M.A.S.K. (TV series)

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

M.A.S.K.
File:MASK Logo.JPG
The M.A.S.K. Logo
Genre Animated television series
Voices of Brendan McKane
Mark Halloran
Graeme McKenna
Doug Stone
Sharon Noble
Brennan Thicke
Brian George
Country of origin France
United States
Canada
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 75 (list of episodes)
Production
Producer(s) DIC Enterprises, Inc
Running time 22 mins
Release
Original network USA CBS
AU Cartoon Network
UK Disney XD
Original release September 30, 1985 –
November 26, 1986

M.A.S.K. (Mobile Armored Strike Kommand) is an animated television series produced by the French-American DIC Enterprises, Inc and Kenner. The series was based on the M.A.S.K. action figures.[1] It was animated in Asia by studios; KK DIC Asia (later known as KK C&D Asia), Studio Juno, Studio World, and Ashi Production.

History

A total of 75 syndicated episodes of M.A.S.K. were broadcast from 1985 to 1986. One of many cartoons produced during the 1980s as a vehicle for toy merchandising, M.A.S.K., was a hybrid of popular era cartoons G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero and The Transformers.

When originally broadcast, M.A.S.K. was the first closed-captioned series to air in first-run syndication.[2]

M.A.S.K. and V.E.N.O.M.

M.A.S.K. (an acronym for Mobile Armored Strike Kommand) is a special task force featuring an array of characters, led by Matt Trakker, with transforming vehicles engaged in an ongoing battle against the criminal organization V.E.N.O.M. (an acronym for Vicious Evil Network Of Mayhem), with an emphasis on super-powered masks worn by the characters on the show.[3]

It is never made clear what sort of criminal organization V.E.N.O.M. is, exactly. They were not the typical world-conquering villains and their schemes mostly revolve around profiting from illegal activities and doing mercenary services.

Episodes

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Cast

  • Doug Stone - Matt Trakker, Hondo MacLean, Dusty Hayes, Bruce Sato, Nash Gorey, Bruno Shepherd, Boris Bushkin, Maximus Mayhem
  • Brendan McKane - Miles Mayhem, Alex Sector, Floyd Malloy, Jacques Lefleur, Nevada Rushmore
  • Brennan Thicke - Scott Trakker
  • Graeme McKenna - T-Bob, Brad Turner, Julio Lopez, Calhoun Burns
  • Mark Halloran - Sly Rax, Buddie Hawks, Cliff Dagger, Duane Kennedy, Ace Riker
  • Sharon Noble - M.A.S.K. Computer, Gloria Baker, Vanessa Warfield
  • Brian George - Lester Sludge, Ali Bombay

Crew

Reception

M.A.S.K. was named the 99th best animated series by IGN. They called it one of the most popular cartoon/toy marketing franchises of the eighties, and that it took many of the strengths of G.I. Joe and Transformers while taking few of their flaws.[4]

Video releases

Several episodes of the series were released under Karl-Lorimar's "Kideo Video" branding on VHS in the 1980s, with two episodes per tape. The "racing season" of the series would be distributed by Tempest Video. Several episodes were also released under the label M.A.S.K The Movie, and M.A.S.K The Movie II. No true direct-to-video or theatrical M.A.S.K movie was ever made.

M.A.S.K. episodes have been released on DVD in three languages.

  • English (U.S.): Shout! Factory acquired the Region 1 DVD rights to the first season of the original series (65 episodes) of the series in 2011 and released a Complete Series set on August 9, 2011, as well as a separate 2-Disc collection of the first 11 episodes. The second season, which consists of 10 episodes, are owned by Cookie Jar Entertainment and are not part of the acquisition.[5] To avoid confusion FremantleMedia North America was not partially responsible for this release. The company has taken over LBS Communications and some of its assets; however, LBS only handled the distribution of DiC shows back in the 80's for syndication. Those rights have since expired, as they have with other DiC shows they distributed in the 80's. All DiC cartoon rights are currently held by Cookie Jar's successor, DHX Media.
  • English (UK): Collection 1 was released in the UK in November 2007 by Jetix Films - Maximum Entertainment, containing the same amount of episodes as the Australian set. Collection 1 was re-released on 31 August 2009, and Collection 2 was finally released on 28 September 2009. Both sets (The re-issue Collection 1 and Collection 2) are distributed through Lace DVD, replacing Maximum Entertainment, and both sets are in Region 2 PAL format. All 75 episodes were released across both sets.
  • English (Australia/New Zealand): Madman Entertainment released the complete series over two DVD collections for the first time in Australia and New Zealand. Collection 1 was released in November 2006 and contains episodes 1 - 38, Collection 2 was released in March 2007 and contains episodes 39 - 75 which includes the season 2 episodes.[6]

Cultural references

  • Robot Chicken has done multiple parodies of M.A.S.K. in several of its episodes. In "Gold Dust Gasoline," Matt Trakker is among the characters taking part in the race that is seen in a sketch that parodies The Fast and the Furious movies. The episode "Rabbits on a Roller Coaster" had a sketch in which after grounding his son Scott for holding a wild party at Boulder Hill, Matt Trakker developed an internet relationship with an overweight woman named Darlene. On their wedding day, Matt is shocked to discover that Darlene is actually Miles Mayhem in disguise so he could know all of M.A.S.K.'s secrets and gain legal ownership of half of the M.A.S.K. organization. The sketch ends by honoring the homoerotic undertones in Trakker and Mayhem's relationship. The show also parodies the intro sequence to M.A.S.K.
  • The M.A.S.K. logo was parodied by wrestling group Chikara as part of their promotional artwork for their first live internet PPV "High Noon".
  • Dubstep producer J:Kenzo sampled audio clips from the "The Roteks" episode in his track entitled "The Roteks".
  • Hip-Hop producer zerosignal sampled both the theme song and audio from "The Currency Conspiracy" in his track entitled "V.E.N.O.M."

In other media

The character of Matt Trakker will be appearing in the third G. I. Joe film.[7]

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links