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Growing
up, Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures was one
of those animated programs that was constantly utilizing my
imagination.
Watching the program was always something special and unique for me. I
could
see the characters and go on the adventures with Jonny Quest and those
family
members and friends in and out of Questworld. Re-watching
the show
proved to be much less enjoyable an experience than I was anticipating,
because
in just a few short years it seems to have completely lost my
interests. The
writing is usually flat. You don't feel any genuine connection to these
characters. They tend to seem so one-dimensional in any given moment.
There's something
so by-the-numbers about it all. It doesn't hold up. The
main character of
course is Jonny Quest. He is a blonde haired, blue eyed wonder boy
capable of
accomplishing many incredible feats with unparalleled abilities.
Nothing seems
impossible to him. Of course, he must rely upon his friends Jessi and
Hadji. Both
of these supporting characters feel even more dimensional. Nothing that interesting was developed
regarding realization of these characters. There's also Dr. Benton and
Roger
Bannon as the intelligent adults who everyone can look up to.
The
worst thing about Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures is
how
the plot-lines feel as though they are being pulled from almost
nowhere. You
don't recognize a building plot as a main concern and things seem to
simply
happen just because, you know, things happen. That is underwhelming to
experience
as a series and that is what makes this one of the weaker of
episode-by-episode
standalone-nature series. The
animation is
cringe-worthy. Don't get me wrong; back when the show first aired the
animation
seemed decent quality and the CGI artwork was especially innovative
during a
considerable time where the norm simply wasn't to create that kind of
animated program
to begin with. The Quest World Virtual Reality was convincing because
there was
barely any competition on the CGI animation market back then. It was
new and
exciting. Today, that particular aspect doesn't stand out as well when
we have
become spoiled by the impressive artistry from Pixar Animation Studios
and
other CGI animation front-runners. You come to realize that the
animation
aspect of the show only seemed impressive because of what it had
promised for
the future above anything else. The
kid in me wants to
give this show a massive shout-out for the happy memories I've had
watching it
growing up, and to acknowledge that as a legitimate indication of
high-quality.
Unfortunately, I can't realistically say that when the show does little
to
nothing for me in retrospect. It doesn't really work for me anymore and
I
strongly advise to other fans that checking out the show again by
rental will
be the best way to see if the series still works somehow - for you. My
own Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures ship
has sailed.
The
DVD: Video: Jonny
Quest: The Real Adventures has
somewhat inconsistent video.
Some of the episodes look much better than others, and this seems to
suggest
that Warner Home Video used a variety of sources to pull this release
together.
Certain episodes were impressive enough visually, and others seemed to
be
lacking in just about every way. Nothing was unwatchable; of course, I
merely
failed to notice anything that impressive. Colors were often muted, and
there
were a number of moments where the video had specks of dust and dirt
that
detracted from my own enjoyment. The series is presented in the
original
television broadcast aspect ratio of 1.33:1. Audio: The
2.0
Dolby Digital audio never did much, and a part of that is merely
because of the
source material. I wasn't expecting much from the audio presentation
considering this series isn't as popular as it once was as it only
receiving a
Burn on Demand release. It wasn't that thrilling presentation-wise. You
get
standard audio with decent dialogue reproduction but it has the minimum
level
of clarity and there remains nothing thrilling about the sound mix. Extras: The
only
bonus feature on this release is Journey
into Questworld
(9:23). The feature isn't even mentioned on the
packaging. Don't become too excited about seeing it, though. This is a
fairly
standard EPK featurette about the Questworld aspect of series, the
computer CGI
animation of Jonny Quest: The Real
Adventures: about how it was cutting edge at the time, with
interviews with
some of the people who worked on the series and animation historian
Jerry Beck.
Sounds okay, I guess, but with such a brief running time it hardly
keeps any
interest and doesn't even have much to add to the knowledge-base about
the
show.
Final
Thoughts: Jonny
Quest: The Real Adventures used
to be
one of my all-time favorite animated series. This was one of the few
series
where I legitimately became excited to see an episode and to find out
what
would happen next. Unfortunately, the show doesn't stand the test of
time that
well and is boring, poorly animated, stereotypical, and redundant in
hindsight.
I wish the show was just as charming as I thought it was back when it
originally
aired on television. Sadly, it isn't, and the fans who collected the
first
set might want to revisit the show first. I owned the first box-set,
and
expected to enjoy this one too. Somehow that was just not to be.
Relatively
weak PQ, AQ, and lackluster supplemental material makes this a release
to skip
altogether unless your already a dedicated enough fan and certain that
you
would appreciate the investment. Skip
It. |