The Magilla Gorilla Show
The Complete Series

Hanna-Barbera
539 min. / Color / 1.33:1 / DTS: HD 2.0 Mono / SDH
Warner Archive Blu-ray $29.99

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Available from Movie Zyng

Wasn’t that a time?

So much of what we who love classic films and TV shows write about was before our time, and so other than commercial TV showings they’re not the same touchstone for us as they were for our elders. (Chaplin’s Modern Times, for example, the movie that made me fall in love with movies, was more than 20 years old before I was born). It isn’t until the early-to-mid 1960s, when my big brudder brung me to all the new Hammer, Poe, and Godzilla monster movies and TV was adorned with a variety of colorful cartoon shows, that my personal consciousness kicks in for new media releases, including today’s topic, an affable but hard-luck ape named Magilla, whose life and career is chronicled in the new release from the Warner Archive.

The Magilla Gorilla Show, sponsored by Ideal toys, debuted in syndication in January, 1964, the sixth of the “comedy trio” shows made for TV by Hanna-Barbera. These shows, as opposed to the groundbreaking The Ruff and Reddy Show or the prime-time The Flintstones, featured a lead character and two supporting cartoon series, plus the requisite funny bumpers and toy commercials. Magilla debuted on WEWS channel 5 in Cleveland, where we could also enjoy Huckleberry Hound, Augie Doggie and Doggy Daddy, Yogi Bear, Pixie & Dixie with Mr. Jinx, and the other popular H-B cartoons characters.

The Magilla Gorilla Show

Magilla was a full-grown gorilla in a tiny bowler, bowtie, and oversized shorts held up by suspenders. He lived in the window of Mr. Peebles’ pet shop and ate several times his weight in bananas every day; no matter how low his price went, Magilla never seemed to be able to find a permanent home, mostly because Mr. Peebles never did a background check on prospective buyers: selling a full-grown ape to a famous hunter, for example, is inviting trouble. Many episodes detail Magilla finding a new home only to discover he’s a very bad fit, and – to the chagrin of Mr. Peebles – returning to the pet store just in time for the next Ideal toy commercial (and a bunch of bananas). Ogee is a sweet little girl who’d love to take Magilla home, but even at 2¢ her resources are thin (and her parents are no doubt not enthused; she should've requested a hippo for Christmas). Occasionally the subject matter varies; in “Fairy Godmother” (episode 11), for example, Magilla’s wish is granted and he’s dropped into the jungle to be a REAL gorilla, only to discover it’s not much fun. More typical was “Mad Avenue Madness” (episode 21), in which Magilla is tapped to do commercials for a new car (“So simple even a gorilla can drive it!”) with the predictable result: it may be simple for a typical gorilla, but not for Magilla.

The second segment on each show starred Sheriff “Bing Bing BING!” Ricochet Rabbit, who always said his name that way, and who was, as might be expected, very fast and bouncy. His sidekick was a Chester from Gunsmoke parody called Droopalong Coyote, and in addition to the typical Wild West bandits and horse thieves Ricochet occasionally had to deal with space aliens, ghosts, and other unusual foes. Finally, the third segment starred Punkin' Puss and Mushmouse, a feudin’ hillbilly cat and mouse, and the idea that the violent gunplay in this particular series of cartoons didn’t lead directly to the corralling of violence in kids’ TV shows is difficult to believe. This third segment is almost a non-stop parade of bullets.

The usual gang of H-B voices is present, including Daws Butler, Don Messick, Mel Blanc, Howard Morris, and Jean Vander Pyl; until we watched the shows on this set, however, we hadn’t realized (or hadn’t remembered) that lovable Allan Melvin was the voice of Magilla (and Punkin' Puss, too). The shows contain a plug for Ideal toys, the original Magilla bumper gags between cartoons, and the full “So Long! So Long! So Long!” annoying closing theme song with guest star Peter Potamus.

Bonus material includes a quick bit on Magilla’s music, archive interviews with cast, crew, and cartoon historians and the real joy is seeing the late Mr. Melvin again; and best of all, a half-hour promotional show with George Fenneman that introduced the then-upcoming Magilla show with a sneak preview and a wonderful product placement for Pebbles & Bam-Bam dolls. When The Magilla Gorilla Show was transferred to Saturday mornings after its initial syndicated run, a handful of new cartoons were produced to fill out the schedule, and those are included as well.

Joining The Jetsons, Top Cat, and Jonny Quest, The Magilla Gorilla Show is the first of the classic H-B comedy “threefers” to make its Blu-ray debut and it’s a funny, clever, and colorful introduction to the madcap world of Hanna-Barbera humor, beautifully and meticulously restored for optimal picture and sound. We have high hopes that upcoming releases will feature Huck, Yogi, Quick Draw, and other favorites.

If it made it to a Soaky, darn it, we want it.

“How much is that gorilla in the window? ”