Ren Stimpy Show Presents Stimpys Invention Genesis Box Art

American animated telly serial

The Ren & Stimpy Bear witness
The Ren & Stimpy Show Logo.png
Created by John Kricfalusi
Directed past John Kricfalusi (flavour 1)
Voices of John Kricfalusi (seasons 1–2)
Billy Westward
Theme music composer
  • John Kricfalusi
  • Chris Reccardi
  • Jim Smith
  • Scott Huml
Composers Shawn Patterson ("Ol' Blue Nose" and "Sammy and Me")
Chris Reccardi ("Hard Times for Haggis", "Hermit Ren" and "Ren's Brain")
State of origin United states of america
Original language English
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 52[1] (93 segments) (listing of episodes)
Production
Executive producers Vanessa Coffey
Mary Harrington
Producer Jim Ballantine
Running time 22 minutes
Production companies
  • Spümcø (seasons ane–2)
  • Games Animation (seasons 3–5)
Benefactor
  • MTV Networks
  • Paramount Domestic Goggle box (season 5)
Release
Original network
  • Nickelodeon (1991–1995)
  • MTV (1996)
Picture format NTSC
Audio format Dolby Stereo (1991–1994)
Dolby Surroundings (1994–1996)
Original release Baronial 11, 1991 (1991-08-xi) –
October 20, 1996 (1996-ten-xx)
Chronology
Followed by Ren & Stimpy "Adult Political party Drawing"

The Ren & Stimpy Show (besides known as Ren & Stimpy ) is an American animated television series created by Canadian animator John Kricfalusi. Originally produced by Spümcø for Nickelodeon, the series aired from August 11, 1991, to December sixteen, 1995, with a total of five seasons and 51 episodes. The series follows the adventures of the championship characters: Ren Höek, an emotionally unstable and sociopathic Chihuahua; and Stimpy, a skilful-natured all the same dimwitted cat.

The Ren & Stimpy Prove is i of Nickelodeon's first original blithe serial—known as "Nicktoons"—alongside Rugrats and Doug. In dissimilarity with other shows on the network, it has generated controversy for its dark sense of humour, sexual innuendos, adult humor, violence, and shock value. This controversy contributed to the production staff's altercations with Nickelodeon's Standards and Practices department, in addition to Spümcø's failure to evangelize episodes on time, all of which led to Kricfalusi'southward termination from the show in 1992. Games Blitheness would produce the remaining 3 seasons of the series.[2] 1 episode was initially left unaired until it was broadcast on MTV on October 20, 1996.

However, The Ren & Stimpy Show received very positive reviews during its original run and has since developed a cult post-obit. It is considered by many to have had a long-lasting influence on television set animation.

A revival for adult audiences, Ren & Stimpy "Developed Party Cartoon", was produced by Kricfalusi and Spümcø and aired in 2003 on Spike TV. Only three episodes were aired before the series was canceled due to negative reviews, with 3 boosted episodes being released straight to DVD. On August v, 2020, Comedy Fundamental appear that they had ordered a second revival of the series to be produced without the interest of Kricfalusi.[3]

Premise [edit]

The serial centers on Ren Höek (voiced by John Kricfalusi in seasons 1–2; Baton W in seasons 3–5), a short-tempered, psychotic, "asthma-hound" Chihuahua,[4] and Stimpson J. "Stimpy" True cat (too voiced by Baton Due west), a dimwitted and happy-go-lucky cat.[4] The duo fill diverse roles from episode to episode, including outer-space explorers, Old Westward equus caballus thieves, and nature-show hosts,[five] and are usually at odds with each other in these situations. While the testify was sometimes set in the present day, the show's coiffure tended to avoid "contemporary" jokes about current events.[6] The evidence extensively features off-colour[vii] and absurdist humor, as well as slapstick.[8]

The evidence features a host of supporting characters. Some appear but in one episode, while others recur and occasionally announced in different roles. They may either be part of the storyline or brand cameo appearances with niggling bearing on the plot. Some, such as Mr. Horse, are exclusively cameo-based, spontaneously appearing equally a running gag.[ix]

Development and history [edit]

Conception [edit]

According to animator William Wray, John Kricfalusi created the characters Ren and Stimpy in 1978 for "personal amusement" while studying at Sheridan College in Ontario, Canada.[vi] He was inspired to create Ren by an Elliott Erwitt photo, printed on a postcard, called "New York City, 1946", showing a sweatered chihuahua at a adult female'southward feet. Stimpy's pattern was inspired by a Tweety cartoon chosen A Gruesome Twosome where the cats in the animation had large noses.[10]

When Nickelodeon approached Kricfalusi, he presented iii shows, among them a variety show titled Your Gang [11] or Our Gang [vi] with a live action host presenting different cartoons, each cartoon parodying a unlike genre. Ren and Stimpy were pets of one of the children in Your Gang, serving every bit a parody of the "true cat and dog genre". The network's vice president of animation production Vanessa Coffey was dissatisfied with the other projects but liked Ren and Stimpy, singling them out for their own series.[half dozen] [11] Production of the series' airplane pilot episode began in 1989 subsequently Kricfalusi pitched and sold The Ren & Stimpy Show to Nickelodeon.[12] The airplane pilot was produced by Kricfalusi's Los Angeles-based animation company, Spümcø, and screened at film festivals for several months earlier the prove was announced in Nickelodeon's 1991 cartoons line-up.[13]

Spümcø (1991–1993) [edit]

The serial premiered on Baronial eleven, 1991, aslope Doug and Rugrats. Spümcø continued to produce the show for the next two years while encountering issues with Nickelodeon's Standards and Practices.[6] The evidence was known for its lack of early on merchandising;[14] according to Wray, the initial lack of merchandise was "the unique and radical affair" near The Ren & Stimpy Bear witness, as no toy company planned ahead for whatsoever merchandise for the testify, and Nickelodeon did not want to use "over-exploitive" merchandising.[6]

Kricfalusi described his early on period with Nickelodeon every bit being "uncomplicated", equally he got along with Coffey, the sole executive of the program. When another executive was added, they wanted to alter or discard some of the Ren & Stimpy episodes, only Kricfalusi says the episodes stayed intact since he did a "merchandise" with Coffey: he would have some "really crazy" episodes in commutation for some "centre-warming" episodes.[xv] Kricfalusi also said that the program was the "safest projection [he] e'er worked on" while explaining the meaning of "safe" every bit "spend a 3rd of what they spend now per picture, hire proven creative talent, and let them entertain." He estimated Spümcø's run of The Ren & Stimpy Bear witness cost around $6 million to produce.[16]

The relationship between Kricfalusi and Nickelodeon deteriorated to the point where Kricfalusi would communicate with Nickelodeon only through his lawyer.[17] News outlets and several of the serial' staff ascribe the tension to episodes not being delivered in a timely mode.[xviii] [19] [xx] [21] [22] Author Andy Mangels, writing for Wizard mag, commented that "Kricfalusi'south lax treatment of deadlines angered not only the networks, but his loyal viewers as well."[23] However, some of the delays were attributed to Nickelodeon'southward prolonged approval process[17] and withdrawal of approval from scenes and episodes that had been previously canonical.[half dozen] [23] [24] Another point of contention was the direction of the series. Kricfalusi cites the episode "Man's Best Friend" as the primary reason for his dismissal;[25] the character George Liquor is depicted in the episode as an abusive father effigy, and Nickelodeon did non want the show to exist and then frightening and dramatic.[6] : fifteen

Games Animation (1993–1996) [edit]

Nickelodeon terminated Kricfalusi's contract in tardily September 1992[22] [26] and offered him the position of consultant for Ren & Stimpy, just he refused to "sell out".[24] The network moved production from Spümcø to its newly founded blitheness studio, Games Blitheness, which later became Nickelodeon Blitheness Studio.[27] Bob Camp replaced Kricfalusi equally managing director,[28] while West, having refused Kricfalusi'due south asking to leave along with him,[19] voiced Ren in add-on to Stimpy.[6] [21] [29] [xxx]

Fans and critics felt this was a turning point in the evidence, with the new episodes being a considerable pace down from the standard of those that preceded them.[27] [31] Ted Drozdowski, resident critic of The Boston Phoenix, stated that "the flower faded" on Ren & Stimpy.[32] Blitheness historian Michael Bulwark writes that while the creators of the Games episodes used crude jokes that were similar to those used by Kricfalusi, they did not "find the material especially funny; they were but doing what was expected".[7]

The series concluded its original run on December sixteen, 1995, with "A Scooter for Yaksmas", although one episode from the final season, "Sammy and Me/The Last Temptation", remained unaired.[33] Almost a year subsequently, the episode aired on Nickelodeon's sis network, MTV, on Oct 20, 1996.[ii]

Production [edit]

Process [edit]

The animation production methods used in The Ren & Stimpy Show were similar to those found in Gilded Age cartoons of the early on 20th century, where a director supervised the entire process.[9] [34] [35] These methods are in dissimilarity with animation production methods in the 1980s, where in that location was one managing director for blitheness and a unlike managing director for voice actors, and the cartoons were created with a "summit-down" approach to necktie in with toy production.[12] [36]

Animator Vincent Waller compared working on Ren & Stimpy and SpongeBob SquarePants in an interview: "Working on Ren and Stimpy and SpongeBob was very similar. They're both storyboard-driven shows, which ways they requite us an outline from a premise afterward the premise has been approved. We take the outline and expand on it, writing the dialogue and gags. That was very familiar."[37]

Blitheness [edit]

The show'southward aesthetics draw on Golden Historic period cartoons,[9] [38] [39] particularly those of animator Bob Clampett from the 1940s in the way the characters' emotions powerfully distort their bodies.[seven] The testify'southward style emphasizes unique expressions, intense and specific acting, and potent character poses.[11] One of the show's virtually notable visual trademarks is the detailed paintings of gruesome close-ups,[eleven] along with the blotchy ink stains that on occasion replace the standard backgrounds, "reminiscent of holes in reality or the vision of a person in a deep state of dementia".[41] This way was developed from Clampett's Babe Bottleneck, which features several scenes with color-cards for backgrounds.[25] The prove incorporated norms from "the onetime arrangement in Telly and radio" where the blitheness would feature sponsored products to tie in with the cartoon, but in lieu of real advertisements, it featured fake commercial breaks ad nonexistent products, almost notably "Log".[42]

Kricfalusi cited Carbunkle Cartoons, an animation studio headed by Bob Jaques and Kelly Armstrong, for beautifully animating the bear witness's best episodes, improving the acting with subtle nuances and wild blitheness that could not be washed with overseas animation studios.[43] Some of the show's earlier episodes were rough to the point Kricfalusi felt the need to patch up the animation with sound effects and "music bandaids", helping the segments "play improve, fifty-fifty though much of the animation and timing weren't working on their own".[ citation needed ] KJ Dell'Antonia of Common Sense Media describes the show'due south style as changing "from intentionally rough to much more than polished and plushie-toy ready."[44]

Voice acting [edit]

Kricfalusi originally voiced Ren, styled after a demented Peter Lorre from the film The Maltese Falcon.[11] [12] When Nickelodeon terminated Kricfalusi's contract, Billy Due west, already the voice of Stimpy, took the role using a combination of Bulge Ives, Kirk Douglas, and a slight "south of the edge accent" for the rest of the Nickelodeon run.[28] West voiced Stimpy for the Spümcø and Games Blitheness episodes, basing the voice on an "amped-upwardly" Larry Fine.[11] Some notable artists and performers who voiced incidental characters on the show are Frank Zappa, Michael Jordan, Pecker Murray, Randy Quaid, Gilbert Gottfried, Whitney Houston, Ellen DeGeneres, Rosie O'Donnell, Annie Lennox, Fergie, Ray Bumatai, Dom DeLuise, Phil Hartman, Mark Hamill, and Soleil Moon Frye.[45]

Music [edit]

The Ren & Stimpy Testify features a broad variety of music, spanning rockabilly, folk, pop, jazz, classical music, jingles, and more. The opening and closing themes are performed past a group of Spümcø employees under the name "Die Screaming Leiderhôsens".[46] Iii Ren & Stimpy albums take been released. In 1993 a compilation album, You Eediot!, was released as a soundtrack anthology. The album's forepart encompass is a parody of The Beatles' 11th studio album Abbey Road.

Stimpy'southward rousing anthem titled "Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy" was composed by Christopher Reccardi[9] and written by Charlie Brissette and John Kricfalusi. A cover of this song, performed past Wax, is included on the 1995 tribute album Sat Morning: Cartoons' Greatest Hits, produced past Ralph Sall for MCA Records.

Grunge icon Kurt Cobain wanted to write a vocal for the show and proposed the idea to Billy West and John Kricfalusi, but was ultimately turned down.[47] This was idea to be around 1992 when Nirvana was only breaking into the mainstream.[48] Ever since fans have heard well-nigh the story, they wonder if the vocal might be one of the home recordings released on Montage of Heck in 2015. When asked on Twitter if he knew what happened to the vocal he replied, "I don't recall the song exists. Equally far every bit I know it had all the same to be written and remained a proposal."

Controversy and censorship [edit]

The program's staff did not want to create an "educational" series, a stance which bothered Nickelodeon,[half-dozen] : 21 leading to the series being criticized by parent groups.[49] [l] Some segments of the testify were altered to exclude references to religion, politics, alcohol, and tobacco. The episode "Powdered Toast Man" had a cross removed from the Pope'due south hat and the credit was inverse to "the man with the pointy hat". The same episode had a segment featuring the called-for of the Us Constitution and Pecker of Rights which was removed, while in "Dog Prove", the last name of the character George Liquor was removed, beingness changed to "George American".[2] Many other episodes included someone smoking a cigar, pipe, or a cigarette.

Several episodes had tearing, gruesome, or suggestive scenes shortened or removed, including a sequence involving a severed head, a close-upwardly of Ren's face being grated against a human being's stubble,[51] and a scene that was shortened where Ren receives multiple punches to the stomach from a baby. One episode, "Human being'due south Best Friend", was banned by Nickelodeon for its violent content. Neither Nickelodeon or MTV would air the episode. Years afterward on Spike TV, the show's reboot, Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Drawing", debuted with this banned episode every bit their unofficial airplane pilot, fifty-fifty receiving a TV-MA rating.[2]

Episodes [edit]

The series ran for five seasons, spanning 52 episodes.[i] The show was produced by Kricfalusi's blitheness studio Spümcø for the first two seasons. First with flavor three (1993–94), the show was produced by Nickelodeon's Games Blitheness. The episode "Human being'southward Best Friend" was produced for flavor two, merely the episode was shelved and debuted with the show'due south 2003 reboot. Some other episode, "Sammy and Me / The Last Temptation", aired on MTV on October twenty, 1996, almost a year later on the original Nickelodeon run concluded.[two]

Reception [edit]

The Ren & Stimpy Show received widespread critical acclamation.[38] Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons, praised the show for its outrageousness[52] and called information technology "the but skilful drawing on Television receiver" other than The Simpsons.[53] Terry Thoren, sometime CEO and president of Klasky Csupo, said that Kricfalusi "tapped into an audience that was a lot hipper than anybody thought. He went where no homo wanted to go earlier – the caca, booger humor".[54] Jonathan Valania of The Morning time Call called it "high voltage yuks and industrial-strength weirdness",[17] John Lyttle of The Independent described it as "a gooey media meltdown, admittedly grotesque and instantly recognisable" and did not consider information technology a children'south drawing.[55] The offset season of the bear witness currently holds a rare 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 12 reviews from critics,[56] though the remaining seasons accept not been rated.

The show came to garner high ratings for Nickelodeon,[12] [17] [18] [38] [57] having double the viewership of the other Nickelodeon cartoons for its first season[53] and subsequently averaging three times their viewership.[58] The show for a time was the virtually popular cable TV show,[59] with several airings beingness the most-watched scripted cable TV testify in 1993 in the Us.[60] The evidence chop-chop developed a cult following in college campuses,[23] [55] [58] and was included in the launch of Nickelodeon'due south Snick, a belatedly-night cake for shows that appeal to both children and adults.[61]

Legacy and influence [edit]

The immediate influence of the show was the spawning of two "clones": Hanna-Barbera's ii Stupid Dogs, in which Spümcø employees including Kricfalusi had some limited interest after their departure from Ren & Stimpy; and Disney's The Shnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon Show.[4] However, the evidence had a wider influence on the future of blitheness.[eleven] [41] Mike Judge credits MTV'southward willingness to commission Beavis and Barrel-Head to the success of Ren & Stimpy on the network.[62] Author Larry Brody credits Ren & Stimpy for leading a new golden age of animation, as other networks followed Nickelodeon and invested in new cartoons, opening the manner for more adult-oriented satirical shows like Beavis and Butt-Head.[63] Writer/animator Allan Neuwirth writes that Ren & Stimpy "bankrupt the mold" and started several trends in Idiot box animation, importantly the revival of credits at the beginning of each episode, the apply of grotesque close-ups, and a shift in cartoon color palettes to richer, more than harmonious colors.[11] A direct influence can be seen in the series SpongeBob SquarePants with the physically farthermost drawings that contrast with the characters' usual appearance, the "grotesque close-ups".[64]

The characters became a cultural touchstone in the mid-1990s, and were featured in works such equally the films Clueless (1995), The Cablevision Guy and Jack (1996).[65] Ren & Stimpy placed 31st in TV Guide's listing of "Top 50 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Fourth dimension" in 2002.[66] The encompass story of the October 2001 event of Magician, a magazine for comic book fans, listed the 100 Greatest Toons ever as selected past their readers, with Ren & Stimpy ranked at number 12.[67] Other entertainment journals similarly hold Ren & Stimpy as one of the best cartoons of the '90s and cartoons for adults.[68] [69] [70] [71]

Revivals/Reboots [edit]

Developed Party Drawing (2003) [edit]

In 2003, Kricfalusi headed the relaunch of the series as Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Cartoon". The new version was aired during a late night programming block on Spike Telly and was rated Goggle box-MA. The series explores more than adult themes, including an explicitly homosexual relationship between the primary characters,[72] strong profanity, graphic violence, and female person nudity.[73]

Billy Due west declined to participate in the testify, maxim that the bear witness "wasn't funny" and that joining information technology would have damaged his career.[74] Eric Bauza voiced Stimpy, while Kricfalusi reprised the roles of Ren and Mr. Equus caballus. The show began with the "banned" Nickelodeon episode "Man's Best Friend" before debuting new episodes. Fans and critics alike were unsettled by the show from the starting time episode,[xiii] which featured the consumption of actual fluids such as nasal fungus, saliva, and vomit.[72] Like the original series, Kricfalusi showed apparent disregard for coming together product deadlines, with only 3 of the ordered nine episodes being completed on fourth dimension. After three episodes, Spike's entire animation block was removed from its programming schedule.[75] Three more episodes, already in production past the time the series was cancelled, were subsequently completed and released directly to DVD in 2006.

Cancelled revival attempt [edit]

In February 2016, Deadline.com reported that Ren & Stimpy was scheduled to appear in an upcoming Nicktoons film reboot.[76] 3 months later, Multifariousness reported that Nickelodeon was in negotiations with Kricfalusi about a revival of the characters.[77] Bob Campsite and William Wray stated in an Apr 2016 console discussion that Kricfalusi was developing a Ren & Stimpy curt that would screen along with the third SpongeBob SquarePants flick. They after said that they were "not invited to that party" and would not exist involved with the production.[78] Nonetheless, Kricfalusi denied on Twitter that he was making such a cartoon.[79] An animatic of the short was released as an Easter egg on the Cans Without Labels DVD in May 2019.[eighty] [81]

Comedy Primal reboot [edit]

On Baronial 5, 2020, it was reported that a new Ren & Stimpy reboot had been greenlit by Comedy Central (along with Daria and Beavis and Barrel-Head). Though a new creative staff has been employed, Billy West was expected to render forth with a few of the original series' writers. Kricfalusi will not exist involved with the reboot, nor will he receive any compensation from it. The serial was originally set to exist produced by Nickelodeon Animation Studio, but as of Oct 2021, the serial' production has been moved to Awesome Inc.[82] [83] According to West, development was postponed due to the COVID-xix pandemic in the United States, contrary to earlier rumors that the project had been cancelled.[84] Paramount Global (at the time operating as ViacomCBS), the parent visitor of Comedy Central and Nickelodeon, has not responded to requests for a comment most the condition of the show, though Due west reiterated that information technology was still in product.[iii] On September 14, 2021, West confirmed that he was reprising his roles every bit Ren and Stimpy.[85] [86]

Home media [edit]

VHS, LaserDisc, UMD [edit]

Sony Wonder initially distributed collections of episodes of The Ren & Stimpy Show on VHS, which were non grouped by air dates or season.[ commendation needed ] The Ren & Stimpy Show 'The Classics Book 1' VHS was released in 1993 and included three episodes from Flavour one ('Space Madness', 'Untamed World' and 'Stimpy'due south Invention') likewise as short segment 'Breakfast Tips' and a 'Log' commercial. Eventually, the rights for Nickelodeon'southward programming on home video transferred from Sony to Paramount Dwelling Video. Paramount only released one video of The Ren & Stimpy Prove, "Have Yourself a Stinky Little Christmas", which was really a re-release of a Sony video from 1993.[87]

DVD [edit]

United States [edit]

Time–Life released several episodes of The Ren & Stimpy Bear witness in a "All-time of" ready in September 2003.[88] This set is now out of impress.[89] On October 12, 2004, Paramount Abode Entertainment released the first 2 complete seasons in a three-disc box set. Although the cover art and press materials said the episodes were "uncut", a handful of episodes were, in fact, edited, due to the use of Spike Television set masters where Spike Telly would cut some scenes from episodes to make room for longer commercial breaks.[90] One of the episodes from the second season, "Svën Höek", did have footage reinserted from a piece of work-in-progress VHS tape, simply with an editing machine timecode visible on-screen; the scene was later restored by fans. Three other episodes ("Powdered Toast Man", "Canis familiaris Show", and "Big House Blues") incorporate extra footage that wasn't originally circulate on Nickelodeon.[91] The DVD set even includes the banned episode "Human being'south Best Friend" equally a bonus feature. A ready for "Seasons Three and a One-half-ish", containing all of season three and the kickoff one-half of flavor four up to "It'south a Domestic dog's Life/Egg Yölkeo", followed on June 28, 2005.[31] [92] Season Five and Some More of Four completed the DVD release of the Nickelodeon serial on September 20.[93] Similar the previous DVDs, some scenes were removed in these releases.[ citation needed ]

A ii-disc gear up dubbed The Lost Episodes was released on July 17, 2006, featuring both the aired and unaired episodes from "Ren & Stimpy Adult Political party Drawing", as well as clips from unfinished cartoons.[94]

Paramount released "The Almost Complete Series" 9-disc set that combines the individual season discs into a single parcel, on February 6, 2018[95] and was re-released on January 11, 2022.[96]

Europe [edit]

The original series was released entirely equally a nine-disc fix in Germany on Oct iv, 2013. Subsequently people said that two episodes on the second disc were not completely uncensored, Turbine Classics offered to transport everybody with proof of buy an uncensored disc.[97] The set comprises a mix of the known United states airings and the German Television set airings which included some exclusive scenes of various episodes. Since the set is the first to include all scenes ever broadcast worldwide, information technology is considered the first truly uncensored DVD release of the serial.[98] [99]

Other media [edit]

Video games [edit]

Seven action games based directly on the tv set series were released betwixt 1992 and 1995.

  • The Ren & Stimpy Show: Space Cadet Adventures was adult by Imagineering, published by THQ and released for the Game Boy in November 1992. The game's premise centers on Stimpy attempting to rescue a stranded Ren, who is simultaneously traversing alien worlds attempting to return to their send. The game received middling reviews and was praised for its true-blue humor and visuals but was criticized for its repetitive and unimaginative gameplay.[100] [101]
  • The Ren & Stimpy Show: Veediots! was developed past Gray Matter, published by THQ and released for the SNES and Game Boy in October 1993. The game is composed of four stages based on episodes from the idiot box series. Both versions of the game received middling reviews. The SNES version was praised for its faithful visuals and sound just was criticized for its repetitive stages, standard gameplay and sluggish controls.[102] [103] Nintendo Power commented that the Game Boy version had good graphics but poor controls and challenge.[104]
  • The Ren & Stimpy Evidence: Stimpy's Invention was adult by BlueSky Software, published past Sega and released for the Sega Genesis in November 1993. The game'due south premise follows Ren and Stimpy as they travel through their neighborhood and collect scattered pieces of Stimpy's latest invention, the Mutate-O-Matic. The game features a 2-player mode in which each player controls one of the two titular characters. The reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly praised the game'due south faithful and humorous visuals and sound but derided the two-histrion style as "more aggravating than fun" and "twice every bit hard every bit a one-player [game]".[105]
  • Quest for the Shaven Yak Starring Ren Hoëk & Stimpy was developed by Realtime Associates, published past Sega and released for the Game Gear in November 1993. It was as well released for the Master System in Brazil in 1995. The game's premise centers on Ren and Stimpy's mission to return the hooves of the Dandy Shaven Yak. Scary Larry of GamePro praised the music as "worth the toll of admission" and the graphics as "very adept by Game Gear standards".[106]
  • The Ren & Stimpy Show: Buckeroo$ was developed past Imagineering, published by THQ and released for the NES in December 1993, and for the SNES in Apr 1995. The game features three levels based on the television episodes "Space Madness", "Out W", and "Robin Höek". Nintendo Power'southward review noted that the NES version'southward graphics "capture the artistic flavor of the cartoon series" just criticized the poor controls and unengaging game elements.[107] Conversely, the SNES version was commended for having more gameplay multifariousness than previous Ren & Stimpy titles, merely the graphics were described equally "[not] very Ren & Stimpyish".[108]
  • The Ren & Stimpy Show: Fire Dogs was adult by Argonaut Games, published by THQ and released for the SNES in March 1994. The game is split up into two singled-out parts; in the commencement part, the histrion controls Stimpy, who must traverse through a firehouse and gather all the equipment for a firetruck in a limited fourth dimension while avoiding the Fire Master, while the second part puts the player in control of both Ren and Stimpy, who must catch items that are thrown out of a burning building. Nintendo Power commended the game'due south graphics, sense of humor, audio, and inclusion of a password characteristic but criticized the lack of variety, limited time allotted for collecting items and repetition of the ii levels.[109]
  • The Ren & Stimpy Show: Time Warp was adult by Sculptured Software, published by THQ and released for the SNES in October 1994. The game's premise centers on Ren and Stimpy'south efforts to navigate through fourth dimension and stop Muddy Mudskipper from ruining history. The reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly praised the game's animations and various attacks but stated that the controls "could exist tweaked up a little more".[110] Next Generation reviewed the game, rating it ane star out of five, and stated that "When Nickelodeon fired creator John Kricfalusi, the centre and soul were sucked out of the pair. This game puts the terminal smash in the coffin."[111]

Aside from these dedicated titles, Ren, Stimpy, and other characters from the series make appearances in the Nickelodeon 3D Flick Maker,[112] Nicktoons Racing,[113] Nicktoons MLB,[114] Nickelodeon Kart Racers 2: Grand Prix,[115] and Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl.[116] A Ren & Stimpy game by Acclaim Entertainment was planned for the Atari Lynx but never released.[117]

Comic books [edit]

Marvel Comics optioned the rights to produce comic books based on Nickelodeon properties in 1992. The initial plan was to have an anthology comic featuring several Nicktoons properties. Marvel produced 44 issues of the ongoing series, along with several specials under the Marvel Cool banner. Most of these were written by comic scribe Dan Slott. I Ren & Stimpy special #3, Masters of Time and Space, was set up as a "Cull Your Own Adventure" and with a fourth dimension travel plot, took Slott six months to plot out in his spare time. It was designed so that information technology was possible to choose a path that would eventually be 20 pages longer than the comic itself. Outcome #6 of the series starred Spider-Man battling Powdered Toast Homo. The editors named the "Letters to the Editor" department "Ask Dr. Stupid", and at least one letter in every column would be a direct question for Dr. Stupid to answer.[118] This comic series lasted from Dec 1992 – July 1996.

Issues

Moving picture adaptation attempts [edit]

Nickelodeon and 20th Century Play a joke on signed a two-year product deal in May 1993 for the development and production of animated and live-action family films, based on new or existing properties. Ren & Stimpy was mentioned equally a possible property for development, along with Rugrats and Doug; however, the show'due south "cynical and gross sense of humor" was a poor fit for a conventional, "warm and fuzzy" family unit film.[119] [120] The deal expired with no movies produced. Nickelodeon would later on kickoff its ain motion-picture show studio after parent company Viacom purchased Paramount Pictures.

At the Wizard World Cleveland convention in March 2017, Camp said that Paramount Pictures rejected a pitch for a Ren & Stimpy feature film because of the "sour taste" left by Adult Political party Cartoon, and they did not desire whatever further connexion with the characters.[121]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "The New TNN Signs With Animator John Kricfalusi". The New TNN printing release. July 17, 2002. Archived from the original on October 22, 2012. Retrieved January 31, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d eastward Thad Komorowski (2013). Sick Little Monkeys: The Unauthorized Ren & Stimpy Story. BearManor Media. ISBN978-1593932343.
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Further reading [edit]

  • Neuwirth, Allan (2003). "Auteur! Auteur! Those creative geniuses who can do it all". Makin' Toons: Inside the Nearly Popular Blithe TV Shows and Movies . Allworth Printing. ISBN978-1581152692.
  • Langer, Mark (2004). "Ren & Stimpy: Fan Civilization and Corporate Strategy". In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics of America'southward Merely Television receiver Channel for Kids. New York University Press. ISBN978-0814736524.
  • Thad Komorowski (2013). Sick Piddling Monkeys: The Unauthorized Ren & Stimpy Story. BearManor Media. ISBN978-1593932343.

External links [edit]

Media related to Ren and Stimpy at Wikimedia Commons

  • "The Ren & Stimpy Bear witness".
  • The Ren & Stimpy Show at IMDb
  • Ren Stimpy Online
  • Ren and Stimpy at Don Markstein'south Toonopedia. Archived from the original on January 9, 2017.
  • Caseen Gaines; Mathew Klickstein (June 17, 2016). "The Oral History Of 'Nicktoons', Part 4: 'The Ren & Stimpy Show' Was A Triumph Of Cultural Subversion". Retrieved June 19, 2016.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ren_%26_Stimpy_Show

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