Muppet Wiki

Kermiteye.png Welcome to Muppet Wiki!


Please visit Special:Community to learn how you can collaborate with the editing community.

READ MORE

Muppet Wiki
Register
Advertisement
Pic

VHS cover

Allstars1

Baby Kermit and Baby Piggy (soon to be joined by Baby Gonzo) take Michael and Smoke on a trip through the human brain, thanks to the power of imagination

Allstarswall-NEW
Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue video store poster

Video store rental poster.

Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue was a half-hour animated television special aired simultaneously on NBC, CBS and ABC on April 21, 1990, financed by McDonald's.

This special brought together a number of famous cartoon characters, representative of the line-ups of all three networks, as well as syndication -- the Muppet Babies and Garfield (CBS); Winnie the Pooh and Tigger (The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh), Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck (The Bugs Bunny and Tweety Show), and Slimer (The Real Ghostbusters) (ABC); ALF, The Chipmunks, and The Smurfs (NBC); and Huey, Dewey and Louie (DuckTales) and Michaelangelo (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles) from syndication. The purpose of the program was to make youthful viewers aware of the dangers of drug use, and was a joint production amongst the various studios involved, overseen by The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

The plot line centers around a teenage boy named Michael, already struggling with drugs, who is pressured into using harder drugs by his unsavory friends. Also harassing him is Smoke, a malevolent symbolic representation of drug abuse, dressed in a business suit. Michael's younger sister Corey worries about him; her room is littered with familiar toys and merchandise, including a Baby Kermit alarm clock and stuffed Winnie the Pooh. Through some form of psychic connection and mythical anthropomorphism, the various toys, books, and posters of licensed characters awaken to assist her. Once apprised of the situation, through a clinical definition by Chipmunk member Simon of the chemical affects of marijuana, other characters, apparently manifesting from thin air or from the labyrinths of network cross-promotion, join in.

The Muppet Babies are most prominently featured in a sequence in which Kermit, now sans clock mechanism, is suddenly joined by Baby Piggy and Baby Gonzo. Piggy is more interested in romance, while Kermit, "thanks to the power of imagination," takes Michael on a psychedelic tour of his own tortured mind. The trip shows the effects of illegal substances on the brain, or rather, Baby Gonzo's lurid artistic conception. The trio are soon compelled to "abandon brain."

Other highlights, as an array of animated characters lecture Michael incessantly, include Bugs Bunny's impersonation of an officer of the law, a musical number "Wonderful Ways to Say No" which includes an admonition not to be tactless to drug dealers, Baby Piggy spitting Michael out of her mouth, and ALF demolishing The Berlin Wall.

Behind the Scenes[]

Voices[]

Credits[]

  • Executive Producer: Roy E. Disney
  • Producer: Buzz Potamkin
  • Writers: Duane Poole, Tom Swale
  • Voice Director: Hank Saroyan
  • Art Directors: Don Morgan, Takashi
  • Production Executives Committe: Bill Hanna, Mark Glamack, Lee Gunther, Margaret Loesch, Jean McCurdy, Phil Roman, Ken Spears, Michael Webster

International release[]

  • Germany, Austria, Switzerland: The special was simulcast on all major networks in 1990, and once more in 1991, as Comic-Stars gegen Drogen (Comic-Stars Against Drugs). The Bush introduction was replaced with one by Annemarie Renger, former federal parliamentary vice-president of Germany and voluntary, supervisory board chairwoman of "Ronald McDonald" Kinderhilfe (Ronald McDonald House Charity). The special was promoted by McDonald's restaurants.

External Links[]

Wikipedia has an article related to:
Advertisement