What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown! | |
---|---|
Genre | Animated television special |
Created by | Charles M. Schulz |
Directed by | Phil Roman Bill Melendez |
Voices of | Liam Martin Bill Melendez |
Theme music composer | Vince Guaraldi |
Opening theme | 'Linus and Lucy' |
Composers | Ed Bogas Judy Munsen Vince Guaraldi |
Country of origin | U.S. |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producer | Lee Mendelson |
Producer | Bill Melendez |
Editors | Roger Donley Chuck McCann |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Picture format | 4:3 |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | February 23, 1978 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown (1977) |
Followed by | Happy Birthday, Charlie Brown (1979) |
Adding on to Charlie Brown's growing list of love and relationship woes, even getting to love someone has caused the boy immense amounts of distress. However, as Alfred Lord Tennyson once said, ' 'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.' Charlie Brown on any given day can speak to the sadness of futility. Metacritic TV Episode Reviews, Snoopy's Getting Married, Charlie Brown, Snoopy runs into a female poodle while guarding Peppermint Patty's house and decides to marry her. Below is a complete The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show episode list that spans the show's entire TV run. Photos from the individual The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show episodes are listed along with the The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show episode names when available, as are the dates of the original airing of the episode.
The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show is an American animated television series featuring characters and storylines from the Charles M. Schulz comic strip Peanuts.It aired Saturday mornings on the CBS network from 1983 to 1985.
What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown! is the 17th prime-timeanimatedtelevision special based on the comic stripPeanuts by Charles M. Schulz. It originally aired on Thursday, February 23, 1978, at 8:00 P.M. ET/PT on CBS. The special is unusual in that Snoopy and Charlie Brown are the only members of the Peanuts cast to appear in it.[1] The plot is similar to that of Jack London's The Call of the Wild, and centers on Snoopy having a nightmare about being an Arctic sled dog. This was the first special Bill Melendez directed since 1973's A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving.
In June 2010, the special debuted on DVD as part of the Peanuts 1970's Collection, Volume Two set by Warner Home Video.[2] Before that it was released on CED format in 1983, and on VHS by Media Home Entertainment in 1985, Hi-Tops Video in 1988, and on September 6, 1995 by Paramount Home Media Distribution along with It's Magic, Charlie Brown. The special occasionally saw airings on the American TV channel Nickelodeon from 1998 to 2000 as part of Nickelodeon's umbrella branding for Peanuts programming, You're on Nickelodeon, Charlie Brown!
Plot[edit]
One winter day, Charlie Brown is trying to pretend to be a musher with Snoopy, but the dog has other ideas and gets Charlie Brown to pull while he has fun riding in the sled. When night comes and they are comfortably indoors, Charlie Brown is indignant that Snoopy is adjusting too well to home life, reminding Snoopy of facts that Arctic dogs are only fed once a day, their meals largely consisting of cold meat and raw fish (to which Snoopy blanches and gives a look of 'it's too bad to be them') and coming to the conclusion that Snoopy is 'an overly civilized, underly 'dogified' dog'. Snoopy makes a sumptuous dinner of five pizzas and a milkshake, to which Charlie Brown retorts he hopes Snoopy can digest all that food. Snoopy then falls asleep atop his doghouse, but when he wakes up he finds himself in a polar region, to which he is made a sled dog of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska, presumably during the Klondike Gold Rush or the 1925 serum run to Nome.
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Snoopy is cruelly mistreated, being run ragged by his owner, who is only seen in shadow or silhouette and only speaks in a much deeper version of the classic Peanuts adult 'waa-waa-waa' language. Snoopy was being denied any food or water by his fellow dogs. The dogs take turns barking loudly at Snoopy in order to let him know he is indeed an outsider. One scene which breaks the snow scenes is where the sled master stops at a honky tonk, and a hungry Snoopy sneaks inside to snatch a sandwich and a mug of root beer sitting near a piano, where he feigns playing John Philip Sousa's 'The Washington Post March'. Snoopy later tries his hand at a game of poker, where he keeps a poker face until he laughs out loud revealing his improbable winning hand of five aces, which causes a brawl and leaving Snoopy to escape into the next room. He finds himself on stage with a painted backdrop of Paris and is cheered for his dancing. However, when the music changes and he impersonates a can-can dancer, Snoopy is thrown out of the bar and is back with the sled dogs, where he continues to be mistreated.
Unable to take any more, that night Snoopy breaks down crying, then once he's done he goes about converting to his 'new life' in order to survive, baring his fangs and falls to walking on all fours. Snoopy challenges the lead dog to a fight and wins, becoming the 'Alpha Male' of the sled dog pack. He also turns the tables on the rest of the dogs by denying them food and water. Eventually, he leads his owner over an ice-covered lake where the ice cracks and causes all the sled dogs and the owner to be swallowed into the water. Snoopy finds himself being pulled into the hole. As he grapples screaming for his life, Snoopy wakes up clinging to the side of his doghouse and is relieved that he was just having a nightmare. Snoopy later wakes Charlie Brown up and recounts his nightmare in pantomime, to which Charlie Brown allows Snoopy to spend the night inside with him, but not before Snoopy helps himself to a large ice cream sundae, reminding himself that his Arctic experience was indeed a nightmare.
Voice cast[edit]
- Bill Melendez as Snoopy
- Liam Martin as Charlie Brown
References[edit]
Charlie Brown Full Episodes Youtube
- ^Woolery, George W. (1989). Animated TV Specials: The Complete Directory to the First Twenty-Five Years, 1962-1987. Scarecrow Press. pp. 444–445. ISBN0-8108-2198-2. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
- ^Charlie Brown/Peanuts Specials DVD news: Announcement for Peanuts: 1970's Collection, Volume 2 | TVShowsOnDVD.comArchived 2010-02-15 at the Wayback Machine
External links[edit]
- What a Nightmare, Charlie Brown! at IMDb