Showing posts with label Flack and Tubbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flack and Tubbs. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2012

With a Little Bit of Luck



This is my latest Pound Puppies fanfiction. In this story, which is based off of an episode of the 2010 Pound Puppies series entitled, "Taboo", Cooler and the crew befriend a cat named Jinx, who's sure that she's nothing but bad luck, and try to help her find a home. Meanwhile, Dabney Nabbit, along with the two dognappers Flack and Tubbs, make several repeated attempts to nab Jinx, all with much hilarity ensuing. Please enjoy!


 
 
 
 
BTW, here are some pictures of a few of the story's characters:
 
 
 
The story's main focus, Jinx, the self-proclaimed bad luck cat. I purposely gave her a similar color scheme to Taboo, the dog from the original story(though she's a bit more of a grayish-black), and she even has the same drooping tail that he does(her tail droops due to the fact that she's a bit down-in-the-mouth).
 
 
Waggster and Mittens, the little puppy and kitten the Pound Puppies find a home for in chapter one. Their names are borrowed from the 2010 series, and Waggster's appearance is based off of that of a dog that appears in this book.
 

 
And finally, Stacie, the teenage girl who visits the pound in chapter four. She's a little ditzy, but very sweet. (BTW, it may be a little hard to tell from the picture, but she has painted toenails.)
 
 
 


Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Eye Don't Know



This is my very first Pound Puppies fanfiction. In this story, which is based off of the 1985 special(as well as the book series), Bigelow accidentally misplaces his glasses, and mistakes Flack and Tubbs(who have sneaked in to do a bit of dognapping) for Doc Weston and Dabney Nabbit, a situation that the dognappers intend to take full advantage of. Fortunately, however, the Pound Puppies take matters into their own paws and remedy this situation, with much hilarity and slapstick ensuing. Please enjoy!



 
 
 
Here, BTW, is a picture of Sneakers(named for his little white paws), the dog Flack tries(and fails) to nab in Doc Weston's office in chapter two.
 
 
 
And here's a picture of Rebound, the(very hyper!) dog Tubbs tries(and fails) to give a bath to in chapter two. (Why, uh, no, no, he wasn't named after an equally hyper dog of the same name from the 2010 series. :-D)
 



Friday, August 3, 2012

Beep! Crash! Squall! Wheeze-Whonk! Skweegie!

How are you today?...today...today...
Good morning...morning...morning...Mr. Echo...echo...echo...
Won't you take my cares away?...away..away...




Here is a Pound Puppies fanfiction of mine, which is based off of the comic "Managing the Eco System" from the Donald Duck compilation Lost in the Andes.  In this story, the Pound Puppies wage an "echo battle" with Flack and Tubbs(who have come to steal Duncan, a rare dog belonging to Holly's friend Maddie) at the local carnival, via an echo machine. Hilarity, slapstick, and wacky noises abound! Please enjoy.






Here, BTW, is a picture of a Dunker(Duncan's breed) with a bit of info on the breed as well.



Here also is a picture of Duncan himself.










Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Fan Fiction Showcase:Of Pups and Love, a Pound Puppies FanFic by WoggleBugLover

In this very cool, well-written, eight-chapter fanfic based off of the Pound Puppies '85 special, the eponymous dogs go on a journey to reunite lost pup Rugby(who, BTW, is very cute!) with his family, finding adventure and dodging the dognappers Flack and Tubbs on the way. As one might suppose from the title, it's noted also that Barkerville and Nose Marie have a bit of a crush on each other as well. Please enjoy!







One point of interest, BTW, is that there seems to be more truth than poetry to the notion of Barkerville and Nose Marie liking each other, as, for example, noted from the picture on this lunch tray below:


As well as on this coloring book page. (They're DANCING!!) I purposely gave Nose Marie the same color scheme she has in the TV series, BTW.


Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Classic Cartoon Showcase:Before They Were Stars:Pound Puppies in City Pound

(I think City Pound may be the official name of this episode.) In this nifty little pilot episode for the Pound Puppies series(complete with a celeb-filled cast) the daring entourage of dogs endeavor to both reunite newcomer Violet with her owners and save pound supervisor Bigelow's job while dodging the dogcatcher Dabney Nabbit and doing battle with the dastardly(albeit dopey and ditzy) dognappers Flack and Tubbs. (By golly, if this doesn't win the prize for most alliteration in a single article, it probably at least ranks!) Please enjoy!(BTW, watch for a humorously hypocritical moment in part one where Nabbit calls the dogs "Walking flea farms" and tells them to "Suck in their bellies." Uh, Nabbit? Have you checked a reflective surface lately?)

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Pound Puppies TV Series-What If

So, I had been thinking, a litle while ago, about the different continuities of the Pound Puppies, and how some characters who were introduced in the 1985 special hadn't made the cut when the show became a series. Then I got to thinking...what if they had?

Here is my opinion of what it could behave been like. I'm also adding a couple of pictures I drew of how the characters would have looked in the series' art style(Well, to be fair, it's actually more my art style, but I tried to copy the show's art style the best I could):



Has anybody seen these dogs?
I'll begin this what if with the three "missing" Pound Puppies, as I call them. (Scrounger's design, BTW, is based off his design in the episode, "Wagga Wagga", and Violet's design is a combination of her original design and her design in that episode.) Their roles and personalities in the show would be like this:
 
 
-Violet would be the group's second-in-command, a role she frequently took in the books.
Personality-wise, she'd still be sweet, polite, and smart, but also tough and adventurous(sort of like Cooler). She'd also, of course, be Cooler's girlfriend.(And you know, in retrospect, it kind of made little sense for her not to be in the series, seeing as that she was Cooler's girlfriend, and that Cooler had no romantic interest in Nose Marie.)
 
 
-Barkerville would be the group's strategist, as he was in the books and the '85 special.
Personality-wise, he'd still be polite, proper, and sensible(The most sensible member of the group, even!) His role as a strategist would be taken a step further in the second season; he'd have a computer that he would use to help find homes for the various dogs and cats they would be trying to place(In lieu of the dogs using "Puppy Power," i.e. the strange psychic abilities they apparently had to do this, which IMHO didn't make much sense...honestly, were they dogs or Alakazams?)
 
 
-Personality-wise, Scrounger would be...well, Scrounger! He'd still, as always, be sarcastic, hygiene-deficient, and have a voracious appetite. As far as things go, though, in the second season, his color would be changed to gray(as it was in the episode, "Garbage Night:The Musical).

And now, on to the villains:


Flack and Tubbs, the two dognappers from the '85 special, would now be Katrina Stoneheart's henchmen, sort of like Horace and Jasper to Cruella De Vil (One could say that they would now have an outlet for their dognapping). They'd mainly serve as comic relief, with their frequent botch-ups being a source of contant frustration to Katrina, as well as Brattina(and Captain Slaughter in the few episodes in which he appeared). 

As per the picture above, the biggest change to them would be their appearance; Flack's sweater, for example, isn't quite as loose-fitting as it was in the pilot episode(i.e. no longer giving him an artificially muscular appearance), his hair is longer, and his beard is a little shorter. Also, in the second season, he'd start wearing fingerless gloves. 

Tubbs now has larger eyes, a smaller mouth, and a slightly more visible nose. His scarf is also slightly shorter. In the second season, he'd don an orange sweater-vest(which, as one might expect, would be no more effective in covering his belly than his shirt was).

Personality-wise, the dognappers wouldn't have changed at all; Flack would still be sneaky and sarcastic, Tubbs would still be dopey and klutzy, and their ability to mess things up in hilarious slapstick ways would also remain the same.

(You know, I might be biased because I happen to like these particular characters, but it seemed like Flack and Tubbs kind of got short-shift in the series; they never appeared in so much as one episode, even in a cameo or a flashback. This is particularly hard to understand considering the fact that Dabney Nabbit, Mayor Fist, and Doc Weston have all appeared in at least one episode of the show.)

On an interesting note, the writers of the series apparently had originally intended to make Dabney Nabbit a regular character. (In fact, on some websites and in some books, he's been mistakenly listed as one of the regular characters.) According to some of the model sheets from the show (which show up on ebay from time to time), they had intended to make him a janitor. Huh? A janitor? Honestly, Nabbit just doesn't seem like the type that anyone would acquaint with cleanliness! You know, IMHO, it would have made more sense to have him still be a dogcatcher, and have him also be working for Katrina.(Honestly IMHO, seeing as that he was so popular in the books, it kind of made little sense not to include him.) Also, in the second season, he'd have a catch phrase: "I'll nab 'em, and I'll nab 'em good!"

To take this what if a step further, I wrote a few fan fictions based off of episodes of the TV show in this continuity:


 
 
 
 







Thursday, April 12, 2012

Book Review:Pound Puppies in Public Nuisance

This is my first book review; as per my previous post, I opted to start with a book from the Pound Puppies series.

The story begins with Cooler watching a cop show starring his hero, Police Detective Gumshoe Gallagher, in the Pound Puppies' mission control room when Brighteyes rushes into the room to inform him that a new dog's been brought to the pound. She mentions on a side note that it's the dogcatcher, Dabney Nabbit's birthday, and he's sad because he thinks that no one remembered. (Little does Nabbit know, however, that the dogs are planning him a surprise birthday party!)

Something that I thought I'd note, incidentally, is that Brighteyes' personality in the books is very different from her personality in the TV series; in the books she's a savvy, intuitive type, whereas in the series she's more of a ditzy character. To be fair, I like both of her personalities, but I thought the first one seemed a bit better.

Cooler peeks into the pound office (via an air vent) and observes a policeman bringing in a (very cute) small, brown dog of the bloodhound persuasion, who's wearing a muzzle. The policeman informs Mr. Bigelow, the pound supervisor, that the dog is a public nuisance; he had been barking all day until the whole neighborhood called to complain.

Cooler then introduces the new dog, whose name they discover is Bogart(which seems a very appropriate name for a bloodhound), to the rest of the group. Bogart then proceeds to share his (very sad) story with them: He's a stray, and has been one all of his life. He was wandering through a quiet neighborhood one day, when he heard someone crying.
He followed the sound to a garden shed and observed, via a knothole in one of the walls, a beautiful (and also very cute) cat tied to a shovel.(She looks a little like a Pound Purry!) She informed him that her name was Simone, and that she was a rare, prize-winning show cat being held for ransom by a pair of cat-nappers. She then proceeded to mention that she belonged to a rich old lady who has a young grandson named Sam, both of whom she misses dearly, which causes Bogart himself to wonder what it would be like to have a home and loving family of his own. (Sniff. :*C)

Bogart had then tried to open the shed door, but wasn't stong enough, so he started barking a lot in hopes of attracting someone's attention. He persisted with this, despite being run off by the cat-nappers several times.
 An interesting note regarding these two cat-nappers is that they bear more than a passing resemblance to...
...a certain pair of dognappers, to the point where one wonders if these cat-nappers might, perhaps, be cousins of theirs, or at least some close relatives. Hmm...

Bogart, regrettably, only succeeds in angering the neighbors, who then call the police, who carry him off to the pound. Now he's being (very unfairly) called a public nuisance and Simone still needs rescued.

(You know, what the main problem here seems to be is that no one can understand "dog-speak." If Holly had only been there, she could have traslated for Bogart and cleared up so much of the confusion. Their fault for being in a different continuity, I guess.)

Fortunately, Cooler, being as resourceful as ever, concocts a plan: he, Scrounger, Violet and Bogart will set out to rescue Simone, while Brighteyes, Howler and the others will prep Nabbit's surprise party.

Scrounger then sets about collecting all the things they'll need for both missions, while Brighteyes and Howler use a ruse to lure Itchy and Snitchey, the pound guard dogs, into the main room for the party.
Another point of interest BTW, is that since this book was made after the TV show came out, Howler now speaks English, as he does in the show. (Honestly, IMHO that was a wise idea; he seemed lost without a voice.) Also, another interesting note, as per this picture, is that Howler has brown eyes(up close).

Bogart leads Cooler and the others to the house where he had seen the cat-nappers; they surround the house, shine flashlights in the windows, and play the sound and dialogue from the Gumshoe Gallagher show via a loudspeaker, which scares the cat-nappers out just in time for the real police to arrive.
The group leads the police to the shed where Simone is being held captive, at which point they reunite her with her owners and arrest the cat-nappers. In addition to this, Sam decides to keep Bogart. Sam's grandmother thanks the group and asks them if they'd like to come to their house to celebrate, but they decline, because they have to hurry back to the pound.
Back at the pound, the guard dogs lead Nabbit into the main room, where they're greeted by the Pound Puppies who have prepared an elaborate birthday party for Nabbit, which he's pleasantly surprised by. About midway into the festivities, Nabbit starts to wonder where Cooler, Violet and Scrounger got to, at which point the dogs quickly blindfold him for a game of "Pin the Tail on the Puppy," and distract the guard dogs with a couple of pieces of cake in an effort to buy Cooler and the others some time to get back. Needless to say, when they finally do return, Nabbit is surprised to see them. It's another case solved, thanks to the Pound Puppies!


UPDATE 6/10/12:I had wanted to mention that I recently acquired a coloring book with a similar subplot to this book; Nose Marie is sad because she thinks her birthday's been forgotten, but she doesn't know that the other dogs are planning a surprise party for her. 
I purposely gave her the same color scheme that she has in the TV series in this pic, BTW.

My thoughts:Overall, this is one of the series best entries. The art style is excellent, Bogart and Simone (and even the cat-nappers!) are good characters, and the storyline is very nicely done; IMHO it would have translated well to an episode of the TV show. Perfect for any Pound Puppies fan/collector.