Jonny Quest (Picture 4) cartoon images gallery | CARTOON VAGANZA

Jonny Quest (Picture 4) Free Online Cartoon Images Gallery. Jonny Quest (Picture 4) cartoon character and history. Jonny Quest (Picture 4) animated movie and comic. CARTOON VAGANZA


Jonny Quest (Picture 4)

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Jonny Quest 4
Jonny Quest (Picture 4)
Jonny Quest cartoon images gallery 4. Jonny Quest cartoon pictures collection 4.
Production on Real Adventures commenced in 1993. Turner hired a team led by director Dick Sebast, writer Peter Lawrence, and art director Takashi Masunaga. The firm appointed Stephanie Sperber head of the Quest task force in 1994. H-B President Fred Seibert allowed Lawrence to create a new team of companions for Jonny, but Lawrence chose to revive the original group. Sebast and Lawrence decided to make the series as realistic as possible through accurate physics and depictions of machinery. Lawrence emphasized believability, eschewing "ridiculous ... laser guns" for real sidearms. Departures from the classic series included new character designs and the introduction of a new character to the Quest family. Takashi designed Jonny to be "edgy and handsome", and rendered characters in the style of Japanese animation to differentiate from American superhero cartoons.
Jonny Quest (Picture 4)
Jonny Quest cartoon images gallery 4. Jonny Quest cartoon pictures collection 4.
The team used a new character—Race's daughter, Jessie Bannon—to create conflict with Jonny. She debuted in 1986 on The New Adventures of Jonny Quest as a general's daughter, and appeared in the telefilms as Race's daughter by Jezebel Jade. The creative team researched child psychology, ensuring they could depict realistic action and consequences without fueling nightmares. Seibert described the show's theme as "The X-Files for kids", citing difficult questions and mysteries to be posed in each episode
Jonny Quest (Picture 4)
Jonny Quest cartoon images gallery 4. Jonny Quest cartoon pictures collection 4.
Lawrence initially titled the show Jonny Quest's Extraordinary Adventures, but the title changed in 1995 to its final name. Intended for a 1995 release with sixty-five episodes, Real Adventures fell into development hell; roughly thirty scripts and only eight reels were in progress by March 1995. H-B removed Lawrence and Takashi in 1996, hiring John Eng and Cosmo Anzilotti to finish the first twenty-six episodes. Certain sequences necessitated exhaustive work and heavy revision. A new team led by David Lipman, Davis Doi, and Larry Houston finished twenty-six more for broadcast as a separate series named The New Jonny Quest. Time Warner's acquisition of Turner negated this plan, leading to the episodes' release as the second season of Real Adventures. Fred Seibert touted Quest as the "Home Alone of adventure", with "high-tech, multicultural themes" that would appeal to contemporary youth. Promoters promised the new Quest would avoid "mindless violence, chauvinism, xenophobia and insensitivity", addressing historical criticisms of the classic series. Turner also claimed that Quest would appeal to any gender, stating, "Traditionally, action adventure animation may be stronger with boys, but in this case, storylines are being developed to draw girls in ... we're really hoping for a wide berth of viewership.
Jonny Quest (Picture 4)
Jonny Quest cartoon images gallery 4. Jonny Quest cartoon pictures collection 4.

Labels:

Share ARCHIVES

<< Home