Misterjaw

Last updated
Misterjaw
Misterjaw title 1976.jpg
Title card
Portrayed by Arte Johnson
In-universe information
Species Great White Shark
Gender Male
Misterjaw (left) with sidekick Catfish (right) in Merry Sharkman, Merry Sharkman Misterjaw 1976.jpg
Misterjaw (left) with sidekick Catfish (right) in Merry Sharkman, Merry Sharkman

Misterjaw is a 34-episode cartoon television series, produced at DePatie-Freleng Enterprises in 1976 for The Pink Panther Laugh and a Half Hour and a Half Show television series on NBC. [1] Reruns continued on the Think Pink Panther Show on NBC through September 3, 1978.

Contents

Plot

Misterjaw (voiced by Arte Johnson) was a blue-colored great white shark (who wore a purple vest with white collar, a black bow tie and black top hat) who liked to leap out of the water and shout "HEEGotcha!" or "Gotcha!" at unsuspecting folks who would run off in terror. He spoke with a German accent and was known to mispronounce words, such as "knucklehead" pronounced as "ka-nucklehead". He also had a sidekick, a green-scaled, brown bowler hatted Brooklyn-accented catfish named Catfish (voiced by Arnold Stang) who usually referred to Misterjaw as "Boss" or "Chief"; Misterjaw usually called Catfish either "pal-ly", "fella" or "sonny" when in a good mood, or names like "dumbkoff", "ka-nucklehead" or "macaroni brain" when irritated. [2] At times, Misterjaw would mistakenly address his sidekick as "Dogfish", only to correct himself a split second later by saying "I mean, Catfish".

The primary goal of Misterjaw and Catfish was to catch Harry Halibut (voiced by Bob Ogle). In several instances, the duo were pursued by Fearless Freddy the Shark Hunter (voiced by Paul Winchell) in "Merry Sharkman, Merry Sharkman" and "To Catch a Halibut".

All entries were directed by Robert McKimson (who died suddenly after production was completed) with co-direction from Sid Marcus and produced by David H. DePatie and Friz Freleng. The music and score for the series were composed by Doug Goodwin. A brief version of the John Williams Jaws theme was used with the variation of the two-note theme. None of the shorts contained any credit information; only the series title, episode title, 1976 copyright and end titles were shown. All episodes include a laugh track.

Episodes

All episodes were directed by Robert McKimson and Sid Marcus.

  1. "Flying Fool"
  2. "Shopping Spree"
  3. "To Catch a Halibut"
  4. "Beach Resort"
  5. "Monster of the Deep"
  6. "Showbiz Shark"
  7. "Aladdin's Lump"
  8. "Little Red Riding Halibut" (a parody of Little Red Riding Hood )
  9. "The Codfather" (a takeoff of The Godfather and the earlier DePatie–Freleng Enterprises cartoon series The Dogfather )
  10. "Davey Jones' Locker"
  11. "Flying Saucer"
  12. "The Shape of Things"
  13. "Caught in the Act"
  14. "Merry Sharkman, Merry Sharkman" (a takeoff of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman )
  15. "Sea Chase"
  16. "Aloha, Hah, Hah!"
  17. "Never Shake Hands with a Piranha"
  18. "Stand-In Room Only"
  19. "The Fishy Time Machine"
  20. "Transistorized Shark"
  21. "The $6.95 Bionic Shark" (a takeoff of The Six Million Dollar Man )
  22. "Moulin Rogues"
  23. "Holiday in Venice"
  24. "Shark and the Beanstalk" (a parody of Jack and the Beanstalk )
  25. "The Aquanuts"
  26. "Cannery Caper"
  27. "Fish Anonymous"
  28. "Maguiness Book of Records" (a takeoff of the Guinness Book of World Records )
  29. "Cool Shark"
  30. "Deep Sea Rodeo"
  31. "Mama"
  32. "Easy Come Easy Go"
  33. "No Man's Halibut"
  34. "Sweat Hog Shark" (a reference to Welcome Back, Kotter )

Episodes 2, 3, 5, 13, 21, 22, and 26 were pulled from NBC's 1977-1978 reruns of the show.[ citation needed ]

Production notes

Home video

VHS

Misterjaw Cartoon Festival Featuring Monster of the Deep was released for VHS on 1987 as part of the "Viddy-Oh for Kids". It contains the first five episodes of the series.

DVD / Blu-ray

The complete series was digitally remastered, issued on its own two-disc Blu-Ray/DVD collection (the first 17 shorts on disc 1 and the last 17 shorts on disc 2) by Kino Lorber (under license from MGM). [3] It was released on April 24, 2018. [4]

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References

  1. Woolery, George W. (1983). Children's Television: The First Thirty-Five Years, 1946-1981, Part I: Animated Cartoon Series . Scarecrow Press. p.  222. ISBN   0-8108-1557-5 . Retrieved 1 April 2020.
  2. Markstein, Don. "Misterjaw". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  3. "The Pink Panther Show DVD news: Announcement for Kino Lorber Cartoon Volumes | TVShowsOnDVD.com". Archived from the original on 2016-05-09. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
  4. Update (Including New Street Date, Artwork Extras) for 'MisterJaw: The DePatie-Freleng Collection'