Rock Odyssey
Rock Odyssey is an animated feature film produced by Hanna-Barbera for a theatrical release in 1987.[2] Directed by Robert Taylor (but credited to William Hanna and Joseph Barbera on the final print),[3] with storyboards by Pete Alvarado.[4]
Rock Odyssey | |
---|---|
Directed by | Joseph Barbera William Hanna Additional director: Robert Taylor (uncredited) [1] |
Produced by | Joseph Barbera William Hanna |
Written by | Robert Taylor Joseph Barbera Neal Barbera |
Starring | Scatman Crothers |
Music by | Hoyt Curtin |
Edited by | Warner E. Leighton Margaret Webb |
Production company | Hanna-Barbera Productions |
Distributed by | Worldvision Enterprises |
Release date | 1987 (Los Angeles International Animation Celebration) |
Running time | 120 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
The story of a mysterious female teen idol named Laura, who embarks on a journey to find her true love. The movie's soundtrack is set to four decades of classic rock. Scatman Crothers provides the voice of a living jukebox who narrates the story.
Characters
- The Jukebox: Scatman Crothers
- Laura (a.k.a. Peggy Sue)
- Billy (50's Love Interest)
- Bob (60's Love Interest)
- Jack (70's Love Interest)
- True Love
Production notes
Production of Rock Odyssey began in 1981 at Hanna-Barbera's short-lived feature animation unit, as a follow-up project to Heidi's Song. It was intended as a prime-time TV special for ABC, and was mentioned in a fall 1981 H-B trade ad as being slated to air in the spring of 1982, but the project was shelved after executives at H-B and corporate parent Taft Entertainment saw the film's graphic imagery, particularly relating to the 1960s and the Vietnam War. (Subsequently, Robert Taylor left the studio, and H-B closed their feature animation unit, after the box-office failure of Heidi's Song.)[6]
The program was shelved by Hanna-Barbera, who intended to retool the program; at a March 1983 Congressional hearing on children's television, ABC children's programming VP Squire Rushnell mentioned that it was slated to air that year.[7] However, the film remained on the shelf until the mid-80s, at which time a new sequence was added, featuring classic Hanna-Barbera cartoon clips set to "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go". This sequence was intended to bring the film "up to date", since the rest of the soundtrack only covered songs up to 1980. Hanna-Barbera and Worldvision Enterprises made Rock Odyssey available for international television distribution in 1987, and the film is mentioned in trade advertisements from that year. (Ironically, this final completed and released version seems to retain all of the "offensive" scenes which had led H-B to shelve the project back in the early 80s.)
Rock Odyssey has not yet been aired on TV, or released on VHS, DVD or Blu-ray in the United States by Warner Home Video, however, it was screened at the Second Los Angeles International Animation Celebration in July 1987. It has also aired on TV in Spain and several Latin American countries, with the narration dubbed into Spanish.
Despite all this, a poster of Rock Odyssey can be seen in The Flintstones TV movie Hollyrock-a-Bye Baby.
In the fall of 2010, the film was aired (in English) on Boomerang Southeast Asia.
References
- Hanna Barbera's Lost "Rock Odyessy"-Cartoon Brew
- Cartoon Research article on the 1987 production
- MUBI
- PETE ALVARADO Interview
- Animation's Legendary (Semi-) Lost Film-Animation Magazine
- Michael Sporn Animation-Splog » Heidi's Song
- Full text of "Children and television : hearing before the Subcommittee on Telecommunications, Consumer Protection, and Finance of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives, Ninety-eighth Congress, first session, March 16, 1983"
External links
- Rock Odyssey on IMDb
- Rock Odyssey at the Big Cartoon Database
- Rock Odyessy Blog