and why can't the show make up its mind?  Well if you can get past that, there’s still mild enjoyment from how Rocko comes to understand Thanksgiving.  However, differentiating from how most people in real life celebrate, in O-Town, the citizens get their turkeys live, and then cook them fresh.  I suppose that this is the best way for Rocko to really understand how Thanksgiving customs work, as well as give the cartoon its conflict.  In a humorous scene of Heffer trying to explain how to ‘invite’ the turkey to dinner, it takes a while for Rocko to figure everything out. Then he gives an emphatic shocked response when he understands.  If that’s not enough, somehow him and Heffer getting a turkey before everyone else entices all the other turkeys to come to Rocko’s house, must to the frustration of O-Town.  Despite this being an inconvenience, Rocko sticks to his good nature and promises not to let anyone eat the turkeys.  

It isn’t long though when the seller of the turkeys, Ed Bighead, discovers they’ve come to Rocko’s, and doesn’t hesitate to expose him.  He does so in a reversal of a previous holiday special where instead of encouraging everyone to skip his party, Ed tells everyone to come to a party Rocko’s not actually having.  This makes the cartoon once again fall victim to the world around Rocko being ridiculously passive.  Do they seriously trust Ed as much as they do this late in the series?  Does his bad reputation suddenly not exist?  This makes their aggressive reactions of not being invited to Rocko’s turkey party all the more frustrating.  

Ultimately, Rocko gives into the pressure, and decides to give them what they want while also keeping the turkeys safe.  With Heffer giving a long-winded yet very fun and exhilarating introduction to the main course, Rocko successfully tricks the town into eating a vegetarian turkey.  Even though everyone loves it, once Ed discovers the truth, the aggression is kicked up again, threatening to end the cartoon on a bad note.  Luckily, everything works out, and O-Town proves to have hearts by seeing the innocence in the turkeys eyes the same way Rocko and Heffer did, and opt to not harm them.  As for Ed, he refuses to listen, is made a fool when trying to go through with the turkey feeding, and ends the cartoon giving the turkeys their own feast of bird seed.  It’s not new for turkeys to be treated like guests instead of food at Thanksgiving, but putting up a feast dedicated to them has some creative merit.  

In all, despite a few directions, this series successfully serves up a pleasing Thanksgiving piece.

A-

Floundering Fathers

Some of the most appealing types of stories are those that give background to established characters and setting, and this cartoon does both.  This would be big enough of a selling point, but it goes the extra mile by giving equal relevance to the key players of the series.  Rocko, Heffer, Filburt, and Ed Bighead are all colorful personalities on their own, but this cartoon is the ultimate way of having them work off one another.  That’s very fitting to see coming from one of the last cartoons of the series.  

It’s Founder’s Day in O-Town, and Ed has appointed himself as head of the committee.  Among the duties of such a figure is approving of the floats to appear in the annual parade.  At the same time, Rocko and the gang have just put together their parade float, a hamburger made of hotdogs, which I think is simply a genius idea.  They arrive at the last minute to submit their float, and Ed, being the overbearing jerk he is, rejects their offer.  

The rest of the cartoon features Rocko and the others trying to convince Ed to change his mind as he explains why he has the right to judge all float approval.  The background of his dominance comes from a rock that was principal in the founding of O-Town many years ago.  According to Ed, his ancestor played a key role in discovering this rock by paying for ownership of it from the Native Americans living on the territory.  It’s a very standard story of the founding of a town, but it does its part to allow the rest of the cartoon to unfold.  

In an effort to still have a chance to let their float be in the parade, there are other stories depicting ancestors of the main players discovering the rock.  Filburt comes close to the accuracy of Ed’s story by claiming that a nest of his turtle ancestors were under the rock long before Ed’s ancestor discovered it.  He even has video proof of this, though Ed still promptly dismisses the claim.  For entertainment’s sake though, the fun of the historical recounts are not just limited to claims based on evidence.  Heffer’s recount, for instance, sounds completely artificial and fake.  It involves seemingly imagined versions of himself claiming to be his ancestors acting out little of bits of any known historical event strung together.  This greatly reflects Heffer’s childlike nature, and it’s a very funny take on history in execution; it could even be considered a highlight for the cartoon.  

With all these radically different claims behind the rock, everyone is led to fight and in turn tip it over.  This in turn brings Rocko’s historical relevance to the rock, as it reveals one of his wallaby ancestors who was living under the rock for over 200 years.  Also, bits of Ed, Filburt, and even Heffer’s stories have truth to them too.  However, it was the wallabies who inhabited O-Town first, and that in turn grants this wallaby the right to be the true honorable head of the parade.  All works out fine as the gang gets their float approved for the parade after all, Ed gets comeuppance for his jerky behavior, and this new background is simply honorable for Rocko.  The only minor qualm is that it’s never explained how this wallaby is alive after all these centuries, because I find it hard to suspend disbelief for that like I can for much of this show.  

Despite that, it’s still a great cartoon of interesting backgrounds, memorable moments, and especially a strong use of characters working off of each other to drive everything.

A+

The Ranking

1.      From Here to Maternity

2.      Floundering Fathers

3.      Heff in a Handbasket

4.      Driving Mrs. Wolfe

5.      Yarn Benders

6.      Feisty Geist

7.      Mama’s Boy

8.      Hypno-Puppy Love

9.      Dumbells

10.  Wallaby on Wheels

11.  Teed Off

12.  Wimp on the Barby

13.  S.W.A.K.

14.  Closet Clown

15.  Turkey Time

16.  Sailing the 7 Zzzz’s

17.  Pranksters

18.  The High-Five of Doom

19.  Magic Meatball

20.  Rug Birds

21.  Fly Burgers

22.  Ed Good, Rocko Bad

23.  Seat to Stardom

24.  With Friends Like These

Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the last episode of the series where everyone reflects on how they first met Heffer, and we look at what O-Town is like in the future.
If you would like to check out other Rocko's Modern Life reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

Friday, March 26, 2021

Hypno-Puppy Love / Driving Mrs. Wolfe - (Rocko's Modern Life Season 4 Episode 11) - 'Toon Reviews 44

If you like this review and want to stay updated for what else I have in store, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on TwitterNow on with today's review:

Hypno-Puppy Love

When it comes to novelties like hypnotism, you can pretty much always expect them to never actually work as those things just weren’t cut out for reality’s capabilities.  Those kinds of things were essentially made for cartoons, especially where anything can happen.  In a show like this, every exaggerated antic is used to make a point of how challenging something in life really is, but what happens is still really bizarre.  For that, it’s open for telling stories about the antics of hypnotism without needing to be relatable to anything.  The results are a well-told story with solid humor, but also a few notable instances of heart.  

The cartoon begins with Heffer’s childlike whimsy of picking up something fun-sounding in his leisure time.  The mere sight of an ad for a hypnotizing kit easily meets his fascination, so he sends in the order for it and is keen to try it when it comes.  He plans to use it on Rocko who insists the statement that hypnosis is just a scam, which it would be in real life.  However, through Heffer’s messing around, he tries the hypnosis out, and it works on Rocko.  There’s no need for an explanation why; the cartoonish tone of the series is all it needs to be acceptable enough.  The actual antics from the hypnosis are standard with Heffer and Filburt telling Rocko to act like certain animals, and Rocko looking foolish performing the mannerisms.  While Heffer and Filburt greatly enjoy messing with him like always, it’s good to know that they realize when they take things too far.  

At one point, Heffer hypnotizes Rocko to make him think he’s a dog, and at that moment, notices a problem that he doesn’t have the skills to get him out of the trance.  Just after that, he and Filburt get a sense of urgency when hypnotized Rocko gets out of the house, and is at the mercy of the outside world as long as he thinks like a dog.  Among many dog mannerisms, one of them is going out into the street, not attending to passing cars.  This in turn makes for an emotional moment where Heffer and Filburt find Rocko’s shirt run over by cars and assume the worst.  In his own emotional way, Heffer especially astounds in showing that for all his lacking intelligence and reckless fun, he has genuine care for his friend.  

As you can imagine, Rocko has not been run over, but is instead taken in as a pet by Bev Bighead.  Considering she has a history of taking in stray dogs and has expressed fondness of Rocko, this cartoon can be seen as a culmination of these traits.  In fact, her care for dog-Rocko is very nice to watch despite Rocko being helpless in a freak circumstance all throughout.  For a conflict, Bev becomes so attached to her new dog that Heffer and Filburt have to be decisive in getting Rocko back to normal.  There’s a heist where they sneak in at night and successfully bring Rocko home, but at the same time, it’s easy to feel for Bev when she believes her dog ran away.  For that, there’s good heart when Ed gives her a fish as a replacement for the dog.  An interesting kind of heart element is found as the cartoon ends with Rocko getting back to normal, albeit hairless and naked.  He receives some teasing, but at least gets to share the humiliation when Heffer looks at everyone with another novelty of x-ray glasses.  

This cartoon may not be relatable, but it certainly takes its absurd concepts, applies them to a medium that can make it happen, and a well-constructed escapade is the result.

A

Driving Mrs. Wolfe

It’s surprising how many cartoons this season lean more towards the flat-out bizarre as opposed to bizarre yet oddly relatable.  That being said, there are still a good number of cartoons that relate to everyday tasks and anything that can ensue from them as a result.  This cartoon is one of those instances, specifically the idea of learning to drive or teaching someone to drive.  

The main underlying tone of the affair connects to both the eagerness to get on the road, and the stress and pressure from whoever is teaching the novice driver. What kicks things off, however, is the paranoia that comes with getting a brand new car and wanting to keep it safe.  Heffer’s dad gets a brand new top of the line car, and it’s an understatement to say that he absolutely treasures it.  Whenever anyone else in the Wolfe family wants to drive it, he aggressively refuses, not wanting it to get even the tiniest scratch. He even goes through the trouble of setting up an intense security system to prevent anyone from getting to the key.  This and other scenes in the cartoon feature him go way overboard with his feelings for the car, acting like he treasures it over life itself.  In a way, this makes the cartoon fascinating for expressing the effects of this behavior.  

Mrs. Wolfe has never driven before, and now with a new family car present, she’s somewhat eager to actually learn.  She gets her chance when the rest of the family goes out for the day, and Rocko is around to teach her how to drive with his own car.  There’s a good clash of driving experience with Rocko being knowledgeable on driving while Mrs. Wolfe, who’s never driven, fumbles through all maneuvers.  Just how Mrs. Wolfe fumbles through even the most basic driving skills is the bulk of the comedy here, and it simply makes the cartoon.  There’s mild humor in how she messes up simple tasks like driving around lampposts or hitting cars while parallel parking.  More creative gags come from signs like a random one of cheese meaning a bunch of cheese is to cross the road, or ‘slow children playing’ depicts kids playing ball in slow motion.  Then there are more suspense filled gags when Mrs. Wolfe stops the car on train tracks and Rocko can’t get her to move the car off as he freaks out over a train coming towards them.  

The thing that makes the humor work is how Mrs. Wolfe never sees the immediate danger of her driving choices.  As a predominantly loving mother figure, she simply sticks to that role no matter what.  It makes for an amusing contrast with Rocko understandably scared for his life.  This only builds when Mrs. Wolfe’s driving gets Rocko’s car destroyed, so she decides to take him home with the new car.  

Her blissful unawareness reaches its climax as not only does she take wrong turns in getting Rocko home, but drives the new car into a monster truck rally.  It’s where the humor of her bad driving is fully realized. She goes through it unaware that cars are meant to destroy each other here and is a sitting duck for the others, but she beats them all anyway, a remarkable turn of events.  Mr. Wolfe even recognizes this after several freak-outs of his new car about to be destroyed.  After all that stress from antics, there’s solid resolution with at least Mrs. Wolfe now being allowed to drive.  I personally wouldn’t have ended the cartoon with the new car getting destroyed from the effects of a door closing though.  That just justifies the paranoia.  

Barring that, exciting staging and strong gags and characterizations bring fun in this relatable driving lesson.

A+

The Ranking

1.      From Here to Maternity

2.      Heff in a Handbasket

3.      Driving Mrs. Wolfe

4.      Yarn Benders

5.      Feisty Geist

6.      Mama’s Boy

7.      Hypno-Puppy Love

8.      Dumbells

9.      Wallaby on Wheels

10.  Teed Off

11.  Wimp on the Barby

12.  S.W.A.K.

13.  Closet Clown

14.  Sailing the 7 Zzzz’s

15.  Pranksters

16.  The High-Five of Doom

17.  Magic Meatball

18.  Rug Birds

19.  Fly Burgers

20.  Ed Good, Rocko Bad

21.  Seat to Stardom

22.  With Friends Like These

Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode about Rocko's first Thanksgiving, and everyone has their own take on the history of O-Town.
If you would like to check out other Rocko's Modern Life reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Dumbells / Rug Birds - (Rocko's Modern Life Season 4 Episode 10) - 'Toon Reviews 44

If you like this review and want to stay updated for what else I have in store, become a follower of this blog, click here to like the official Facebook page, and click here to follow me on TwitterNow on with today's review:

Dumbells

People don’t always do the right thing, but that doesn’t automatically make those people bad.  That would be if any wrongdoings actually really hurt people.  Otherwise, certain acts can be chalked up to innocent playing around, which is the case for the act that drives this entire cartoon.  

Now, Heffer and Filburt are unsurprisingly at their most likable when their goofing around also comes with genuine heart through putting in the efforts to be good friends.  This includes helping Rocko get good at something he tries his hand at, or introducing him to interesting life alternatives.  In this cartoon’s case, Heffer and Filburt take up the favorite prank of ‘ding-dong ditch’ or ringing someone’s doorbell and running away to hide.  As you can tell, this is something that’s not really allowed, but it all works out.  Heffer and Filburt have no hint of malice through their mischief, and people only get confused when they run off after ringing their doorbell.  For that, there’s no real concern when they decide to teach their pranks to Rocko, who’s too innocent to even realize that this ‘game’ is a prank.  

Ultimately, Heffer and Filburt aren’t even the ones Rocko ends up doing ding-dong ditch with much.  During an attempt to really get how it works at an apartment complex, Rocko rings the doorbell of a fat hippo lady he commonly runs into, Gladys. Unable to get that he’s supposed to run and hide after ringing until it’s too late, it seems that Rocko has no choice but to introduce ding-dong ditch to Gladys.  Just as he gets the hang of how it works, he finds himself struggling to pass his teachings onto Gladys.  Through her clearly dimwitted and crazy mindset, she acts all over-excited whenever she does all the steps, like when she rings, ditches, and doesn’t hide, and lets it be known.  Rocko helps her along in getting the gist, but that only increases her excitement.  

Over time, Gladys becomes so infatuated with ding-dong ditch that she goes on to do it at practically all the doorbells of O-Town.  This in turn brings an instance where even the most harmless of deviant acts can become a problem.  So many doorbells have been rung and homeowners have been ditched, it makes sense that this act is treated like a state of emergency, complete with major news reports.  Heffer and Filburt, who feel responsible for starting this, prepare to go on the run for their doorbell ringing.  That’s probably them at their most mature and thoughtful, though they are still unaware of how far Rocko took the prank. 

Ultimately though, Rocko is found and framed along with Gladys, and the staging of the doorbell ringing as a national offense continues with intense interviews.  Heffer and Filburt soon hear of this and completely own up to their actions by confessing at a trial just before Rocko and Gladys can be declared guilty.  By the way, the trial is also a good spot of humor with a disgruntled judge, and everyone cowering at the sound of a doorbell in accordance with recent events.  It brings a good air of satire to a light-hearted prank staged as a huge aggressive assault on the public.  This is only further proven when after the matter is settled and Heffer and Filburt soon take up a new prank on the phone.  

It’s all just a comedy of events stemming from playing around which may not be allowed, but is still perfectly harmless fun.

A

Rug Birds

When it comes to overall impressions of this cartoon, it’s hard to tell how satisfying it is.  It counts as an instance of bizarre ideas made to represent a common pastime for most people, but also brings out some of the worst qualities of the featured players.  

Filburt reveals to Rocko his fascination with collecting wigs that birds apparently have.  Of course, that’s a major stretch to avian biology, and birds naturally carrying wigs is clearly something that’s pure cartoon logic.  At the same time, Rocko’s concerns that acts like this are wrong and unfair to the birds are in line with those of real life environmental activists.  It’s people like them who can make one question whether any bird-related activity is harmless or not.  No matter what Rocko says though, Filburt insists on going through with the bird wig-snatching.  A major reason is how far he’s come with it already.  He only needs the wig of the balding American eagle to really complete his collection, and such an eagle just happens to be nearby.  Unbeknownst to Filburt, this eagle uses products to naturally grow his hair, so he’s not really wearing a wig.  This means when Filburt ultimately snatches it, he’s really taking off the eagle’s hair, prompting him to take it back quick.  Now Filburt drives himself mad trying to get the wig back for his own greedy collection.  

Under normal circumstances, one wouldn’t really need to think much of this, and enjoy the wild cartoonish gags from all of Filburt’s failed attempts.  Then it starts getting problematic when Filburt reads up on the diet of eagles, thinking he could use it to attract this eagle.  Conveniently, the animal eagles are said to prey upon the most are wallabies, and Rocko, the innocent bystander in all this, is that very species.  The most disturbing part is that Filburt has a moment of consciousness when seeing that this is taking things too far, but then he completely ignores it.  Yes, he’s willing to sacrifice his friend for his own selfish gain, as if he has no humanity which several past cartoons have proven against.  When Rocko is successfully taken as bait leaving Filburt free to break into the eagle’s home and take his wigs, there’s little to know sympathy.  I can’t even tell if it’s ok to enjoy the gags that come from Filburt trying on all the wigs.  

Rocko at least shines in this situation as he saves himself through good wit by convincing the eagle that he looks better bald.  At that, Rocko is freed and Filburt is exposed for trying to steal the wigs.  He also gets good comeuppance when his shell breaks, allowing him to know how the birds who lost their wigs feel, and is too stressed to take the wigs the eagle throws at him.  Still, it doesn’t shake off the disturbing implications that he even considered choosing the wigs over his friend, even if it didn’t turn out that way.  

As you can see, the cartoon wants to be seen as an enjoyable set of bizarre events, but certain story decisions prevent that feel from being fully realized.

C

The Ranking

1.      From Here to Maternity

2.      Heff in a Handbasket

3.      Yarn Benders

4.      Feisty Geist

5.      Mama’s Boy

6.      Dumbells

7.      Wallaby on Wheels

8.      Teed Off

9.      Wimp on the Barby

10.  S.W.A.K.

11.  Closet Clown

12.  Sailing the 7 Zzzz’s

13.  Pranksters

14.  The High-Five of Doom

15.  Magic Meatball

16.  Rug Birds

17.  Fly Burgers

18.  Ed Good, Rocko Bad

19.  Seat to Stardom

20.  With Friends Like These

Be sure to stay tuned for the review of the next episode where Rocko is hypnotized into being a dog, and Heffer's mom gets driving lessons.
If you would like to check out other Rocko's Modern Life reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.