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When people say âThere arenât any American cartoons worth watching, anymoreâ I feel compelled to disagree. As a matter of fact, thereâs plenty. So the purpose of this feature is to point out the clever, entertaining gems buried amongst the landslide of coal.
The first cartoon I want to celebrate; the Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy. Itâs probably the best title in Cartoon Networkâs Friday night line-up and most-certainly more worthy of endless daytime reruns than that Ed, Edd & Eddy drivel.
The core concept of the show is that Death-himself, the Grim Reaper, was swindled into being the friend-slave of two youngsters; the psychotically moody yet brightly-dressed Mandy, and her loud, idiotic, Stimpy-like companion, Billy. Together, the three are subjected to a whirlwind of freaky and insane adventures which they usually take in total stride.
Like most cartoons of this episodic-nature, the show is primarily character-driven, leaving the audience more interested in what the characters are going to say or do next than how the âplotâ unfolds. Billy, voiced by Richard Horvitz of Angry Beavers and Invader Zim fame, is entertaining for his hyper-HYPER-active brand of mind-boggling stupidity accentuated by his perpetually sunny, naïve disposition. Mandy isnât just your typical quiet, âTheyâre all idiots except meâ sort of character. Sheâs most clearly the Anti-Christ, usually inflicting more damage on the main cast than the episodeâs villain and committing morally-depraved and often times murderous acts without so much as a âmehâ. Grimâs bi-polar personality makes him an unpredictable element, sometimes reaping the souls of the elderly with his scythe, and sometimes frolicking in meadows and baking cookies. The Jamaican accent is a nice touch, too.
But itâs not just the title characters who carry the show, a vast supporting cast of equally bizarre monsters and people bring life to the stories. Thereâs Hoss Delgado, the ultra-violent parody of Ash from the Evil Dead trilogy, Nergal (originally voiced by David Warner), the disturbingly lonely creature from the center of the Earth, Irwin, Billyâs best friend and Mandyâs freaky stalker, and Billyâs parents, a Dad whoâs just as stupid as his son, and a Mom who seems to be the only person to react to the crazy crap that goes on in their lives.
And the characters are only half the fun. While the show started off blandly-enough (with hackneyed stories about âOpposite Dayâ or Billy dealing with a bully, etc.), the show quickly fell into its own brand of manic, âWho the Hell thinks up this stuffâ-humor. In their mandatory public service episode alerting kids to the merits of proper diet and exercise, they worked the moral into a deliciously morbid plot in which Death presents âBonus Yearsâ to people who stay healthy, thus keeping them alive a little bit longer. In one of my favorite episodes, Grim goes on a road-trip through the desert with a geriatric âDraculaâ. However, âDraculaâ is more closely related to âBlackulaâ, a jive-talking 70âs stereotype. âVampireâz donât suck, dats a myth! Dracula scrap wif hiz fangs then lickz up tha blood.â
The humor is extremely unpredictable and very, very bizarre. The plots of the show, typically dealing with death or death-related subjects, is noticeably morbid for a âkidâs showâ, giving it a distinct edge. The humor in Billy & Mandy ranges all over the spectrum, entertaining adults and kids alike. Additionally, it has a âHarvey Birdmanâ or âSpace Ghost Coast to Coastâ quality to it, often having random guest stars from classic Hanna Barbara cartoons. In one episode, a Gamera-like monster dunks Grape Apeâs head in a volcano (âGrape Ape. It BUUUUURNS!!! Grape Ape.â), another time, Scooby Doo testifies against Mandy in court, and in one of the better episodes, Billy discovers Fred Flintstone buried in ice in his backyard and Fred goes completely berserk trying to adapt to modern civilization.
Billy & Mandy has been around for a few years, but is certainly one of the most clever Cartoon Cartoons to come around in quite a while. A much better âhorror cartoonâ than their last effort, Courage the Cowardly Dog. Definitely check it out if you havenât yet, cuz you never know whatâll happen next.
Category: Cartoons
7 Responses for "Cartoons Worth Watching: Billy & Mandy"
June 13th, 2006 at 11:04 am
1“…Ed, Edd & Eddy drivel.”
Them’s fightin’ words. :)
I can’t believe you would run down the Ed’s like that. Ed and Eddy are the closest thing we now have to Pinky and The Brain. I’m not sure how Edd fits in, but regardless, hearing Ed say “Buttered Toast” harkens me back to the great days of “Narf, Poit”.
Speaking of Pinky, will WB ever release DVDs?
June 13th, 2006 at 11:43 am
2I love Billy & Mandy. I watched that cartoon every opportunity I had, unfortunately, I haven’t had that opportunity for a year now, and I haven’t seen most of the episodes you talked about. I’m glad to know others enjoy that cartoon as much as I do.
I also have to agree with hap in that Ed, Edd, and Eddy is a great cartoon.
I wish I had Cartoon Network available to me.
June 20th, 2006 at 2:09 pm
3Oh, I love Billy&Mandy, and can agree with everything said. It’s the best show on Cartoon Network, and my favourite cartoon of all time, with South Park and Invader Zim. I just wonder, where do they come up with this stuff?
December 9th, 2006 at 3:14 pm
4hell right, besides there’s the doujinshi by bleedman, and it’s awesome.
you should check it out:
grim.snafu-comics.com
ah
invader zim and ppg rules too.
March 4th, 2007 at 1:27 pm
5Yeah, billy and mandy is way better than Juniper Lee, in fact anything is better that Juniper lee, but I would take Ed,Edd, Eddy over billy and mandy though.
March 4th, 2007 at 4:43 pm
6Courage was a childhood favorite and even though they barely ever show it if I had to choose between Courage or Billy and Mandy it’s all Courage for me.
March 22nd, 2007 at 8:50 pm
7Another good cartoon to watch is Foster’s Home For Imaginary Friends. It usually comes on every weekday around 5 or 6.
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