Wikipedia

The Brothers Grunt

The Brothers Grunt
The Brothers Grunt titleboard
GenreBlack comedy
Surreal humor
Off-color humor
Created byDanny Antonucci
Developed byDennis Heaton
Danny Antonucci
Written byDennis Heaton
Danny Antonucci
Rod Filbrandt
Directed byDanny Antonucci
StarringDoug Parker
Jennifer Wilson
Danny Antonucci
Julie Faye
Phil Hayes
Terry Klassen
Ed Hong Louie
David Mylrae
Drew Reichelt
Lee Tockar
Camella Rhodes
Kevin Hayes
ComposerPatric Caird
Country of originCanada
United States
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes42
Production
Executive producerDanny Antonucci
Running time4-7 minutes
Production companya.k.a. Cartoon
DistributorCBS Television Distribution
Release
Original networkMTV
Audio formatStereo
Original releaseAugust 15, 1994 –
April 9, 1995
Chronology
Related showsEd, Edd n Eddy

The Brothers Grunt is a Canadian-American animated comedy television series by Ed, Edd n Eddy creator Danny Antonucci that originally aired from August 15, 1994 to April 9, 1995 on MTV. It centered on Frank, Tony, Bing, Dean and Sammy in search of their lost brother Perry.[1] The series had a short run and was met with a generally negative reception.[2]

Overview

Premise

The series centered on an ensemble cast of pale, rubbery, twitchy, yellow-eyed, shirtless humanoids with prominent bulging varicose veins often leaking various noxious bodily fluids who are distantly related to human beings, all of them ostensibly male, wandering around in their boxers. Their main food staple is cheese; nevertheless, they are able to eat other foods (at least potatoes, according to the episode "Not My Potato"). Their single parent is a large, floating, mute and fat male humanoid called Primus Gruntus Maximus, to whom they are born as embryos inside skin warts, much in the way of the Suriname Toad (see Pipa pipa). They live in a monastery in the wilderness.

A group is formed, composed of most of the survivors of their species, in a quest to bring back one of their kind, Perry, who has abandoned his involuntary position of "Chosen One" (leader of their order) and is now living the "high life" among human beings (who seem to deal with the bizarre nature of the grunts by ignoring them and pretending everything is normal).
In music video segments that are intervened with some episodes, supervised by Kathy Karp, there are additional animated portions of the main characters grunting.

Characters

The main characters were named after famous crooners of the 1950s: Frank (Sinatra), Tony (Bennett), Dean (Martin), Bing (Crosby), Sammy (Davis Jr.), and Perry (Como), all voiced by Doug Parker.

Main

  • Frank
  • Tony
  • Bing
  • Dean
  • Sammy
  • Perry – A grunt that became the chosen one in the pilot episode: The Ceremony.

Major

  • Gruntus Poobah – (Doug Parker) The leader of the brotherhood of grunt, he serves as the show's host and explains the plot before each episode. He also appears often in flashbacks when the grunts are in a troubled situation giving them advice.
  • The Dıflash Queen – (Jennifer Wilson) A Turkish Queen that appeared in the episode "Scrub Me Sammy".
  • Primus Gruntus Maximumus – (Doug Parker) A floating fat and mute giant and the male parent of the grunts. All grunts are born or hatched from warts on his back.
  • The Dıflash Queen's İgnam lamp – (Jennifer Wilson) A Turkish lamp belonging to Sammy.
  • The Smein – (Doug Parker) A Nazi German skunk that appeared in the lost episode "Hunt for Grunts".
  • Krischmäßante – (Doug Parker) The Smein's best friend skunk.
  • Santa Claus (St. Nicholas or especially Kris Kringle) – (Doug Parker) An obese present bringer that appeared in the lost episode "The Grunts Who Came for Turkey."

The characters that would become The Brothers Grunt were first seen in one of MTV's numerous 30-second promos. This particular promo consisted of close-up shots of the at-the-time-unnamed character's faces who seemed to be straining to do something (veins in their heads would bulge, the characters would squint and grunt) until the scene cut to the MTV logo landing in a pool of sludge followed by a satisfied "Ahhhhh" (suggesting that the characters were suffering from constipation and the MTV logo was the 'turd' as it were). It is unclear when this promo aired if the storyline and characters for The Brothers Grunt had been developed already or if it had been developed into its own show after the success of the promo, in the wake of Beavis and Butt-head.

Production

The show's origins can be traced back to 1993 when the MTV ad "Grunt MTV" aired. At the time Danny Antonucci had animated several MTV ads to find work outside of International Rocketship Ltd., who he had worked for since 1984. Although Danny enjoyed the success of Lupo The Butcher, he wanted to leave International Rocketship Ltd. and start his own animation company. The result was a.k.a. Cartoon, which began on April 1, 1994. The studio began as a way to locate his work for The Brothers Grunt after MTV executive Abby Terkhule liked his MTV ad so much, he asked him to turn it into a television series.[3] In production order, each episode of the show would consist of three to four segments.[4]

Reception

"I still think it’s a cool show and I really enjoyed doing it. For what I wanted to do I thought it was quite successful. That’s the key for me. I really dig what I do and it’s important for me to like what I do. I don’t regret anything. I just look at it as something I did, and move on."

Danny Antonucci, in response to the show's obscurity[3]

The Brothers Grunt had a short run and was met with generally negative reception from critics. Kenneth R. Clark of the Chicago Tribune said that, with the series, MTV "created the most repulsive creatures ever to show up on a television screen" and "accomplished the seemingly impossible."[5] Charles Solomon of the Los Angeles Times called the show "an effortful, sophomoric half-hour that leaves the viewer longing for the refined good taste of Alice Cooper."[6] In their book North of Everything: English-Canadian Cinema Since 1980, William Beard and Jerry White called the series a "failure".[7]

The show was often compared to Aaahh!!! Real Monsters, an animated series that aired on MTV's sister channel, Nickelodeon. Gábor Csupó, co-creator of Aaahh!!! Real Monsters, rejected these comparisons, claiming that his show was more character-driven, while The Brothers Grunt was an idea-driven series, also pointing out that both shows have different visual styles.[8] When looking back on the series, creator Danny Antonucci stated that the series "didn't really do too well", also saying that the show has since become MTV's "dirty little secret".[3]

Episodes

Note: All episodes directed by Danny Antonucci

No.TitleWritten byStoryboard byOriginal air date
1"The Ceremony"Danny Antonucci and Dennis HeatonHilary PhillipsAugust 15, 1994
2"Make Mine a Grunt"Danny Antonucci and Dennis HeatonMike GrimshawAugust 22, 1994
3"The New Fish"Danny Antonucci and Dennis HeatonRussell CrispinAugust 29, 1994
4"Where Angels Fear to Grunt"Mike GrimshawHilary PhillipsSeptember 5, 1994
5"Viva Grunt Vegas"Rod FilbrandtGreg SullivanSeptember 12, 1994
6"Scrub Me Sammy"Danny Antonucci and Dennis HeatonRussell CrispinSeptember 19, 1994
7"The Detective"Sam Johnson & Chris MarcilRussell CrispinSeptember 26, 1994
8"If I Could Grunt to the Animals"Rod FilbrandtHilary PhillipsOctober 3, 1994
9"Grunt Moments in History"TBATBANovember 7, 1994
10"Perry Molo"TBATBANovember 14, 1994
11"Tony and Salsa"TBATBANovember 21, 1994
12"A Call to Grunts"TBATBANovember 28, 1994
13"Clean Up in Aisle Grunt"TBATBADecember 5, 1994
14"Land of the Midnight Grunt"TBATBADecember 12, 1994
15"Close Encounters of the Grunt Kind"TBATBADecember 19, 1994
16"The Scent of Grunts"TBATBADecember 26, 1994
17"Paging Dr. Grunt"TBATBAOctober 10, 1994
18"Perry's Appliance Repair"TBATBAOctober 17, 1994
19"Timmy's Best Friend"TBATBAOctober 24, 1994
20"No Quest Today"TBATBAOctober 31, 1994
21"Eat My Grunt"Dennis HeatonMike GrimshawJanuary 2, 1995
22"They Stole Tony's Veins!"Dennis HeatonRod FilbrandtJanuary 9, 1995
23"Not My Potato"Dennis HeatonRussell CrispinJanuary 16, 1995
24"Squeal Like A Grunt"Jono HowardAngus BungayJanuary 23, 1995
25"The Big Crapple"Mark SawersRussell CrispinJanuary 30, 1995
26"Grunt Fare"Mark Sawers, Dennis Heaton and Danny AntonucciRod FilbrandtFebruary 13, 1995
27"Sammy in a Varicose Vein"Rod FilbrandtHilary PhillipsFebruary 6, 1995
28"To Hell with Bing"TBATBAFebruary 20, 1995
29"Cream Style Tony"TBATBAFebruary 27, 1995
30"The Ugly Gruntling"TBATBAMarch 5, 1995
31"5 Card Grunt"TBATBAMarch 12, 1995
32"The Stench of Grunts"TBATBAMarch 19, 1995
33"Grunt Games"TBATBAMarch 26, 1995
34"Requiem for a Sammy"TBATBAApril 2, 1995
35"Smells like Dean Spirit"TBATBAApril 9, 1995

Unreleased episodes

These episodes have been unreleased, but have been uploaded on to YouTube in June 2019, three of these episodes might have been produced, but are currently unconfirmed.

No.TitleOriginal release date
36"Perry Come Home"11 June 2019[9]
37"Bring Me the Head of Perry the Grunt"11 June 2019[10]
38"Black Balled Grunt"11 June 2019[11]
39"Perry's Off Day"11 June 2019
40"Tony & Lace"11 June 2019
41"The Filling of the Shorts"11 June 2019
42"Poobah Blues"11 June 2019
43"Hunt for Grunts"Unconfirmed
44"Friends! Romans! Grunts!"Unconfirmed
45"The Wedding"Unconfirmed

Merchandise

Fleer released in 1995 trading cards based on the series, as part of the MTV Animation Fleer's Ultra set.[12] The show's theme song, sung by Frank Sinatra and written by Brendan Dolan and Geoff Whelan, was featured in Television's Greatest Hits: Volume 7, which was released in 1996 by TVT Records' soundtrack imprint, TVT SOUNDTRAX.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present. Ballantine Books. 2003. p. 162. ISBN 0-345-45542-8.
  2. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 160. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  3. ^ a b c "Antonucci.html".
  4. ^ Perlmutter, David (May 4, 2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 95. ISBN 978-1538103739.
  5. ^ "Mtv's 'Brothers Grunt' Pushes Cartoon Envelope".
  6. ^ SOLOMON, CHARLES (August 15, 1994). "'Brothers Grunt' a Reason to Say 'Ugh'" – via LA Times.
  7. ^ Beard, William; White, Jerry (January 1, 2002). North of Everything: English-Canadian Cinema Since 1980. University of Alberta – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ Mendoza, N.R. (October 30, 1994). "Nickelodeon offers monsters in training". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on August 24, 2011. Retrieved August 24, 2011.
  9. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K949ABG5Rfg
  10. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ui9iMCLwD9E
  11. ^ https://youtube.com/wVrZXNlglds
  12. ^ https://www.amazon.com/Brothers-Grunt-Frank-Trading-Animation/dp/B01N7VNW9N
  13. ^ "The Brothers Grunt".

External links

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