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Happy Tree Friends

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Happy Tree Friends
Happy Tree Friends title card
GenreBlack comedy
Splatter
Adult animation
Horror
Created byAubrey Ankrum
Rhode Montijo
Kenn Navarro
Developed byRhode Montijo
Kenn Navarro
Warren Graff
Voices ofKenn Navarro
Rhode Montijo (1999-2005)
David Winn
Dana Belben (2000-2005)
Ellen Connell (2005–2009)
Lori Jee (2009-present)
Warren Graff
Aubrey Ankrum
Liz Stuart
Nica Lorber
Jeff Biancalana (2002–2005)
Peter Herrmann
Michael "Lippy" Lipman
Francis Carr
Theme music composerrj Eleven
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasonsInternet:3
TV:1
Smoochies:1
Kringles:1
Irregular episodes:1
YouTube Interactive:1
Ka-Pow!:1
Break shorts:1
Love Bites cartoons:1
Home Video:1
No. of episodes182
75 Internet shorts
39 TV series episodes
11 Smoochies
10 Kringles
16 irregular episodes
2 interactive YouTube video
5 Ka-Pow! episodes
12 "Break" shorts
5 "Love Bites" cartoons
7 Home Video episodes
(list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerJohn Evershed
ProducerLiz Stuart
Running timeInternet: 1–7 minutes
TV: 22 minutes (in 3 segments and Cartoon Network only)
Smoochies:1-3 minutes
Irregulars:30"-5 minutes
Kringles:30"-1 minute
YouTube Interactive:1-4 minutes
Ka-Pow!:3-5 minutes
Breaks:17"-1 minute
Love Bites:46"-1 minute
Home Video:30"
Production companyMondo Mini Shows
Original release
NetworkG4,
Release1999 - Present

Happy Tree Friends is an American Flash cartoon created and developed by Aubrey Ankrum, Rhode Montijo, Kenn Navarro and Warren Graff for Mondo Media. The show is cited as an early example of a popular Internet phenomenon achieving a cult following.[1]

The cartoon is drawn in simple appearance and combines cute forest animals with extreme graphic violence. Each episode revolves around the characters enduring accidental events of bloodshed, pain, dismemberment and/or death. The episodes last from between 1 to 7 minutes. At one point, the warning "Cartoon Violence: Not recommended for small children, or big babies" was given on the official website.[2]

The show is nearly free of dialogue, and when the characters do speak, it is mostly in gibberish with some simple English words. According to the website, the idea for Happy Tree Friends was conceived by Rhode Montijo when he drew a yellow rabbit slightly resembling the character Cuddles on a piece of paper and wrote "Resistance is futile" underneath it.

This show is flipping retarded. Do not watch.

In 2006, a television series featuring longer episodes aired. A spin-off called Ka-Pow! premiered on September 2, 2008.

History

1999: Beginning

While working on Mondo Mini Shows, Rhode Montijo drew on a little piece of scrap paper a character who would later become Shifty. He then drew on a spreadsheet poster a yellow rabbit that bore some resemblance to Cuddles and wrote "Resistance is futile" underneath it. Rhode then hung the drawing up in his workstation so other people could see his idea, and eventually the idea was pitched to and accepted by the Mondo Media executives.[3] In 1999, Mondo gave Aubrey Ankrum, Rhode Montijo and Kenn Navarro a chance to do a short for them. They came up with a short named Banjo Frenzy, which featured a blue dinosaur (an earlier version of Lumpy) killing three woodland animals, a rabbit, squirrel and beaver (earlier versions of Cuddles, Giggles and Toothy) with a banjo. Also earlier versions of Flaky and Flippy having a relationship. From there, Mondo gave them their own internet series, which they named Happy Tree Friends. They got new writers and animators to work on the show.

2000-12: Success

Only after its internet debut in 2000, Happy Tree Friends became an unexpected success, getting over 15 million hits each month,[4] and being shown in film festivals.[5] In some countries, the episodes can be seen on television. They can be seen on French, Dutch, Portuguese, German, Polish, Swedish, Filipino, Brazilian, Lithuanian, Japanese, Italian, Israeli, British, Australian, Mexican, Greek, and Spanish TV channels, the Greek Mad Music Channel, channel C4 in New Zealand, the Russian 2×2 channel (though it was pulled from the station following a warning from a government group),[6] the Canadian television channel Razer, the American television channel G4, the Czech musical channel Óčko, and on the Australian Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) network. The series has been reformed into its own show, rather than as a part of a compilation as before. Happy Tree Friends has also gained a collection of Audibles and an "IMVironment" for Yahoo!'s instant messenger. It is featured on many websites on which flash cartoons can be watched, such as YouTube, Atom Films, Purple Twinkie, Albino Black Sheep and the official Happy Tree Friends website.

Encouraged by the show's success, its creators have released four DVDs (First Blood, Second Serving, Third Strike and Winter Break) containing the episodes shown on the website and others that have not been released. A collection consisting of the first three DVDs and five bonus episodes, Overkill, has also been released. Two episodes, "Stealing the Spotlight" and "Ski Ya, Wouldn't Wanna Be Ya!", were originally only available in the Happy Tree Friends: Winter Break DVD, but are now on YouTube and the happy tree friends website.

Happy Tree Friends is currently one of the most downloaded iTunes podcasts and thousands of fan-made videos have appeared on YouTube.[7]

Mondo Media CEO John Evershed attributes the success of the series to animator Kenn Navarro. “He had a clear vision for that show and he’s just a brilliant animator. He has created something that is pretty universal. I envision kids watching Happy Tree Friends 20 or 30 years from now the same way that they watch Tom and Jerry now. So really it’s Kenn Navarro.”[8]

TV series

The Happy Tree Friends TV series was first shown at Comic-Con 2006 and some of the episodes were shown on the website a few weeks prior the show's television premiere, September 25, 2006 at midnight on the G4 network. Each half-hour episode of the TV series contains three seven-minute segments. 39 segments were made, making 13 full episodes for season one. Pictures from the first six episodes can be seen on G4's website. The Canadian channel Razer aired the show in syndication as did the CityTV stations throughout Canada.[9] The show was also broadcast on MTV in Europe and Latin America and on Animax in South Africa.[10] It was also shown on Paramount Comedy 1 in the UK from May 11, 2007 for a short time, with occasional reruns afterward with the channel, now branded as Comedy Central UK. It was rated TV-MA, few episodes were TV-14.

Show characteristics

All the characters are anthropomorphic mammals, and all of them (except Lumpy, Buddhist Monkey, Evil Flippy and Sniffles) have two front buckteeth and pink heart-shaped noses. In early episodes, most characters played the roles of children doing childish games. However, as the series progressed the age concept was dropped, and now characters act variously like children, teenagers and adults in different episodes. The only characters who are unaffected by this concept are Pop and Cub, who always act like an adult and a child respectively, and characters whose roles usually are not affected by age, such as Splendid or Cro-Marmot.

At the beginning of each episode, the characters are typically found in everyday situations. However, much like Sam Peckinpah's "Salad Days" these situations always escalate into violence and the inevitable deaths of those involved and/or "innocent" bystanders, mostly because of very unfortunate, surprising accidents with otherwise harmless instruments, and some of them have mental illness, like Flippy, who has post traumatic stress disorder from a war and will turn evil and go on a murderous rampage in certain stimulus (such as popping balloons, which sounds like gunfire to him). The show's characters sometimes appear not to notice other characters' deaths/injuries, despite clear indications (such as blood coming out of the latters' mouths), or they seem to overcome their fellows' deaths (save "Happy Trails Pt. 2" where several funerals are held and the first few are taken seriously). Characters always reincarnate for the next episode, and without any care of what these characters have suffered in the previous one.

Each episode starts with introduction credits resembling a children's book, which portrays the show's logo, the episode title (which is usually a pun) and the cast. Internet episodes have a typical duration of a maximum of four minutes. Early YouTube episodes often have a still image inserted in the middle of the video, which then became the thumbnail for the video (at that time, YouTube automatically selected the center frame as the video's thumbnail[11]). Usually only a few of the characters are used in a single episode, but occasionally larger episodes have been released where most of the characters appear (in one case, the entire cast except for the Buddist monkey & Lammy have appeared). TV episodes last about half an hour, having three segments of about seven minutes.

Fall Out Boy music video

Fall Out Boy's music video for "The Carpal Tunnel of Love" is an episode of Happy Tree Friends. All of them die the same type of graphic, bloody deaths that are featured in the series. The Fall Out Boy band members cameo as special Happy Tree Friend characters.

Characters

There are 23 main characters in the Happy Tree Friends series, all of whom have unique personalities and appearances. There have been many "minor" characters that have appeared on the show, some appearing many times and some appearing only once.

Video game

A video game titled Happy Tree Friends: False Alarm was released on June 25, 2008. It was developed by Stainless Games and Sega for Xbox Live Arcade on the Xbox 360 and the PC.[12] Writer Ken Pontac previously posted a blog on the Happy Tree Friends website telling fans about the adventures of the staff making the game, but it was ended before the game's first slated release date in Spring 2008.[13]

Controversies

The graphic content of Happy Tree Friends has prompted concern amongst some parents. Despite this, no apparent warning about the graphic content of Happy Tree Friends is provided by Mondo Media on either its website or on the YouTube videos of its episodes. Meanwhile, neither the 'About the Show' or the 'FAQ' sections of the website refer to the program's graphic content or indicate its suitability for children.

In February 2008, Russian Media Culture Protection Department (Rossvyazohrankultura, a regulatory body for TV in Russia) banned Happy Tree Friends alongside The Adventures of Big Jeff, claiming that both shows "promote violence and brutality, harm the psychic health and moral development of children, attack social morality; all of this being a violation of license agreement". The department warned Russian television broadcaster 2×2 to cease broadcasting the program to prevent legal enforcement.[14]

Spin-offs

Three spin-off series have been aired as of September 2008. The Ka-Pow! series is about adventures of three popular characters, Flippy, Splendid and Buddhist Monkey. Three episodes are called W.A.R Journal, Splendid's SSSSSuper Squad and Buddhist Monkey. To date[when?], six episodes have been aired.

Cast and crew

Music and sound-effects
Job title Person Description
Sound Engineer Jim Lively The music featured before, after, and during each and every episode of Happy Tree Friends is composed by Jim Lively, the sound engineer for Happy Tree Friends. Lively has been in the sound business since the age of 16. Lively primarily works in sound design and dialog editing, although he continues to mix music.[15]
Foley Artist Francis Carr Foley artist Francis Carr joined the team later on in development. Usually working with sound engineer Jim Lively, he has been able to expand his career. Francis Carr is also noted for being the voice of Russell.
Happy Tree Friends creator Kenn Navarro
Crew
Name Position Years
Kenn Navarro Director, Animation Director, Writer, Voice Actor 1999 – present
Rhode Montijo Director, Art Director, Writer, (former) Voice Actor 1999–2004
Aubrey Ankrum Director, Writer, Storyboard artist, Voice Actor 1999–2006
Warren Graff Story Editor, Writer, Voice Actor 2000 – present
Ken Pontac Story Editor, Writer, (minor) Voice Actor 2004 – present
Jeff Biancalana Writer, Animator, Storyboard artist, (former) Voice Actor 2001–2005
David Winn Writer, Animator, Voice Actor 2003 – present
Alan Lau Animator, Writer, Director, Storyboard artist 2001 – present
Jason Sadler Animator, Writer, Director 2001 – present
Mark Fiorenza Writer 2000–2003
Brad Rau Animator, Storyboard artist 2001 – present
Roque Ballesteros Writer, Animator, Director, Storyboard artist 2001 – present
Paul Allan Writer, Animator, Director 2000 – present
Nica Lorber Animator, Voice Actor 2000 – present
Michael "Lippy" Lipman Storyboard artist, Animator, Director, Writer, Voice Actor 2000 – present
Peter Herrman Storyboard artist, Voice Actor 2000 – present
Jim Lively Sound Designer, Music 2000 – present
Francis Carr Foley artist, Voice Actor 2004 – present
Jerome Rossen Music Composer 2005 – present
John Evershed Executive Producer 2000 – present
Liz Stuart Producer, Voice Actor 2000 – present
Kristen McCormick Animator, Storyboard Artist 2007 – present
Cast
Name Character
Kenn Navarro Cuddles, Flippy, Lifty & Shifty
Rhode Montijo Lumpy, Splendid (2000–2005)
David Winn Lumpy, Splendid (2005–present)
Christian Baranda Lumpy (2012–present) on the game Milk Pong, Mime
Dana Belben Giggles, Petunia, Cub, Giggles' Mom (2000–2005)
Ellen Connell Giggles, Petunia, Cub (2005–2009)
Lori Jee Giggles, Petunia, Cub, Panda Mom (2009–present)
Warren Graff Toothy, Handy
Aubrey Ankrum Pop, Evil Flippy
Liz Stuart Sniffles
Nica Lorber Flaky
Jeff Biancalana Russell (2000–2005), Buddhist Monkey
Peter Herrman Disco Bear
Michael "Lippy" Lipman Nutty
Francis Carr Russell (2005–present)
Mark Giambruno Lifty & Shifty (2000–2005)
Renée T. MacDonald Lammy
Ken Pontac Additional voices
Awards
Show Year Category Laureate
Annecy International Animated Film Festival 2003 Best Animated Short Film Made for the Internet Eye Candy
2007 Best Animated Series For Adults From Hero To Eternity
Ottawa International Animation Festival 2004 Best Animated Short Made For The Internet Out On A Limb
2005 Mole in the City
2007 Best Television Series For Adults for the episode Double Whammy Part 2

See also

References

  1. ^ Humphrey, Michael (November 11, 2011). "Mondo Interview: Happy Tree Friends Join Eminem, RWJ In YouTube's Billion Views Club". Forbes.
  2. ^ Horn, Jesse (December 10, 2010). "Happy Tree Friends". Interview with Mondo Media CEO John Evershed. Oddities Magazine. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  3. ^ Gruesome fun with Happy Tree Friends
  4. ^ "The Kenn Commandments". coldhardflash.com. April 5, 2005. Retrieved 2005-04-09.
  5. ^ Annecy International Animated Film Festival
  6. ^ Happy Tree Friends banned in Russia
  7. ^ "HTF YouTube videos". youtube.com. September 15, 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-15.
  8. ^ Oddities Magazine interview with John Evershed
  9. ^ CityTV.com
  10. ^ "Mondo Media Gaining Revenue from International Licensing". Beet.tv. March 9, 2010.
  11. ^ Choose a thumbnail for your YouTube video
  12. ^ "Sega announces Happy Tree Friends False Alarm". sega.com. February 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-15.
  13. ^ Pontac, Ken (February 2007). "Ken Pontac's video game blog". happytreefriends.com. Retrieved 2007-09-15.
  14. ^ "Happy Tree Friends - Banned In Russia". Mondo Media.
  15. ^ Conlan Press: The situation was dire

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