Official announcement
I wonder if that will be related to the unproduced episode, that was supposed to feature Clint Eastwood as Two-Face, that they did a comic book adaptation of.
From the interviews I've seen, the humor is updated for modern audience. "Pointed" and "a bit more naughty" are the references I remember. But even so, kids probably won't get the "naughty" bits. Hopefully like the old Bugs Bunny and Bullwinkle cartoons, lots of stuff for the grown-ups but still ok for the kids. We'll see.I might have missed this...but I assume very kid friendly? A nd will it be out on Redbox?
^James Tucker and Michael Jelenic were actually the developers and showrunners of Batman: The Brave and the Bold. So they're good choices for this.
Looks like they don't have the likeness rights to Neil Hamilton, since they've given Commissioner Gordon a mustache. I didn't recognize the voice, but it sounded kind of Hamilton-like. The Penguin didn't sound much like Burgess Meredith, unfortunately.
Official announcement
CBS/P really needs to take notice of this, and let Shatner head up an animated Star Trek '66 movie in the same vein as this one, with voice actors approximating the ones that can no longer do the voices.
I dunno how well that would work, really. I mean, I have never heard anyone do a good Leonard Nimoy impression -- other than Anna Torv on Fringe, who got his delivery down uncannily, but obviously didn't capture the timbre of his voice at all.
Besides, with Batman, most of the supporting cast is gone, but at least both members of the core duo are still around, so reuniting them feels right. With Trek, only one of the central four cast members is left. It wouldn't be the same.
I am so glad that the Ghostbusters Video Game was made with the prinicpal cast all involved. It could have been a series if they hadn't waited so loog.
A series of games? The Sierra video game was only put into production because Sony wanted to cash in on the 25th anniversary, and Murray's involvement was so up in the air that Dan Aykroyd and Ernie Hudson recorded much of Venkman's dialogue in the event that he didn't actually show up for recording (which he finally did, for a few days, after Sony gave him profit participation).
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