The Ed-touchables / Nagged to Ed

"The Ed-touchables" /
"Nagged to Ed"
Ed, Edd n Eddy episode
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 1 & 2
Directed by Danny Antonucci
Written by "The Ed-touchables"
Danny Antonucci
Jono Howard
"Nagged to Ed"
Danny Antonucci
Jono Howard
Mike Kubat
(uncredited)
Featured music Patric Caird
Original air date January 4, 1999 (1999-01-04)
Running time 22 minutes (11 min. each)

"The Ed-touchables" and "Nagged to Ed" is the first pair of episodes of the animated comedy television series Ed, Edd n Eddy that serves as a half-hour pilot episode for the show. It premiered on Cartoon Network in the United States on January 4, 1999, although it had originally been scheduled to air in November 1998.

The series follows Ed (voiced by Matt Hill), Edd "Double Dee" (voiced by Samuel Vincent) and Eddy (voiced by Tony Sampson), three preadolescent boys collectively known as "the Eds" and unofficially led by Eddy, who live in a suburban cul-de-sac. In "The Ed-touchables", the Eds try to earn money by hunting down the "serial toucher", who has been stealing the cul-de-sac children's belongings, while "Nagged to Ed" chronicles the Eds' first encounter with the obsessive Kanker Sisters, after they lure the Eds' into their trailer park home.

Series creator Danny Antonucci directed both episodes, co-writing "The Ed-touchables" with Jono Howard and "Nagged to Ed" with Howard and Mike Kubat. The score was composed by Patric Caird, who went on to compose the scores for all of the series' episodes. Although Ed, Edd n Eddy was one of Cartoon Network's top-rated shows ever since its premiere and was largely well received, its pilot was met with mixed reviews. The episodes can be bought as part of various season home media releases..

Plot

"The Ed-touchables"

While organizing his room, Double Dee (Samuel Vincent) notices that his magnifying glass is missing. Convinced that it was stolen, he begins to have a panic attack, but is calmed down by Eddy (Tony Sampson). The two then go to Ed's (Matt Hill) house. Not long after they arrive, Ed's younger sister Sarah (Janyse Jaud) comes barging into his room, accusing him of stealing her doll. Ed denies having done so, and Eddy concludes that there is a "serial toucher" on the loose. The Eds spread the word to the other cul-de-sac children, who offer them money if they catch the thief.

The three then form a plan, which has Ed sitting alone on a bench in the playground with a "Don't Touch!" sign around his neck. Jonny (David Paul Grove) soon walks by, carrying his imaginary friend Plank, who is a board of wood. Impressed with Ed's hair cut, Jonny ignores the sign and rubs Plank against Ed's head. Eddy and Double Dee then jump out from behind a nearby bush and capture Jonny, accusing him of being the serial toucher. Eddy interrogates Jonny and Plank after tying them to chairs in Double Dee's garage and hooking them up to a homemade lie detector. However, when they give him no answers, he resorts to using chinese water torture on Plank. This makes Jonny need to use the bathroom and in his desperation, he falsely confesses to the crime. The Eds then collect their money and punish Jonny by trapping him in a tire.

While on their way to buy jawbreakers at the candy store, the Eds are stopped by Sarah who claims to have found her doll under her bed. Double Dee then confesses that he recently found his magnifying glass as well, proving that there never actually was a serial toucher. Despite this revelation, the Eds still decide to spend the money, without freeing Jonny. However, while they are enjoying their jawbreakers, Sarah rolls the tire in which Jonny is trapped in down a hill, knocking the three over. The jawbreakers fly out of their mouths and roll down the street, leaving the Eds to chase after them.

"Nagged to Ed"

Setting out on Double Dee's monthly insect expedition, the Eds venture into a forest. While Double Dee admires the bounty of nature, Eddy discovers a giant spiderweb and fearfully suggests that they leave. His friends are intrigued by its enormous size however, and Ed starts bouncing on the web. Suddenly, nearby voices start chanting the Eds' names. Double Dee and Eddy urge Ed to climb down from the web, but he is unable to break free on his own. After his friends manage to pull him down, the three of them frantically try to run away. Before they are able to escape the forest though, they fall into a muddy swamp and are surrounded by three seemingly ominous figures.

Some time later, the Eds wake up in a trailer home, where three girls are staring down at them. The boys have already been changed out of their dirty clothes and put into clean robes, which the girls inform them each belong to one of their three respective dads. Explaining that they are new to the area, the girls introduce themselves as Lee (Janyse Jaud), Marie (Kathleen Barr) and May Kanker (Erin Fitzgerald). The Eds begin to offer their own introductions, but are stopped short by the sisters who are already familiar with the boys' names. As the Kankers head into the kitchen to prepare food for the Eds, Double Dee anxiously proposes that the three of them leave. However, Eddy stops him, insisting that they stay at least for the free food. Looking around, the boys notice drawings of themselves, each paired with one the Kankers: Ed with May, Double Dee with Marie, and Eddy with Lee. Although left unsettled by this discovery, they eagerly accept the food that is brought out to them and begin to relax, as the Kankers slip a movie into the VCR and go upstairs to freshen up.

When the Kankers return, they make multiple attempts to garner the Eds' attention, but the boys, engrossed with what they are watching on the T.V., ignore them. Angry, and feeling unappreciated, the Kankers start bossing the Eds around, forcing them to clean up the house. Eddy quickly grows annoyed with the situation though, and loses his temper with the Kankers, sending them crying into their room. In a moment of regret, he attempts to apologize, but is told by May to leave and to never return. The Eds gladly accept this, but upon opening the front door, they find the Kankers blocking their way, holding self-made dolls styled to look like the Eds. Dubbing the dolls "Eddy Junior", "Ed Junior" and "Double Dee Junior", the Kankers try to guilt the Eds into staying. However, this only causes the boys to flee in terror. The Kankers look after the Eds longingly as they go and declare their love for them.

Production

Cool-looking animator, Danny Antonucci
Ed, Edd n Eddy creator Danny Antonucci directed and co-wrote the pilot.

As an animator of various Hanna-Barbera children's cartoons, Canadian cartoonist Danny Antonucci was bothered by people who thought that animation was only for children, prompting him to produce edgy adult works such as Lupo the Butcher and The Brothers Grunt.[1] Antonucci was later dared to produce a children's cartoon and accepted the challenge.[2] Antonucci drew the Eds while designing a commercial.[2] Impressed, he spent months designing the show and then faxed a one-page concept sheet to Cartoon Network (CN) and Nickelodeon in 1996.[2] Both responded quickly with high interest, but demanded creative control, to which Antonucci refused.[1] After CN agreed to let Antonucci have creative control,[1] a deal was made that his studio, a.k.a. Cartoon, would produce the series. The show entered production in 1997, making it Cartoon Network's first original series to be produced by an outside production company rather than Hanna-Barbera, as well as the first to by-pass a seven-minute short.[3]

An advocate of hand-drawn animation, Antonucci wanted Ed, Edd n Eddy to be produced in a way akin to cartoons from the 1940s to the 1970s. Consequently, the series was the last to use cel animation; the cels were shipped to Korea for creation of the initial animation, and then later edited back at a.k.a. Cartoon.[1] However, when the negatives arrived back from Korea, they were so dirty, a run through digital noise reduction (DVNR), technology used to clean up dirt and grain digitally as film is transferred to tape, was unavoidable. Antonucci referred to it as "a necessary evil", because it caused large damage to the animation. Upon seeing the harmul effects on the pilot, the percentage of DVNR was minimalized to purify the colors and avoid affecting the image as much as possible.[4]

The episode was directed by Antonucci, who also co-wrote the episodes, "The Ed-touchables" with Jono Howard and "Nagged to Ed" with Howard and Mike Kubat.[5] Both episodes were storyboarded by Scott Underwood, Leah Waldron, James Wootton and Bill Zeats.[5] The score was composed by Patric Caird, who went on to compose the music for the rest of the series.[5] The series was initially scheduled to premiere November 7, 1998 but was moved to November 16, and then finally to January 4, 1999 due to minor post-production delays.[6][7][8]

Reception

Ed, Edd n Eddy was one of Cartoon Network's top-rated shows ever since its premiere, particularly with boys.[9] While Ed, Edd n Eddy went on to garner largely positive reviews, the pilot was met with mixed reactions. Some reviewers were unenthusiastic about the episode. The Hollywood Reporter said the animation was "primitive" and "simplistic" and could "only be described as ugly." He further criticised the characters as "grim and toothy" and the voice work as "glowering".[10] The Times-Picayune wrote: "the funniest thing about Ed, Edd and Eddy is the title."[11] Terrence Briggs of Animation World Magazine wrote a highly negative review, considering Ed, Edd n Eddy the worst Cartoon Network show up to that point and criticising the episodes as "empty adventures" of pure "filler" with characters that were "products from the school of acid-trip caricature".[12]

However, other reviews were positive. After Briggs' review was published, a large number of letters supportive of the show were sent to the magazine, prompting it to "take a second look" at the show, writing a much more positive review, calling it "a fresh show with very different approaches".[13] The Sarasota Herald-Tribune was highly positive of the show and felt that the show's lively animation and slapstick humor recalled "the delight of earlier cartoon era", writing: "In times of old, cartoon characters had eyes that bugged out when they drank something unpleasant, legs that became whirling circles when they ran and bodies that flattened into pancakes when they crashed into slammed doors. Well, they're ba-a-a-ck."[14] The Herald Sun considered Ed, Edd n Eddy an animated mixture of well-known classic TV shows, noting "just imagine Dexter in his laboratory working on some new project for the Cartoon Network when he tunes into The Little Rascals and The Three Stooges. Alfalfa, Spanky, Moe and Curly really excite the wunderkind who decides to extract some DNA from the old TV legends. Into the test tubes with the DNA ... add a little animation and Dexter has Ed, Edd N Eddy".[15]

The pilot was released as part of Ed, Edd n Eddy: The Complete First Season DVD on October 10, 2006,[16] which can be purchased on Amazon.com and the Cartoon Network Shop.[16][17] It is also available for purchase on the iTunes Store, where it can be bought separately, or as a part of season 1.[18] It can also be streamed through Netflix.[19]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Danny Antonucci (October 10, 2006). Ed, Edd n Eddy: The Complete First Season—Interview with the Creator (DVD). Warner Home Video. Event occurs at 0:22–2:34.
  2. 1 2 3 Danny Antonucci (April 24, 2007). Ed, Edd n Eddy: The Complete Second Season—Behind the Eds (DVD). Warner Home Video.
  3. Simensky, Linda (June 22, 1999). "Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy: Three Guys, One 'Toon". Take One.
  4. Amidi, Amid (March 1999). "Digital Noise Reduction: Where'd That Cartoon Go?". Animation World Magazine (3.12). Retrieved August 23, 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 Ed, Edd n Eddy: "The Ed-Touchables / Nagged to Ed"—Credits. Cartoon Network. January 4, 1999.
  6. King, Susan (September 6, 1998). "Wake-Up Calls". Los Angeles Times. Tribune Company. Retrieved May 17, 2013.
  7. K. Bevilacqua, Joseph (September 1998). "Tooning in the 1998 Fall Season". Animation World Magazine (3.6). Retrieved August 24, 2013.
  8. "Cartoon Network delays Ed, Edd n Eddy". Animation World Network. September 16, 1998. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  9. "Cartoon Network Greenlights 26 New Ed, Edd n Eddys". Animation World Network. June 15, 2004. Retrieved May 12, 2012.
  10. "Ed, Edd n Eddy". The Hollywood Reporter (Prometheus Global Media). January 4, 1999.
  11. "'Toon doesn't tickle: Cartoon Network's new series funnier on paper". The Times Picayune (Advance Publications). January 4, 1999.
  12. Briggs, Terence (February 1999). "Ed, Edd n Eddy: Caught in a Circle". Animation World Magazine (3.11). Retrieved July 31, 2008.
  13. Shumway, Matt; Wayne, Lamont (June 1999). "Ed, Edd n Eddy: A Unique Approach". Animation World Magazine (4.3). Retrieved July 16, 2012.
  14. "Ed, Edd n Eddy recalls the delight of earlier cartoon era". The Sarasota Herald-Tribune (Halifax Media Group). January 10, 1999.
  15. "Boys will be boys: Cartoon Network's latest series features the misadventures of 3 awkward adolescents". The Herald Sun (The Herald and Weekly Times). January 6, 1999.
  16. 1 2 "Ed, Edd 'N Eddy: The Complete First Season (1999)". Amazon.com. Retrieved May 28, 2011.
  17. "DVD: Ed, Edd n Eddy - Complete First Season". Cartoon Network Shop. Retrieved May 5, 2012.
  18. "Ed, Edd n Eddy, Season 1". iTunes Store. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  19. "Ed, Edd n Eddy". Netflix. Retrieved August 24, 2013.

External links

Preceded by
Ed, Edd n Eddy (season 1) Succeeded by
Pop Goes the Ed / Over Your Ed
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