Biker Mice from Mars

Biker Mice from Mars
Genre Science fiction / Action-Adventure
Created by Rick Ungar
Voices of Rob Paulsen
Dorian Harewood
Ian Ziering
W. Morgan Sheppard
Country of origin United States
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 65 (List of episodes)
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) Brentwood Television Funnies
Marvel Productions (season 1)
New World Animation
Worldwide Sports & Entertainment
Galoob Toys
Distributor Genesis Entertainment
Broadcast
Original channel Syndication
Original run September 18, 1993 – February 24, 1996
Chronology
Followed by Biker Mice from Mars (2006 TV series)
External links
Website

Biker Mice from Mars is a science fiction animated series created by Rick Ungar that began airing in 1993 in the United States and lasted for three seasons before it was cancelled. It followed three anthropomorphic mice motorcyclists named Throttle, Modo, and Vinnie who escaped a war on their home planet Mars before arriving to defend the Earth from the evil that destroyed their homeland (the Plutarkians) and to one day return to Mars. The mice's weapons of choice consist of a Cestus (Throttle's signature weapon), a Laser (Modo's signature weapon), and Flares (Vinnie's signature weapons); thus no blood is shown, no firearms are used and many villains are monsters, aliens, and robots. These elements allowed the show to still be considered suitable for children.[1][2][3]

Contents

Plot

On the planet Mars, there existed a race of anthropomorphic mice who enjoyed motorsports and had a very similar culture and society to that of human beings. At some point in time they were all but wiped out by the Plutarkians, an alien race of obese, foul-smelling, fish-like humanoids who exploit other planets for natural resources because they have wasted all of their own. Three survivors, Throttle, Modo and Vinnie, manage to find a spaceship and escape the Plutarkian takeover but they are soon shot down by a Plutarkian warship and end up crash-landing on Earth in the city of Chicago. There they meet a charming female mechanic named Charlene "Charley" Davidson and discover that the Plutarkians have come to Earth to steal its natural resources. The Biker Mice investigate the crumbling ghetto of the windy city and soon discover that Chicago's leading industrialist, Lawrence Limburger, is actually a Plutarkian who disguises himself as a human. Limburger enlists two henchmen, mad scientist Dr. Karbunkle and the idiotic Greasepit to help him steal Earth's natural resources and send them to Plutark. But the Biker mice from Mars themselves as heroic vigilantes come to save the day and stop Limburger from destroying Chicago, doing it to bring Plutark to justice as payback for the loss and powerful destruction of their home in process. And to defend the Earth from the similar fate. Thus, the Biker Mice become Limburger's chief foils, felling his business tower at the end of nearly every episode.

Characters

The Mice and protagonists

Antagonists

Recurring characters

Episodes

2006 revival

The Biker Mice from Mars returned to TV screens in 2006. The 2006 Biker Mice From Mars series is a continuation of the story.[5]

The new series launched in autumn of 2008 in Italy on Italia 1, and on August 1 of the same year on 4kids FOX. The series is on hiatus in the US, but according to the official website (www.bikermice.tv) will return later in 2009, on 4kids CW.

In the 1990s, the series was repeated on Channel 4 and from 1998-99 on its youth strand T4.

The new 28 episode series began airing in the UK on Toonattik on GMTV (now known at weekends as CITV) on August 26, 2006. [1] However, due to production problems at the studio in the Philippines the series was not finalized until late 2007, resulting in the launch in the USA and many other countries being delayed until 2008 as it still needed to be dubbed.

CITV on ITV2 re-ran the original 1990s series at 07.55 Monday to Friday for a 10 week strip from early September 2006. It was repeated on ITV2 at 08.25 Monday to Friday for 10 weeks from March 27, 2007.

The series also launched successfully in Finland on MTV3 and in Australia on Channel Ten in October 2006.

Despite been successful in Europe, the revival didn't live up to the original series and the fans response was mostly negative.

Video games

A Biker Mice from Mars video game was released by Konami for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1994. The European version features extensive advertisements for Snickers candy bars.

In 2006, Biker Mice from Mars was released based on the 2006 Revival in Finland, Australia & The United Kingdom for the Nintendo DS & Sony PS2 consoles. None of these games received any major positive ratings although the PS2 game was a major sales success throughout Scandinavia.

Comic books

Marvel Comics published a three issue series in the early 1990s. A fourth issue was solicited on the reader's page. Marvel UK published its own series. The whole American series and portions of the British series were published in Germany (also by Marvel UK) in 7 magazine-sized issues from 1994 to 1995.

DVD releases

The first 13 episodes of Season One was released on DVD in the UK by Maximum Entertainment.[6]

In the USA in 2008, Exposure Enertainment had released the 1st season on DVD as a two disc set.[7]

Both the UK and US sets are now currentily out of print.

An online petition demanding the release of the full original series in DVD has so far collected the signatures of several hundred fans from around the world,[8] representing a growing community of fans numbering thousands of people on Facebook.[9]

See also

United States portal
Television portal

References

  1. ^ "Roll Over, Michelangelo, It's The Mice". Newsweek. http://www.newsweek.com/id/121018. Retrieved 2010-03-03. 
  2. ^ Schmeltzer, John (1993-09-19). "3 Mice From Mars A Cause For Hype, Hope". Chicago Tribune. http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1993-09-19/features/9309190291_1_biker-mice-action-figures-plastic-toys. Retrieved 2010-08-28. 
  3. ^ Fowler, James E. (1994-08-19). "The locally conceived 'Biker Mice From Mars' series is seen in more than 50 countries. The stars make a live appearance Saturday.". The Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/1994-08-19/news/va-28817_1_biker-mice. Retrieved 2010-08-24. 
  4. ^ Forman, Ross (1994-11-08). "Cartoon-voice Actor Is All Talk". Chicago Tribune. http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1994-11-08/features/9411080101_1_cool-job-animaniacs-rob-paulsen. Retrieved 2010-08-28. 
  5. ^ Official website
  6. ^ Biker Mice From Mars - Season One [DVD - Universal]. Amazon.com.
  7. ^ Biker Mice from Mars Complete First Season (2 Disc Set) (1993). Amazon.com.
  8. ^ "Biker Mice From Mars onto DVD". petitiononline.com/bikermfm/petition.html
  9. ^ BMFM. Facebook.

External links