Well, I sort of gave up my plan to watch episodes of Filmation's Journey to the Center of the Earth on YouTube, since the versions they have are either low-quality with the sound out of sync, or flattened for widescreen, and I'm not sure which of those I find more irritating. But I did succeed in DVRing this weekend's four episodes. It is pretty elementary stuff -- a lot of running and getting caught and escaping and facing monsters and natural and artificial deathtraps, and a different civilization of underground creatures almost every week. But it's surprisingly violent for a Filmation show. There was one episode where they made peace with the locals, but at least a couple where the local bad-guy race got entirely massacred by nature's fury or their own civilization collapsing.
I just saw "Land of the Dead," which was the eighth episode aired, but I'm pretty certain it was the first one produced. The characters give bits of exposition that sound like the sort of thing you'd hear in a first episode, and several of the main characters' voices sound a little different, as though Ted Knight and Pat Harrington hadn't quite settled into their characterizations. And there's an animation sequence of Gertrude the Duck circling a whirlpool and then coming to rest over the middle of it, which is a motion that I've seen used for the duck in several episodes, but this is the only time it actually makes sense in the context of the environment rather than just being a random motion. So it must've been animated for this scene and then reused.
I'm curious enough that I may watch the YouTube episodes after all, just to be thorough. But maybe El Rey will run through the whole series more than once. I guess I'll wait and see if they do.
I just saw "Land of the Dead," which was the eighth episode aired, but I'm pretty certain it was the first one produced. The characters give bits of exposition that sound like the sort of thing you'd hear in a first episode, and several of the main characters' voices sound a little different, as though Ted Knight and Pat Harrington hadn't quite settled into their characterizations. And there's an animation sequence of Gertrude the Duck circling a whirlpool and then coming to rest over the middle of it, which is a motion that I've seen used for the duck in several episodes, but this is the only time it actually makes sense in the context of the environment rather than just being a random motion. So it must've been animated for this scene and then reused.
I'm curious enough that I may watch the YouTube episodes after all, just to be thorough. But maybe El Rey will run through the whole series more than once. I guess I'll wait and see if they do.