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DC Comics is doing new versions of The Flintstones, Johnny Quest, Scooby Doo, Wacky Races

In one of the episodes Wilma disguised a huge crack in the wall by painting flowers at the end of each "branch" along the crack. Betty complimented her artistic skill. I believe that's the only time such a thing was ever shown on-screen. Good enough to extrapolate as canon, though.
 
I saw some previews of the inside - not my cup of tea, trying too hard to be "serious" from what I can see.
 
The word "No" will never be sufficiently big enough to channel my rejection of this Flintstones comic.
 
Yeah, but, just goats, not goatasaurases or something?

If there are humans coexisting with dinosaurs in the world of the Flintstones, shouldn't there be other mammals as well? I do remember them having sabertooth cats and woolly mammoths, so they're pretty much conflating the Pleistocene epoch with the Mesozoic era. Goats were first domesticated about 10,000 years ago, which is around the time that mammoths and sabertooth cats went extinct. So it makes as much sense as anything in The Flintstones does.
 
Wacky Raceland #1.

I spent money on it.

It's not Mad Max. It's Marvel Secret Wars, complete with a Beyonder character...
 
I read through the preview for that a while back, and I was really confused by the cars talking to each other. Was that something from the original cartoon?
CBR's Anthony Couto liked the first issue of The Flintstones.
Anthony Couto said:
The same goes for DC Comics' new "Flintstones" series by Mark Russell, Steve Pugh and Chris Chuckry, which exceeds the already-high expectations as an incredibly relevant, and surprisingly dark, comedy. It's a delight, particularly for those of us with more cynical sensibilities
At one point he comapres it to Louie, Love, and Girls.
This does sound like something I'll want to check out. It does sound like it's a very different approach to the concept, but that isn't always a bad thing.
 
I read through the preview for that a while back, and I was really confused by the cars talking to each other. Was that something from the original cartoon?
CBR's Anthony Couto liked the first issue of The Flintstones.

At one point he comapres it to Louie, Love, and Girls.
This does sound like something I'll want to check out. It does sound like it's a very different approach to the concept, but that isn't always a bad thing.

No, the cars in the Wacky Races cartoon didn't talk. That's the comic writers trying to add Knight Rider to the concept.
 
I was just surprised when I saw that because I was expecting something a bit more grounded.
 
"Wacky Raceland" looks influenced by "Judge Dredd" to me as well as Mad Max - I like both of these as I enjoy dystopian adventure stories, but the Wacky Racers just don't fit! Seems to me they were using names and approximate images of well-known characters to publicise comics which are really not about them.....!!!!
 
I don't know if I'd say that. I definitely see the thought process that lead from the original cartoons to these versions.
The Scooby-Doo characters reveal fake monsters, so it's not a totaly stretch to have them dealing with real monsters, and having big apocalyptic event is an easy way to throw out all sorts of monsters.
The Flintstones has always been a satirical look at the modern day twisted to fit a prehistoric setting, so all they are doing with the new comic is giving it a bit more of an edge.
Wacky Races is about goofy characters racing in crazy cars, and Mad Max is about crazy people driving and fighting in crazy cars, so it makes sense to mash them up.
Team ups have been a big part of comics for decades, so it makes sense do that with the HB characters.
Now obviously not all of these are guaranteed to work, but it's really not that hard to see where they got the ideas from.
 
I don't know if I'd say that. I definitely see the thought process that lead from the original cartoons to these versions.

Doesn't seem so different from what DC has done with its other characters. Some might say that the goofy, cheerful Batman of the '60s comics and TV series and the '70s cartoons (including crossovers with Scooby-Doo) is not the same character as the grim, brooding Batman of the post-Frank Miller era, but there's a recognizable throughline between them and a lot of shared fundamentals despite the radically different approaches. It's not two completely different things, it's two distinct variations on a theme.

And since Hanna-Barbera was completely absorbed into Warner Bros. 15 years ago, that means all H-B's characters and concepts are now part of the same stable of properties as the DC universe. These are just the "post-Crisis reboots" of the H-B titles, so to speak. (Meanwhile, there are still more conventional, kid-friendly Scooby-Doo comics being put out by DC, including a crossover series that often features lighter versions of DC heroes and villains, like the gang taking on Harley and Ivy or visiting Paradise Island with Wonder Woman.


The Scooby-Doo characters reveal fake monsters, so it's not a totaly stretch to have them dealing with real monsters, and having big apocalyptic event is an easy way to throw out all sorts of monsters.

A lot of prior Scooby productions have involved real monsters, though there's this really good essay on ComicsAlliance about why it undermines the core idea of Scooby-Doo if the supernatural threats are real, because it's essentially a series about young people questioning the lies of adults and standing up to fearmongering.

The more adult, dark, satirical tone of Scooby Apocalypse reminds me of Mystery Incorporated, which was the best version of Scooby-Doo ever (although I'm saying that as someone who was never really much of a fan). But the sample pages I've seen of the comic don't seem nearly as good as MI.


The Flintstones has always been a satirical look at the modern day twisted to fit a prehistoric setting, so all they are doing with the new comic is giving it a bit more of an edge.

The sample pages and review I've read of that remind me of Jim Henson's Dinosaurs from the '90s. I gather it's at once more bitingly satirical and more bleak, both of which were true of Dinosaurs.
 
Why would anyone want a more bleak version of the Flintstones? There is certainly room for "bleak" in comics, but I don't think they are it!
 
Why would anyone want a more bleak version of the Flintstones? There is certainly room for "bleak" in comics, but I don't think they are it!

Why would anyone want a more bleak version of Batman? There was a time when that would've seemed anathema to the character.

I think it's just how the culture's tastes in humor have changed. The Flintstones had the sensibilities of a relatively typical prime-time sitcom of the '60s; despite being animated and set in the Stone Age, it was overtly a pastiche of The Honeymooners. Today's sitcoms are often darker, edgier, more cynical than '60s sitcoms.
 
Today's sitcoms are often darker, edgier, more cynical than '60s sitcoms.

And most of the newest ones suck, mainly for that reason. The 60s sitcoms at least had the virtue of being funny.

I get where S. is coming from. I've seen nothing in the previews for them so far that would make me spend money on the Flintstones or Scooby-Doo remakes, and I thoroughly regret having bought Mad Max Knight Rider Raceland #1.

The one bright spot in all these remakes has been Future Quest, mainly because it reads like the creators actually give a damn about the source material. (Just got issue #2. The series gets better with each installment.)
 
Not the greatest fan of cross-overs, but would have gone for Future Quest if the Impossibles hadn't been changed beyond looking more realistic...................but they are going to be, so I won't.
 
Not the greatest fan of cross-overs, but would have gone for Future Quest if the Impossibles hadn't been changed beyond looking more realistic...................but they are going to be, so I won't.
Got that. My biggest concerns were the Quest characters and Space Ghost, and they've nailed those.
 
So far, the only one of these books I like is Future Quest. Its a very entertaining book, and the characters are all interesting.
 
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