Talespin Episode 1

  
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  2. Talespin Episode 1 In Hindi
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TaleSpin

Genre

Jan 05, 2016  Talespin Volume 11 DVDRip x264 AC3 Hindi FMD Release Segment 0 mpeg4. Kobayashi lives alone in an apartment, until one day, Tooru appeared and they ended up living together. Tooru looks down on humans as inferior and foolish, but having been saved by Kobayashi-san, she does everything she can to repay the debt and help her with various things, although not everything goes according to plan. 121 rows  The following is an episode list for the Disney animated television series TaleSpin. The majority of the series and storylines are stand-alones and bear little significance in the order they are aired. 'Plunder & Lightning: Episodes 1 through 4' September 7, 1990 In the series. TaleSpin Season 1 Episode 62. TaleSpin Season 1 Episode 63. TaleSpin Season 1 Episode 64. TaleSpin Season 1 Episode 65. In part two of this exciting adventure, Baloo and Kit are captured by the villainous Don Karnage and his gang of pirates. Baloo, however, is severely down in the dumps and out of confidence because of him crashing the Sea Duck into the ocean. Fnaf 3 pc free download.

Format

Created by

Directed by

Larry Latham
Robert Taylor
James T. Walker
Ed Ghertner

Starring

Ed Gilbert
R.J. Williams
Sally Struthers
Janna Michaels
Jim Cummings
Tony Jay
Pat Fraley

Opening Theme

Number of seasons

Number of episodes

Production

Producer(s)

Robert Taylor
Ed Ghertner
Larry Latham
Jamie Mitchell
James T. Walker

Running time

Production company(s)

Walt Disney Television Animation
Wang Films Productions Co., Ltd.
Walt Disney Animation (Japan), Inc.
Walt Disney Animation France

Broadcast

Original channel

Picture format

Audio format

Original run

External links
IMDb pageTV.com page

TaleSpin is an American animated television series based in the fictional city of Cape Suzette. It first aired in 1990 as part of The Disney Afternoon starring characters from Disney's1967 animated feature The Jungle Book. The name of the show is a play on 'tailspin': the rapid, commonly fatal descent of an aircraft in a steep spiral. The two words in the show's name, tale and spin are a way to describe telling a story. The show is one of the nine Disney Afternoon shows to use established Disney characters as the main characters, with the others being Darkwing Duck, DuckTales, Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers, Goof Troop, Bonkers, Quack Pack, Aladdin, and Timon & Pumbaa.

Background

After a preview of The Disney Afternoon that aired on the Disney Channel in May 1990, the series began its run in September of the same year. The original concept was embodied in the introductory television movie Plunder and Lightning which was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (Prime Time for Programming One Hour or More) in 1991 and was later re-edited into four half-hour episodes for reruns. The show was often seen either on its own as a half-hour show, or as part of the two-hour syndicated series The Disney Afternoon. TaleSpin ended on its 65th episode which ran in 1991, later nominated for another Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (Entire Series) in the same year. However, reruns continued to be shown on the Disney Afternoon through 1994. Afterwards, it was moved to the Disney Channel and later to Toon Disney.

Several of the characters are loosely based on characters from Disney's animated film version of The Jungle Book: in particular Baloo, the hot-shot pilot hero of the series; Louie, the owner of Baloo's favorite bar; and Shere Khan, a business tycoon who appears in many episodes. Kit seems to be a stand-in for Mowgli, since Baloo calls him by the same nicknames his Jungle Book counterpart called Mowgli, like 'Little Britches' and 'Baby Bear'. Kit Like Mowgli Before Him Calls Baloo Papa Bear

Also, many of the series concepts seem to be based on the 1982ABC series Tales of the Gold Monkey, including the main concept of a cocky flying boat cargo pilot and his rocky relationship with his girlfriend, his scatterbrained mechanic sidekick, the era, and designs of the aircraft and costumes, the Pacific Islands setting, the secondary character relationships, even the visual appearance of the lagoon. Also, the protagonists of both series fly planes named for waterfowl (Cutter's Goose and Sea Duck) and are regular denizens of taverns named 'Louie's.'

There are also many similarities to Hayao Miyazaki's film Porco Rosso about an anthropomorphic pig who flies a seaplane and fights air pirates. While the film was released in 1992 (two years after TaleSpin had already aired) Porco Rosso is based on Miyazaki's manga, Hikōtei Jidai which was first published in 1989.

The series was largely developed by writers Jymn Magon and Mark Zaslove, who were also the Supervising Producers on the series as well as Story Editors. There were four production teams, each one headed by a Producer/Director: Robert Taylor, Larry Latham, Jamie Mitchell, and Ed Ghertner.

Synopsis

Main article: TaleSpin episode list

TaleSpin is set in the fictional city - state of Cape Suzette (a pun on the pancake dish, Crêpe Suzette), a harbor town protected by giant cliffs through which only a small opening exists. The opening in the cliffs is guarded by anti-aircraft artillery, preventing flying rabblerousers or air pirates from entering the city. Characters in the world of TaleSpin are anthropomorphic animals. The timeframe of the series is never specifically addressed, but appears to be in the mid to late 1930's, probably the year 1937; the helicopter and jet engine are experimental devices and most architecture is reminiscent of the art deco style of that period. World War I ended 'nearly 20 years ago', and radio is the primary mass medium (In one episode, the local station is identified as 'K-CAPE'). Also, in one episode the characters talk about the newly invented jet-motor and the possibility of flying faster than the speed of sound.

The series centered on the adventures of bush pilot Baloo the bear, whose failing air cargo freight business is bought out by Rebecca Cunningham, and renamed 'Higher for Hire'. An orphan boy and former Air Pirate, the ambitious Kit Cloudkicker, attaches to Baloo and becomes his navigator. He sometimes calls him 'Papa Bear'. Together, they are the crew of Higher for Hire's only aircraft, a modified Conwing L-16 named the Sea Duck. From there, the series follows the ups and downs of Higher for Hire and its staff, sometimes in the vein of old action-adventure film serials of the 1930s and '40s like Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Their adventures often involve encounters with a gang of Air Pirates led by Don Karnage, representatives of Thembria, which is a parody of the Stalinist Soviet Union inhabited by anthropomorphic warthogs, or other, often even stranger obstacles.

The relationship between Baloo and Rebecca owes something to the screwball comedy films of the 1930's. It's even more closely patterned after the later years of the television sitcom Cheers—in both shows, a buttoned-down businesswoman named Rebecca takes the reins of a struggling company, then hires its previous owner (a fun-loving but irresponsible slacker) to do most of the work for her.

A video game by Capcom was also released on the NES and Game Boy. Sega produced a different version for the Sega Genesis and Sega Game Gear. A third incarnation was produced by Hudson Soft for the TurboGrafx-16.

Famed Uncle Scrooge comic writer and artist Don Rosa contributed with episode 5, 'I Only Have Ice for You' and episode 9, 'It Came From Beneath the Sea Duck'.

Home video releases

Main article: TaleSpin videography

Controversy

Banned episodes

Two episodes of TaleSpin drew varied amounts of controversy, enough for one episode to be temporarily banned and the other to be permanently banned.

The first of these, the episode 'Last Horizons', was temporarily banned and taken off the air. Investigation of the event has since revealed that the reason for its temporary removal was the alleged stereotyping of Asians. The villain in the episode is an anthropomorphic panda Emperor named Wan Lo (voiced by actor Robert Ito) living in a mock-pre-WWII Asian nation called 'Panda-La', who takes Baloo into his country to exploit his naiveté and attacks Cape Suzette. There is a reference how their lust for conquest is not shared by all of their species with 'Good Pandas especially dislike us.'

The fictitious nation may have been a take on Japan, which attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on December 7, 1941. That incident ushered America's entry into the Second World War.

Talespin Episode 18

The second episode, 'Flying Dupes' (coincidentally the last of the series) was aired for the first time on August 8, 1992 and immediately pulled from the lineup, not to be seen again for over a decade. It aired once on Toon Disney, possibly by mistake, and has never been re-broadcast since. Considered by Disney to be a banned episode, the apparent reason for this episode's permanent removal from the airwaves is the terrorist theme associated with it. Despite this ban, the episode was aired repeatedly by independent stations, including Seattle-based KSTW-TV and Family Channel in Canada. The two banned episodes are also aired on German TV (dubbed) whenever the series is broadcast.

The general synopsis of the episode begins with Baloo being asked to deliver a goodwill present (a cuckoo clock, he is told) to the High Marshall of Thembria from Cape Suzette. Baloo is unaware until the end of the episode that the package actually contains a time bomb planted by munitions manufacturers who wish to provoke a war between Thembria and Cape Suzette in order to boost weapons sales. It's also possible the 9/11 attacks contributed to the permanent ban.

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Voice impersonation

Another controversy related to TaleSpin involved the character Louie. In 2001, the widow of Louis Prima, who had voiced the scat singing orangutan in The Jungle Book, filed suit against Disney for 'breach of contract, non-payment of royalties, unjust enrichment, fraud and negligent misrepresentation'. At issue were back royalties owed for profits made from video and DVD sales of The Jungle Book and unauthorized use of her husband's voice and its likeness in shows like TaleSpin (Jim Cummings' impersonation of Prima's voice was near-perfect).

Although the case was eventually settled out of court, Disney has since chosen to avoid any further trouble and has refrained from using the character in anything else. It was due to this lawsuit that Louie was conspicuously absent from The Jungle Book 2 (2003); he is the only major Jungle Book character to not appear in the 2003 film. Additionally, an episode of House of Mouse included a similar-looking character referred to as Louie's twin brother, King Larry.

Comics

Main article: TaleSpin (comic book)

A monthly comic book based on the show was published by Disney Comics in 1991, running for seven issues (eleven, counting a four-issue mini-series based on the series premiere). Bobby JG Weiss was the writer for issues 1-4 and 6-7. As issue 5 was adapted from the episode 41, 'The Old Man and the Sea Duck', Weiss only is credited for adaptation.

The comic's cancellation seven months later terminated several planned stories that would have revealed pieces of background for the main characters. Issue 7 explored Kit's past, and how he joined up with the pirates. According to the letter page in #3, a planned story for the comic's annual would have explored the origin of the Iron Vulture. #4-7 would have letters 'answered' by the characters.

Subsequent comic stories were also printed in Disney Adventures from 1990 to 1995, one of which was notably reprinted in the Summer 2006 issue of Disney Adventures Comic Zone Magazine. Two new stories also appeared in The Disney Afternoon comic book published by Marvel Comics.

Talespin Episode 1 In Hindi

Gallery

The Disney Wiki has a collection of images and media related to TaleSpin.

Videos

Episode
TaleSpin Promo footage
TaleSpin Intro
TaleSpin Series Promo

Trivia

  • Pat Fraley and Ed Gilbert also worked together on unrelated TV shows such as Centurions: Power Xtreme and BraveStarr.
  • R.J. Williams and Ed Gilbert also worked together on the unrelated TV show Kissyfur.
  • Animating the flying sequences for the Sea Duck, along with the Pirate Fighters and several other planes seen in the show, was done with computer animation. However, certain sequences were also done with hand drawn animation. In comparison with the computer animation, the hand drawn animation sequences were heavily out of perspective, resulting in a dozen errors that were seen in the show.
  • Even though TaleSpin was replaced by Aladdin in the Disney Afternoon in 1994, its characters Baloo and Louie still appeared in Mickey's Starland Show which ran until 1996.
  • The youngest known male voice is Whitby Hertford, who played the voice of Ernie (8 years old).
  • Jim Cummings did the most male voices for TaleSpin with nearly 40 different voices overall.
  • Donald Duck Comics writer Don Rosa wrote two episodes for TaleSpin: 'I Only Have Ice For You' and 'It Came From Beneath the SeaDuck'.
  • There were a total of five directors in TaleSpin.
  • TaleSpin was Disney's only TV series to hire an Eastern European writer (Martin Donoff).
  • There were a total of just seven story editors for the entire TaleSpin series.
  • Jim Cummings is the only voice who plays the role of two of the main characters in TaleSpin. (Don Karnage and Louie).
  • TaleSpin was partially based on the 1980s TV series 'Tales Of The Golden Monkey' with Stephen Collins, the dad from '7th Heaven'.
  • The series was set in the harbour town of Cape Suzette, a take off on the pancake dish 'crêpe suzette'.
  • Cape Suzette was referenced in the 2017 DuckTales episode 'Woo-oo!', suggesting that the setting of TaleSpin may be part of a shared universe, at least in the reboot timeline Don Karnage has appeared in a Couple of Episodes and A Grown up Kit and Molly will appear in Season 3

External links


v - e - d
Media
TaleSpinWalt Disney's World on Ice: Double Feature.. Live!Raw ToonageNES gameGenesis gameVideographySoundtrackComic book
Characters
BalooKit CloudkickerRebecca CunninghamMolly CunninghamWildcatLouie LamountAirplane JaneClementine ClevengerKatie DoddPrincess GraceKing AmokLotta LamourPrince Nevarhas Bin-BroakBandar-logCaptain William StansburyJoe MageeDoctor CooperRick SkyWhistlestop JacksonNanukMyra FoxworthyDetective ThursdayInspector BurrowOscar VandersnootShere KhanKhan's PilotsDon KarnageAir PiratesIvanod SpigotSergeant DunderJack CaseDaring Dan DawsonAce LondonGeneral PattonTrader MoeThaddeus E. KlangKitten KaboodleIgnatiusDr. AxolotlDr. ZibaldoBuffy and Muffy VanderschmereDouglas BensonPrince RudolfChancellor TrampleEmperor Wan LoProfessor Martin TorqueSeymourCovingtonMacKneeSheriff Gomer Cleghorn and Deputy WendellCrazy EdieCool Hands LukeHans and Helga
Episodes
'I Only Have Ice for You' • 'Time Waits for No Bear' • 'A Touch of Glass' • 'It Came From Beneath the Sea Duck' • 'The Bigger They Are, the Louder They Oink' • 'The Idol Rich' • 'Stormy Weather' • 'Plunder and Lightning' • 'From Here to Machinery' • 'Mommy for a Day' • 'Molly Coddled' • 'Polly Wants a Treasure' • 'Vowel Play' • 'Bearly Alive' • 'Her Chance to Dream' • 'All's Whale That Ends Whale' • 'The Golden Sprocket of Friendship' • 'For a Fuel Dollars More' • 'A Bad Reflection on You' • 'On a Wing and a Bear' • 'A Star is Torn' • 'A Spy in the Ointment' • 'The Balooest of the Bluebloods' • 'A Baloo Switcheroo' • 'Whistlestop Jackson, Legend' • 'Double or Nothing' • 'Feminine Air' • 'Last Horizons' • 'Flight of the Snow Duck' • 'Save the Tiger' • 'The Old Man and the Sea Duck' • 'War of the Weirds' • 'Captains Outrageous' • 'The Time Bandit' • 'For Whom the Bell Klangs' • 'Citizen Khan' • 'Gruel and Unusual Punishment' • 'Jolly Molly Christmas' • 'My Fair Baloo' • 'Waiders of the Wost Tweasure' • 'Flight School Confidential' • 'Bringing Down Babyface' • 'Jumping the Guns' • 'In Search of Ancient Blunders' • 'Louie's Last Stand' • 'Sheepskin Deep' • 'Pizza Pie in the Sky' • 'Baloo Thunder' • 'Bullethead Baloo' • 'Destiny Rides Again' • 'Mach One for the Gipper' • 'Stuck on You' • 'The Sound and the Furry' • 'The Road to Macadamia' • 'The Ransom of Red Chimp' • 'Your Baloo's in the Mail' • 'Paradise Lost' • 'The Incredible Shrinking Molly' • 'Bygones' • 'Flying Dupes'
Locations
Cape SuzetteHigher for HireLouie's PlaceWildcat's HouseboatKhan IndustriesThembriaPirate IslandWalla-Walla-Bing-BangMacadamiaTinabulaPanda-La
Songs
Spin ItI'm GoneHome is Where the Heart IsSky PiratesMonkey In Your TankFriends for Life
Objects
Sea DuckKhan TransportIron VultureSpruce MoosePirate FightersIdol of the Spirit-SwitcherThe Ruby WingsThe Three Bells of Tinabula
See also
The Jungle BookThe Disney Afternoon


v - e - d
Shows
Adventures of the Gummi Bears (1985-90) • DuckTales (1987-90) • Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers (1989-90) • TaleSpin (1990-91) • Darkwing Duck (1991-92) • Goof Troop (1992-93) • Bonkers (1993-94) • Aladdin (1994-96) • Gargoyles (1994-97) • The Shnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon Show (1995) • Timon & Pumbaa (1995-98) • Quack Pack (1996) • Mighty Ducks (1996-97)
Shows aired only in international versions
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1988-91) • Donald's Quack Attack (1992-93) • The Little Mermaid (1992-94) • 101 Dalmatians: The Series (1997-98) • Mickey Mouse Works (1999-00) • The Legend of Tarzan (2001-03) • Kim Possible (2002-07) • Lilo & Stitch: The Series (2003-06) • W.I.T.C.H. (2004-06)
Other media
SoundtrackDisney Afternoon AvenueComic bookVinylmationThe Disney Afternoon: The Making of a Television Renaissance
See Also
Disney Afternoon Theme


Talespin Episode 13

v - e - d
Disney Afternoon Era: 1985–96
The WuzzlesAdventures of the Gummi BearsDuckTales (1987)The New Adventures of Winnie the PoohChip 'n Dale Rescue RangersTaleSpinDarkwing DuckGoof TroopThe Little MermaidRaw ToonageBonkersMarsupilamiAladdinGargoylesThe Shnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon ShowTimon & PumbaaQuack PackMighty Ducks
One Saturday Morning Era: 1996–2002
Jungle CubsRecessPepper AnnNightmare Ned101 Dalmatians: The SeriesHerculesMickey Mouse WorksThe WeekendersTeacher's PetBuzz Lightyear of Star CommandHouse of MouseLloyd in SpaceThe Legend of TarzanTeamo Supremo
Playhouse Disney Era: 1998–2011
PB&J OtterMickey Mouse ClubhouseMy Friends Tigger & PoohSpecial Agent Oso
Disney Channel Era: 2003–present
Kim PossibleFillmore!Lilo & Stitch: The SeriesDave the BarbarianBrandy & Mr. WhiskersAmerican Dragon: Jake LongThe Buzz on MaggieThe Emperor's New SchoolThe ReplacementsPhineas and FerbFish HooksGravity FallsMickey MouseWander Over YonderStar vs. the Forces of EvilDescendants: Wicked WorldMilo Murphy's LawRapunzel's Tangled AdventureDuckTales (2017)Big Hero 6: The SeriesBig City GreensAmphibiaThe Owl HouseMonsters At WorkThe Curse of Molly McGee
Jetix Era: 2004–2009 (Jetix Animation Concepts)
Super Robot Monkey Team Hyperforce Go!Get EdYin Yang Yo!
Disney XD Era: 2007/2009–present
Kick Buttowski: Suburban DaredevilMotorcityTron: UprisingRandy Cunningham: 9th Grade NinjaThe 7DPenn Zero: Part-Time HeroPickle and PeanutFuture-Worm!Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer
Disney Junior Era: 2011–present
Jake and the Never Land PiratesSofia the FirstThe Lion GuardElena of AvalorMickey and the Roadster RacersFancy NancyThe Rocketeer

Talespin Volume 1 Episode List

Discussions about TaleSpin

Talespin Episode 11

  • Ducktales and three other classic Disney shows now on iTunes

    • Yet another classic Disney toon added to iTunes and they go for uppercase closed captioning once again! When is there gonna be one Disney s..
  • Did Baloo Ever Adopted Kit Cloudkicker?

    • Well to be honest. I think Kit should halved been a son to Rebecca and Baloo, and a brother to Molly.
    • I'm going to say verbally and I think In the end quite likely the left it ambiguous but i think Baloo spent the rest of his days raising ..