Do you know what I find even
more annoying than constant Hollywood reboots of successful properties? Critics
constantly complaining about how Hollywood likes to reboot successful
properties. If bringing back a famous TV show or film series to wring even more
cash out of an eager fanbase is lazy, then trotting out this same old grievance
certainly is as well. Reboots have been around a lot longer than objectors to
the practice would have you believe, and I’m sure that we’ll all be getting yet
another recast of Spider-Man long after the moon has fallen and the sun has
burnt out. The only thing that you can really ask for is that they are done
right, and I’m happy to report that Hulu’s recent revival of 90’s darling Animaniacs is one such reboot.
Last
seen on TV in 1998, Yakko, Wakko, and Dot are back in their water tower and
better than ever. Along for the ride are the equally iconic Pinky and the
Brain, who, like the Warners, are voiced by their original voice actors under
returning executive produce Steven Spielberg (the Warners and the mice
are the only returning main cast members, by the way, which I
don’t mind; I was never a fan of the gangster pigeons or the Bernadette Peters
cat). Irreverent and offering hilarity to both kids and adults alike, it is
easy to fall into the groove of this new series as if it were a natural, if
long-awaited, coda to the original run. After the initial episode gets our cast
caught up to the current times, the familiar structure of the old series
returns: A Warner siblings segment starts each episode, followed by a Pinky and
the Brain segment, followed by another shorter Warner segment. It’s all very
familiar, and I mean that in the best possible way.
It is not the exact same
beast, of course: Thanks to new writers and a showrunner that hails from Family
Guy, it feels like the balance between kid humor and adult humor that the
original had may have shifted a wee bit to the adult side in the new episodes
in order to satisfy the now-grown fans of the ’95-’98 series. Don’t get me
wrong… the show is not adult by any stretch of the
imagination; you can (and should!) still watch it with your kids. It’s just a
tiny bit less innocent and a little more meta. The satire also doesn’t seem
quite as subtle as it once was in certain places, and some might complain about
the lampooning of certain political figures and ideas (to them I would like to
point out that the original had Bill Clinton in its theme song).
But despite a few quirks, there
is no denying that this is a series lovingly cut from the same cloth as the
original. There is even an entire albums’ worth of new songs spread across the
episodes to enjoy, although I doubt any of them will be as helpful as the U.S.
presidents song was to me in AP U.S. History. This is, simply, a reboot down
right.
Animaniacs Season 1, as well as the
entirety of the original series, is now available on Hulu.
This
review was first published in The Keizertimes on December 11th, 2020. Visit at http://keizertimes.com/
Hindsight: Review is fine. Don't feel too eloquent this morning so let's leave it at that.
Is it technically a reboot? Or is it a continuation? And should we even make that distinction?
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