Squirrel Boy

2006

Seasons & Episodes

  • 2
  • 1

EP1 Flatbottom's Up Feb 02, 2007

EP2 Family Crude Feb 02, 2007

EP3 Eddie or Not... Feb 09, 2007

EP4 Trouble Date Feb 09, 2007

EP5 Winner Fake All Feb 16, 2007

EP6 Rodney Darling Feb 16, 2007

EP7 Frag the Dog Feb 23, 2007

EP8 The Grim Cheaper Feb 23, 2007

EP9 Treehouse Broken Apr 06, 2007

EP10 My Brand New Salty Mike Apr 06, 2007

EP11 Stranger Than Friction Apr 13, 2007

EP12 Don't Cross Here Apr 13, 2007

EP13 More Flower to You Aug 16, 2007

EP14 News it or Lose It Aug 16, 2007

EP15 Get a Lifeboat Aug 23, 2007

EP16 Bully, for You Aug 23, 2007

EP17 Ice Cream Anti-Social Aug 30, 2007

EP18 Dog & Phony Show Aug 30, 2007

EP19 He Got Blame Sep 24, 2007

EP20 I Only Have Eye For You Sep 24, 2007

EP21 Diss and Make Up Sep 25, 2007

EP22 Be Careful What You Fish For Sep 25, 2007

EP23 Don't Pet on It Sep 26, 2007

EP24 Bunny and the Beak Sep 26, 2007

EP25 Gumfight at the S'Okay Corral Sep 27, 2007

EP26 I, Stan, Corrected Sep 27, 2007

5| 0h30m| TV-Y7| en| More Info
Released: 14 July 2006 Ended
Producted By: Cartoon Network Studios
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Squirrel Boy is an American animated television series produced by Cartoon Network Studios. The series, created and executive-produced by Everett Peck, who also the creator of the more adult-humored Duckman, ran from May 27, 2006 until September 27, 2007 on Cartoon Network, with a total of 52 eleven-minute episodes. It also aired on Cartoon Network Australia in Australia and Teletoon in Canada and also in some parts of Africa. The series has no home video release, and is only available on iTunes.

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Reviews

DCfan I honestly think the main reason why I don't like this show is mainly due to it's art style and character designs. However the voice acting is pretty good (especially since I know Jason Spisak can voice little boys) apart from Rodney's voice because it just sounds terrible, I like Richard Steven Horvitz as a voice actor but his Squirrel boy is just a miscast. They should have gone with someone like Josh Keaton, Dee Bradley Baker, Johnny Yong Bosch (even if he would have been stuck in anime at this time), Jason Marsden or even David Kaufman. I have to admit though the intro is good but the designs of the show (even if its by the same person who made Duckman) just put it down.
GravityLoudHouseLover1 Squirrel Boy was a show about a Squirrel named Rodney and his owner Andy and their misadventures. The Show Ran on from May 27, 2006 - September 27, 2007 on Cartoon Network. I like this show when I was 10 to 11 years old. However Cartoon Network hasn't shown it Since March 2009 and it doesn't have a home video release for this show. Anyway the show ran for 2 Seasons & 26 Episodes in Total. The Voice acting was Pretty Good I Mean you got Richard Steven Horvitz as Rodney J Squirrel and Pamela S. Aldon as Andy Johnson and Kurtwood Smith as Mr. Bob Johnson and Nancy Sullivan as Mrs. Lucille Johnson. Anyway Squirrel Boy was okay show not as good as FHIF. I Give Squirrel a 6 out 10 stars for being Decent. I'm GravityFalls2 have nice day. BYE.
Ahuebner2004 When I saw this show on-demand, which is what I have on my Digital cable, I was amazed when I heard the characters. When I heard the kid, he reminded me of some minor characters on Rugrats, her name is Pamela Adlon from Lucky Louie. When I saw the closed-captioning for the show, I thought the squirrel's name was Rooney from Ferris Bueller's day Off. But it wasn't. it was Rodney. When I heard Rodney's voice, he reminded me of Dagget Beaver off The Angry Beavers. Now here's my favorite character of all time that nobody commented on in this show. His name is Leon. he is a blue squirrel with a cute grin on his face. many people think he looks and sounds like SpongeBob, with his facial look consisting of buck teeth sticking out. And he has a voice like you could not imagine. If you don't know who does Leon's voice, its none other than Tom Kenny. finally, there is a yellow squirrel who you also haven't commented on, Rodney's Girlfriend Darlene.
Papagatero I wondered where I had seen this stomach-churning style of art-house character design before, so I looked up the show's creator, Everett Peck. Sure enough, he was also the creator of Duckman, a really raunchy and only slightly uglier comedy cartoon for adults. While the grotesque style certainly worked well with a show as bizarre and often disturbing as Duckman, it isn't as effective on a show aimed at kids. At least the animation is smoother and up-to-date, but that scarcely saves it from its own inherently ugly art-house style. Duckman was able to pull it off due to the deranged nature of the show, but it just doesn't hold up in "Squirrel Boy."The voice acting is good, but therein lies another downfall; these are voices most cartoon-watchers have heard a LOT and can connect to famous characters from better cartoons. The two lead voice actors pull out their tried-and-true voices for this show. Pamela Adlon, the voice of "Andy" on this show, provides a voice that's quickly identified as the same voice used for Bobby Hill (King of the Hill), Otto (Time Squad), Milo (The Oblongs), and Spinelli (Recess), just to name a few. Richard Horvitz, the voice of "Rodney J. Squirrel," also provides a familiar voice. The voice of Rodney isn't that much different from other famous characters played by Horvitz, such as Billy (The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy), ZIM (Invader ZIM), Dagget (The Angry Beavers), and Kanchome (Zatch Bell, an anime currently shown a LOT on Cartoon Network). True, they're great voice actors, but we've heard these voices before, and have come to identify them with other characters (or likely the actor themselves when the voice is overused enough). It was a bad casting decision to imbue the two main characters on a brand new show with voices that are far from new or unique. A good character has a unique look and voice; that's the kind of character that kids will remember.So, the character design style of the show share's Duckman's art-house ugliness (but lacks the twisted humor to go with it), and the two characters around whom the entire show revolves have overused voices. What's the show itself like? How's the writing, the plot? Well, unfortunately, there's no saving grace in the show's writing. The story and gags aren't anything to get excited about, though not terrible, they pale in comparison to some of the other shows on Cartoon Network that are overflowing with charismatic writing. Basically the show's about a boy, Andy, and his squirrel friend/pet, Rodney. Rodney is the driving force of the show, always imposing his will upon Andy and getting the two of them into trouble. The humor is pretty basic and enough to get a laugh or two from kids, but there aren't any cleverly inserted jokes that'll have adults cracking up (unlike "Billy and Mandy" for example). Rodney stands out as one of the only truly influential characters on the show, and possibly the only interesting one, with everything essentially revolving around and hinging upon the actions of this character. Aside from the strength of Rodney's character, the other characters on the show are considerably weak. One character does not a series make.It might not be fair to judge this show so harshly based on the merits of Cartoon Network's other shows; it might actually be "decent" if it didn't have other shows of higher quality to measure up to. But, this IS a Cartoon Network-distributed show, and thus, it SHOULD measure up to the quality viewers have come to expect from the network. "Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends," "The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy," and "Ed, Edd, & Eddy" are all shows that radiate with originality, first-rate writing, and great voice acting (with voices that are, for the most part, unique to those characters). Those are shows that appeal to all ages, are visually appealing, with extremely effective characters: all of those qualities are lacking in "Squirrel Boy." Though it's not the first of Cartoon Network's new shows to disappoint those who've come to expect high quality original shows from the network, it still comes as a disappointment to be handed another lemon. Just because a show is aimed at children is no excuse for mediocrity... not for the same network that continues to produce exceptional cartoons like those mentioned above.