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A Pup Named Scooby-Doo
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A Pup Named Scooby-Doo : ウィキペディア英語版
A Pup Named Scooby-Doo

''A Pup Named Scooby-Doo'' is the eighth incarnation of the Hanna-Barbera Saturday morning cartoon ''Scooby-Doo''. This spin-off of the original show was created by Tom Ruegger and premiered on September 10, 1988 and ran for four seasons on ABC and on ''The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera'' as a half-hour program, until August 17, 1991. Following the show's first season, much of Hanna-Barbera's production staff, including Tom Ruegger, left the studio and helped to revive the Warner Bros. Animation studio, beginning with ''Tiny Toon Adventures''.
This was notable for being the last series to star Don Messick as the voice of Scooby-Doo, and one of the few animated series in which someone other than Frank Welker voiced the character of Fred Jones. Messick and Casey Kasem (who voiced Shaggy Rogers) were the only two voice actors from other ''Scooby-Doo'' series to reprise their roles in this version, and both received starring credits for their work.
==Overview and tone==
The new format followed the trend of the "babyfication" of older cartoon characters, reducing the original ''Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!'' cast to junior-high age. (In doing so, the series reintroduced Fred Jones and Velma Dinkley to the show, both of whom had not appeared as regular characters since the 1970s, and erased Scrappy-Doo from the cast.) This new show also used the same basic formula as the original 1969 show: the "Scooby-Doo Detective Agency" (a forerunner of Mystery Inc.) solved supernatural-based mysteries in the town of Coolsville, where the villains (the ghosts and monsters) were always revealed as bad guys in masks and costumes. The biggest difference was the tone of the show: with ''A Pup Named Scooby-Doo'', producer Tom Ruegger built upon the slightly irreverent humor he had established along with producer Mitch Schauer with Scooby's previous unsuccessful incarnation, ''The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo''. This resulted in a wackier, more extremely comic version of ''Scooby-Doo'' that satirized the conventions of the show's previous incarnations. It was not uncommon for the characters to do wild Tex Avery/Bob Clampett-esque takes when they ran into ghosts and monsters.
Animation director and overseas supervisor Glen Kennedy animated many of the wild-take sequences personally. Fred was constantly blaming a character appropriately called "Red Herring" (a pun on red herring) for each and every crime on the show (true to his name, Red was always innocent, except for the one episode in which Fred ''didn't'' blame him) and shots of the characters (and even the ghosts and monsters) dancing were inserted into the obligatory late-80s-pop-rock-music-scored chase sequences. The ghosts and monsters themselves were also more comedic, such as a creature made out of molten cheese, a monster in the form of a giant hamburger, and the skeleton ghost of a dogcatcher. The series also features Scooby and Shaggy as their favorite superhero duo. Shaggy would be the fearless Commander Cool (a combination of Batman and Superman) and Scooby would be his faithful canine sidekick Mellow Mutt (a combination of Krypto, Robin and Ace the Bat-Hound.) In 2013 a direct-to-video puppet movie was released exclusively to US Walmart stores and digital download called ''Scooby-Doo! Adventures: The Mystery Map'', that featured traits similar to that of ''A Pup Named Scooby-Doo''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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