The Huckleberry Hound Show
The Complete Original Series

*
Hanna-Barbera (1958-1961)
36 hrs., 15 min. / Color / 1.33:1 / DTS HD-MA 2.0 MONO
Warner Archive Blu-ray $69.99

Available from
Movie Zyng

Boomer nostalgia, thy name is The Huckleberry Hound Show. Warner Bros. deserves a citation (the good kind, not the traffic kind) for this one, the most fun boxed set release of the year so far.

Following their success with Ruff and Reddy, dog-and-cat pals with a three-year TV run, William Hanna and Joe Barbera pitched a circus-themed cartoon show to Kellogg’s, then sponsors of the live-action Adventures of Superman. Ringmaster Huckleberry Hound would introduce episodes via bumpers (bridging cartoons) featuring himself, a Southern-drawled blue hound dog with a sweet disposition but rotten luck in variety of occupations, yet he normally succeeded in the end; Pixie & Dixie, a pair of affable mice who tangled with Mr. Jinx, who sounded like Marlon Brando in The Wild One and who seems to enjoy playing, well, cat and mouse with his two little friends, never considering eating them and frequently stepping in when another cat tries it although he claims he hates meeces to pieces; and Yogi Bear, who – with his little pal Boo Boo – is intent on escaping from Jellystone Park and, failing that, absconding with as many picnic baskets as he can get his paws on. All of these characters are as well known to us Boomers as our own siblings, only better.

Debuting in the fall of 1958 via syndication in local markets around the country, Huckleberry Hound was an immediate success with children, adults, and even critics, and became the first animated TV series to win an Emmy. Furthermore, it launched a series of popular Hanna-Barbera shows with a similar format: a headliner with two backup stars, beginning with the spun-off Yogi Bear Show, featuring Yakky Doodle & Chopper and Snagglepuss. For the final 2 seasons, Yogi was replaced on The Huckleberry Hound Show with Hokey Wolf and Ding-a-Ling.

This set contains all their cartoons, bumpers, and original commercials, and every episode is a treat from start (the Kellogg’s Corn Flakes rooster introducing Huck) to finish (our stars riding around the circus tent in a car, picking up hitchhiking Kellogg’s mascots like Snap, Krackle, & Pop and Tony the Tiger). I’m sure we all have our favorites – Yogi and Pixie & Dixie being mine – and those of us old enough to remember this stuff have already been on eBay looking for a vintage Huckleberry Hound cereal bowls and Yogi Bear milk cups (both surprisingly affordable). The episodes are clean, bright, colorful (well, some of the vintage commercials, bumpers, and closing credits don’t exist in color) with impeccable sound and easy to operate menus. Bonus material is a mixed bag; we enjoyed the 13 min. featurette on the talented voice master Daws Butler, but the vintage music video and “linguistics professor” explaining Huck’s language-isms wore thin fast. Didn’t matter, the REAL bonus material is the ability to watch full episodes just as they looked in the late ‘50s and early ‘60s only BETTER, because they’re remastered and restored, and the cartoons themselves are funny as well as nostalgic. The 68 episodes are spread across 11 discs (for you CPAs out there, season one was 26 episodes, season two and three were 13 each, and season four was 16 episodes, although some of the cartoons and bumpers were repeated back in the day and here as well).

This is the perfect set to schedule with the kids, grandkids, or just yourself on Saturday morning or anytime. What a treat!

A brilliant cartoon collection that will be watched and enjoyed for years. Kudos to Warner Archive, big time, but they’ve set the bar VERY high for future releases.

Shucks… now I’ll have ta do somethin’ really SNEAKY!