¡Mucha Lucha!

¡Mucha Lucha!
¡Mucha Lucha!: Gigante
Format Animated television series
Created by Eddie Mort & Lili Chin
Starring Carlos Alazraqui
Kimberly Brooks
Candi Milo
Country of origin Originally created by Fwak! animation in Sydney Australia [1]
Language(s) English
No. of episodes 52
Production
Running time 22 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Kids' WB
Original run August 17, 2002 (2002-08-17) – February 28, 2005 (2005-02-28)

¡Mucha Lucha! (later known as ¡Mucha Lucha!: Gigante) was an animated television series. It premiered on Kids' WB on August 17, 2002. It was created by Eddie Mort and Lili Chin and produced by Warner Bros. Animation. It is the first animated television series created with Adobe Flash, a program often used for Internet cartoons. The show was also seen on Teletoon in Canada, CITV and Kix! in the UK, and Cartoon Network worldwide (including the US).

The show is set in a town centered around Lucha libre (nearly everyone in the town has a mask and costume and a signature move) and is essentially about the adventures of three children, Rikochet, The Flea and Buena Girl, as they struggle through the Foremost World-Renowned International School of Lucha, where they study.

Contents

Main characters

Season list (Episodes)

Season 1: 2002-2003

  1. Back to School / Weight Gaining
  2. How Rikochet Got His Move Back / Heart of Lucha (also known as Big Bad Flea)
  3. Woulda Coulda Hasbeena / The Anger of Cindy Slam (also known as Gerbil George's Masked world of Luchafun & Wrestletainment)
  4. The Fantastic Backpack / The Naked and the Masked (also known as Got a little bit of obscene)
  5. The Curse of the Masked Toilet / The Mummy with the Golden Mask (also known as Buena Girl Gets Kidnapped)
  6. Bring Your Dad to Lucha Day / Our Founder
  7. Tooth or Dare / Mask Mitzvah
  8. Flea's Fighting Fish (also known as A Little Fishy) / La Flamencita (also known as Dance Disaster)
  9. Will the Real El Rey Please Stand Up? / The Musica Man
  10. Pinball Wizard (also known as Pinball Problems) / Not So Buena Girl (also known as The Fortune Donut)
  11. Honor Thy Lucha (also known as Trading Card Trouble) / Chinche (also known as The Masked Bee)
  12. Timmy of 1,000 Masks (also known as EXPELED) / All Creatures Masked and Small (also known as Doggone It)
  13. Mask Away

Note: "Back to School" was originally planned to be the pilot episode and was originally intended to be shown with, "How Rikochet Got His Move Back", but ended up being paired with "Heart of Lucha" (while "Back to School" is shown with "Weight Gaining") for reasons unknown. Several episodes from this season were adaptated into children's storybooks, most of them being given titles different from the episodes themselves.

Season 2: 2003-2004

  1. Lone Stars / The Littlest Luchadora
  2. The Man from M.A.S.K. / The Flea's Bueno Twin
  3. Nightmare on Lucha Street / Revenge of the Masked Toilet
  4. Calling All Monsters / Pig Out
  5. Thrills and Skills / Party Animal
  6. Dancing with Bugs / Chain of Fools
  7. You Look Radishing (also known as Thief of Radishes) / Lucha, Rinse and Repeat
  8. War of the Donuts / Show Me the Funny
  9. French Twisted / Hungry Like Los Lobos (also known as Los Lobos De Lucha)
  10. Big Buena Sellout / Laying in Ruins
  11. Getting Ahead / Los Fabulosos
  12. Meet the Muertos / Mask Maker
  13. Undercover Flea / Kid Wombat
  14. Churro Overload / Mini Mercado of Doom
  15. La Bruja / El Niño Loco
  16. The Collector
  17. The Brat in the Hat (also known as Los Pantalones) / Election Daze
  18. Late Night Lucha / Flea at Last
  19. Flea's Personal Demons / Virtual Luchadores
  20. Cinco De Piñata (also known as Day of the Piñata) / Poocha Lucha
  21. Run, Lucha, Run / An Epic Tale Of Heroes And Donuts
  22. Attack Of The Luchabots
Video Movie

Note: The theme song from Chicos de Barrio was slightly changed this season. The last four episodes of this season were held over and ended up airing during season 3.

Season 3: 2004-2005 (¡Mucha Lucha!: Gigante)

  1. My Hairy Knuckles / Brains Meets Brawn
  2. Asphalt of Doom / Hot Hot Hot
  3. I was a Pre-Teenage Chupacabra (also known as I Was a Pre-Teen Chupacarbra) / Carnival of Masked Terror
  4. Getting His Goat / 10 Rounds of Trouble
  5. Buena Basura / Shamrock and Roll
  6. Spider and the Flea / The Incredible Penny Plutonium
  7. Dare to Lucha / Monkey Business
  8. Dawn of the… Donuts (also known as Sprinkles) / Yo Ho Ho and a Bottle of Horchata
  9. Big Worm / Medico Mayhem
  10. Banditos de los Muertos / Field of Screams
  11. Slamazon and On… / Buena on Wheels
  12. A Whole Lot of El Rey / Doomien
  13. The Match Before Xmas (also known as A ¡Mucha Mucha!: Gigante Lucha Christmas special or simply The Match Before Christmas)
  14. The Call of the Mild
  15. Niko Sushi's Happy Battle Funtime Dome 3000 / Smarticus
  16. Mars Madness / Fears of a Clown
  17. The Magnificent 3 (also known as Blue Demon)

Spin-off merchandise

A toy line based on the show was released by Jakks Pacific in 2003. In this toy line included "Mix-a-Lot" action figures; these had removable body parts that could be placed on the bodies of other action figures in the series. "Signature Move" action figures were also put out, along with a toy wrestling ring. However, the second series of the toy line was cancelled.

During summer of 2003, DC Comics published a three-issue mini-series of comic books based on ¡Mucha Lucha! All three of the stories featured in these comic books were written by Eddie Mort, and have even been occasionally referenced in the TV series.

  1. El Rey, Come Home!
  2. It's All Buena!
  3. Limbo of the Lost Luchadores!

The show was licensed for a Game Boy Advance video game in late 2003 - Mascaritas of the Lost Code, and also a Sony Playstation 2 video game was slated for release but was cancelled around 2004 - Mysterioso Grande.

See also

External links