Time for another one of my re-write posts, as I've done with other posts,this is away to either take an old post and expand, refresh, and fix up, and this one might need that. (You can red the original one here)
This is the 32nd Peanuts special , that first aired on CBS (The Charlie Brown Station) on September 27th, 1988. This Peanuts special is not like the others in many ways. I like to think of the 80's Peanuts specials being a period of just whatever they felt like doing, CBS was paying... and all the holidays had been done, so why not?
This special is another hour-long special (46 minutes without ads) and following "Snoopy! The Musical, the animated version" . This one is about Spike, one of Snoopy's brothers he actually becomes more prominent in the 1980's and 1990's strips where Charles Schulz must have decided to write more about the desert beagle instead of the famous one. Spike is named after Schulz's childhood dog and his character lives in Needles, California.
There''s a simple format to Spike's strips, he's alone in the desert, so he's interacting with things more than people. He's writing letters, and has some of his own adventures, much like his brother.
"It's the Girl in the Red Truck" starts with a shot of a desert and a red truck. Wow the animation is amazing, eat your eyes, Pixar, go away anyone else, the desert looks so real and life-like, like wow! The scenery is amazing, it's beautiful, this was made in 1988? wow, we've not advanced at all. This was peak animation.
Beautiful/ Copyright Peanuts
Alright, I've dragged the joke out too long. This special is hybrid. (it runs on gas and electric) When it cuts inside Spike's home, which is a cactus, the internals all animated, when spike looks out he's animated but the rest is live-action. This was not even the first time Peanuts had done hybrids like this and they've done it after this for ads as well. But those were ads this was a special. It also wasn't made in 1988, it took four years to make this and it was delayed, they actually wanted it to air in March. Hmm? What other live-action/ animation thing was coming out in 1988? (Hmmmmm) They wanted this out in March because later that year "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" was coming out. It's funny, they both were being worked on around the same time. This is not going to be that well done in production,but it's not awful, it's good for CBS. (Cheap But Serviceable-- someone said maybe)
It's like animation with real life backgrounds/ Copyright Peanuts
The music is interesting, it takes it's own direction, instead of being jazz it's something.
It kind of sounds like old video game music or it's for a desert travelogue. This special is 50 minutes long and it will fell 50 minutes long. The credits say starring Snoopy's Brother Spike, since he doesn't speak, it's very correct. It's also starting someone named Jill Schulz. I wonder who she is, so besides having his daughter play the girl... (more on her soon calm down) his son Monte helped with the script. (oh)
I also have to say, since Spike is added in later, because animation, that means they had some camera people out in the desert just taping desert, without other people to put Spike in later, that's kind of funny. They also bought some fake cacti to use because the real ones might not have been in the right spot. (what does even mean?)
Hey there's Charlie Brown, you remember him, but he won't be her long. He's just here to remind you, you should be watching a different Peanuts special where he and Snoopy are there longer. They just are there to tell you his name is Spike incase you didn't see the credits, and fill time between some Spike walking the desert scenes. They are reading a letter Spike sent, and it leads into a the red truck and girl. (Finally, took forever for this special to Girl in the Red Truck)
The special Charlie Brown-ed before it Girl-ed /Copyright Peanuts
If you have a strong attention span , this special is for you. Spike and the girl wave back and forth when she drives by. This is feels like they really wanted to fill out that 50 minutes. Finally the red truck gets tired, and decides to break down right near spike. The girl (I'll say her name soon, don't worry) hears Spike's French practice tapes, which is interesting for a dog that doesn't talk to be learning. She's seems impressed by the tape and learns his name is Spike. I do like the blend of animation and not in this movie. She takes up most of the dialogue because someone has too, as she starts to fix her truck.
I'm the girl not in the red truck/ Copyright Peanuts
She asks Spike would he like to come with her and he decides..yes., I think I will. Also safety first message, they make a point of mentioning that Spike but his seatbelt on and how smart he is for doing so. (Click it or die it) It got my attention. They go to the diner and we get scene where Spike knows the diner owner, Molly. Classic Peanuts dogs favorite drink is root beer, he's a regular customer. (That's the world I want to live in)
Molly and Jenny (going to use her name now) are talking and giving us some information about Jenny and some stuff about a guy should be coming back. Jenny is an aerobics instructor as well. Back to the red truck, since it's in the title it needs love too. Again, this special is really filling out it's 50 minutes; though, it is nice to see Jenny and Spike spending some time together. There is an awkwardness to using Spike, because Jenny has to do all the talking essentially to fill in space, it's like when Peanuts characters are with Snoopy or an adult and have to do the lifting.
Spike gets to watch TV at Jenny's nice house, I like how the remote switches from real to animated when the need for Spike to use it. Hey, it's Jeff! You know Jeff. Fine, Jeff is Jenny's boyfriend, at least I hope he is, and he comes into the house and is surprised to find Spike and thinks he's a wild animal, and doesn't like that he's in his chair. You can feel the tension, is Jeff jealous of Spike? (Find out... after the jump)