OK, I’m just quickly going to review one of the best cartoons on television right now. It’s called the Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack. If you haven’t seen it it airs on Cartoon Network and I believe there are episodes streaming on their website. The show is about a boy named Flapjack that hangs out with a washed up old pirate named Captain K’Nuckles. They live inside of a whale named Bubbie and spend most of their time romping around in Stormalong Harbor, which is a city that is built completely on a doc in the middle of the ocean. Their main goal in life is to adventure their way to the legendary Candy Island. Candy is a highly sought after commodity in Stormalong, subbing for Gold and even for Booze at times.
First of all, the show is downright hilarious, which is the most important thing. The writing style is geared toward the status quo which is a
classic kids show theme. The characters have well defined personalities and it seems like the stories almost write themselves because of that.
Visually, Flapjack is stunning. The world and most of the characters who inhabit it have a real grit to them. Dirty, muddled colors. Most of the sailors of Stormalong are riddled with scars and wrinkles and are just plain ugly, which is beautiful. To contrast that, Flapjack, K’Nuckles, and Bubbie are all very bright and vibrant. There’s a great use of mixed media in the show
which never feels phoned in or gratuitous. Claymation, or even still shots built with clay, are primarily used during dream/fantasy sequences, or for “grossups” (a closeup shot with repulsive details a la John K’s Ren and Stimpy). The ocean is built with what appears as layers of painted on cut paper.
Sometimes the main characters feel like they don’t have much structure to them, which is usually good because it allows them the elasticity they require to display the vast array of emotions they constantly emit. Sometimes they do feel a little wonky or overly simplified, but for the most part it works in the show’s favor. Especially since that simpicity of the main characters is balanced out by the heavily structured tertiary characters who have all that vile detail built into their ugly mugs.
The only thing that disapoints me about this show is that it seems to be of a dying breed. So much of the shows out for kids right now are just not stimulating to watch. Flapjack is a product of a lot of love and labor and it shows. Most shows aren’t doing much with their animation at all. They seem to follow that trend started by the Fairly Odd Parents where everything has to have a four inch thick line on the outside of it so all the characters feel like they’re in a sticker book. It also seems like most shows are just using the same characters and same plot lines we’ve been seeing for a decade. And don’t even get me started on ANIMATED REALITY TELEVISION. Drawn Together was one thing, but now we have shows like Total Drama Island, marketed towards kids. It’s just frustrating that the television industry doesn’t seem to recognize that reality television is the downfall of any sort of stimulating thought the idiot box had left to offer.
That said, there is still hope, and The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack is a great example of that.