I’m getting into archiving animated media from all countries from my lifetime and a decent bit before (70s-today, animated includes claymation/stop motion/puppetry i suppose through cgi)

Like I’m currently watching lavender castle. Very enjoyable old thing.

I’m looking for weird shit you grew up on. Bonus if it’s dubbed in English but i’m willing to do subtitles to experience the weirdest shit aimed at your youth.

Video links appreciated, if available.

  • Guy Ingonito@reddthat.com
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    29 minutes ago

    From Nelvana, a Canadian cartoon company that has died just recently:

    Dumb Bunnies

    George & Martha

    Maurice Sendak’s Sevin Little Monsters

    Best & Bester

    Birdz

    Blazing Dragons

    Braceface

    Cadillacs and Dinosaurs

    The Day My Butt Went Psycho

    The Detentionaire

    Jacob Two-Two

    Moville Mysteries

    My Pet Monster

    Stickin’ Around

    Bob & Margaret

    Commited

    DeltaState

  • JillyB@beehaw.org
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    2 hours ago

    Seabert

    It’s a French show but it’s also dubbed in English which is how I saw it. It’s about a guy and his pet baby seal and their adventures. Most of it has a pro-environment angle if memory serves. It’s a whacky show for kids. Nobody I know has ever heard of it besides my brother.

  • lost_faith@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    Claymation, look for Pingu ('80-06)

    Other children’s media (not animated) you might want: Captain Kangaroo ('61), The Friendly Giant ('58-85), Fraggle Rock ('83-87), Polka Dot Door ('71-2k), and a french show Passe Partout ('77-92). This with the other suggestions should eat some storage

  • rozodru@piefed.world
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    7 hours ago

    Here in Canada we had a couple shows that stood out.

    First wasn’t Canadian but a British Import but they still showed it a lot here. Count Duckula. Basically this duck is a vampire except he doesn’t drink blood, he’s a vegetarian. And it was kinda like Doctor Who as there were several different “generations” of Count Duckula would would die and come back and each one had it’s own personality with the most recent one, the one the show is about, being a vegetarian vampire.

    Next would be held near and dear to many Canadians my age, The Raccoons. A small group of Raccoons that try to save their forest from deforestation by an evil guy. The thing about the Raccoons was while it was a kids show it had plot points that were very mature and sophisticated that honestly anyone of any age could enjoy it. romance, action, humour, etc were all quite mature. Also the ending theme “Run with us” was a hell of a damn banger. But some of the stories did get quite dark. I remember as a kid honestly being scared of a couple Raccoons episodes. also it’d be a crime for me not to post the awesome ending theme: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEkSzcGIfW0

    But for whatever reason a lot of Canadian cartoons, like The Raccoons, were quite mature. Reboot and Beasties comes to mind (Transformers: Beast Wars for those in the US). Reboot started out fairly light hearted but the story quickly went to a more mature and dark setting. Same with Beasties. Beasties was interesting because in later seasons they had way more callbacks and plot points from the original G1 Transformers 80s cartoon where the show kinda transitioned from being a kids show to one where Teenagers could enjoy it because they watched the original 80s Transformers. Like it took what happened to the original Transformers and matured the story to the point that the show is so incredibly influential to the overall Transformers lore today that most of the plot and story elements still exist.

    finally you have Totally Spies which while likely isn’t a hidden gem it is Canadian. It started out as a joint French/Canadian project but the later seasons were done entirely in Canada. a psychologist could have a field day with that show.

  • GreyEyedGhost@piefed.ca
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    6 hours ago

    I didn’t watch Schnappi as a kid, but I stumbled across it when my kids were young and they appreciated the bizarre stuff it showed. I linked one with the full song, but the one I stumbled across back then had Schnappi smoking a blunt (or maybe a cigarette) and reacting to it. I know barely any German, so all I understand is “Schnappi the Little Crocodile”.

  • DaddleDew@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    I grew up exposed to French and European media. A few shows come to mind.

    Nobody’s Boy: Remi

    If you can find it, it is a powerfully emotional watch. Unfortunately I don’t know if an adequately dubbed or even subbed version is available. It is on YouTube in French but the auto translated subs are awful.

    The Mysterious Cities of Gold

    A great Franco-Japanese classic. Dubbed versions are out there.

    All of the Asterix cartoons are decent and available dubbed as well.

    Fast forward in time to the 90s and the show called Reboot is pretty solid. It was made in Canada and I heard that most Americans never heard of it. The first entirely CGI show. Someone rescued the original high def footage recently too so it should be out there.

    • zout@fedia.io
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      7 hours ago

      The Remi one was also available in Dutch, titled “alleen op de wereld”, alone in the world.

    • SolarMonkey@slrpnk.netOP
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      11 hours ago

      I actually do have reboot, and vaguely recall it being on air where I lived, which wasn’t Canada but close (2hrs drive, we got their OTA signals)

      Im also familiar with asterix, i have some of the animated stuff and have played some of the games even :) good stuff, enjoyable!

      I’ll take a look for the other things, thanks :D

  • Ilandar@lemmy.today
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    10 hours ago

    Lift Off. It aired throughout the 90s and was sort of like a weirder Sesame Street for Australian kids. It occupies a strange place in my brain because it’s one of the first TV shows I ever watched and is therefore memorable in that sense, but it was also so weird that it feels like a dream I had which has been distorted by time.

    Plasmo. I’m not sure if they still do this with kids programming but it was quite common for there to be several of these shows with very short episodes scattered throughout the after-school kids broadcast, usually as gap fillers between the longer shows that would start on the hour or half hour. This one had quite heavy themes for how short and simple it was. One of the characters kinda looked like an Ithorian from Star Wars. That’s all I can remember!