The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin

1987

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 The Treasure of Grundo Sep 14, 1987

EP2 Beware of the Mudblups Sep 15, 1987

EP3 Guests of the Grunges Sep 16, 1987

EP4 In the Fortress of the Wizard Sep 17, 1987

EP5 Escape from the Treacherous Mountains Sep 18, 1987

EP6 Take a Good Look Sep 21, 1987

EP7 Grubby's Romance Sep 22, 1987

EP8 Tweeg's Mother Sep 23, 1987

EP9 The Surf Grunges Sep 24, 1987

EP15 The Rainbow Mine Oct 02, 1987

EP18 One More Spot Oct 07, 1987

EP19 Elves and Woodsprites Oct 08, 1987

EP20 Grundo Graduation Oct 09, 1987

EP21 Double Grubby Oct 12, 1987

EP22 King Nogburt's Castle Oct 13, 1987

EP23 The Day Teddy Met Grubby Oct 14, 1987

EP24 Secret of the Illiops Oct 15, 1987

EP25 Through Tweeg's Fingers Oct 16, 1987

EP26 Uncle Grubby Oct 19, 1987

EP27 The Crystal Book Oct 20, 1987

EP28 Teddy and the Mudblups Oct 21, 1987

EP29 Win One For the Twipper Oct 22, 1987

EP30 Tweeg Joins M.A.V.O. Oct 23, 1987

EP31 The Mushroom Forest Oct 26, 1987

EP32 Anything In the Soup Oct 27, 1987

EP33 Captured Oct 28, 1987

EP34 To the Rescue Oct 29, 1987

EP35 Escape From M.A.V.O. Oct 30, 1987

EP36 Leekee Lake Nov 02, 1987

EP37 The Third Crystal Nov 03, 1987

EP38 Up for Air Nov 04, 1987

EP39 The Black Box Nov 05, 1987

EP40 The Hard To Find City Nov 06, 1987

EP41 Octopede Sailors Nov 09, 1987

EP42 Tweeg the Vegetable Nov 10, 1987

EP43 Wizardland Nov 11, 1987

EP44 The Ying Zoo Nov 12, 1987

EP45 The Big Escape Nov 13, 1987

EP46 Teddy Ruxpin's Birthday Nov 16, 1987

EP47 Wizardweek Nov 17, 1987

EP48 Air and Water Races Nov 18, 1987

EP49 The Great Grundo Ground Race Nov 19, 1987

EP50 A Race To The Finish Nov 20, 1987

EP51 Autumn Adventure Nov 23, 1987

EP52 Gimmick's Gizmos and Gadgets Nov 24, 1987

EP53 Harvest Feast Nov 25, 1987

EP54 Wooly and the Giant Snowzos Nov 26, 1987

EP55 Winter Adventure Nov 27, 1987

EP56 Teddy's Quest Nov 30, 1987

EP57 Thin Ice Dec 01, 1987

EP58 Fugitives Dec 02, 1987

EP59 Musical Oppressors Dec 03, 1987

EP60 MAVO Costume Ball Dec 04, 1987

EP61 Father's Day Dec 07, 1987

EP62 The Journey Home Dec 08, 1987

EP63 On the Beaches Dec 09, 1987

EP64 L.B.'s Wedding Dec 10, 1987

EP65 The Mystery Unravels Dec 13, 1987

7.3| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 14 September 1987 Ended
Producted By: Atkinson Film Arts
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin is an American animated television series based on Teddy Ruxpin, an animatronic teddy bear created by Ken Forsse and distributed by toy manufacturer Worlds of Wonder. While some of the stories used in the TV series were adapted from the books, many were original and greatly expanded upon the world established there.

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Atkinson Film Arts

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Reviews

Francesco Massimino The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin is a fantastic TV show that all ages can get enjoyment out of. The story is very well thought out and the characters are lovable. The story focuses on Teddy and Grubby as they try to get the 6 crystals. As they do this, Tweeg, a wimpy villain, and his bounder L.B, also try to get the crystals so they can become filthy rich. At the same time, they try to get into the M.A.V.O. (Monsters and villains organization). The show also has some very heartfelt moments, such as when Teddy returns home and when he reunites with his father, and when Tweeg reunites with his dad and goes surfing with him. The animation is very good for being made 30 years ago, and the backgrounds look stunning. The songs are also very good, and can be catchy and touching, such as the song "Freedom". Overall, I give this a 10/10. It's an amazing and engaging series that I can recommend to anyone.
Srananbloke It's like having a "my first Sony" at the age of 7 or 8. That is the feeling Teddy Ruxpin brings back to me. This was the first cartoon series that slipped into my young mind and brought me the introduction to a lovely human-created fantasy world containing rare species of animals living in a world a young kid only can dream about. Whether you were looking for love, adventure or humor; Teddy Ruxpin and his friends/enemies brought it all. Quellor, the big boss of the MAVO (MESO in Dutch) was frightening, Grubby was funny, and I have to admit...I had quite a crush on Princess Aruzia :) Now that the first series have been released on DVD in the US and Canada, I hope Europe will be next. Here in the Netherlands, the series were broadcasted on VARA public TV at the end of the 80's, and later in the 90's on the Dutch children's network Kindernet and the Dutch edition of Nickelodeon.Nowadays, when I see the crap channels like Jetix and Nickelodeon are broadcasting, I look back at the good ol' days of children's television, a time when cartoons were not only funny and thrilling, but also highly educative and gave children the opportunity to create their own personal fantasy world, a good bunch of cartoons and other children's TV series as a result. The release of the complete Teddy Ruxpin series on DVD in North America (and hopefully soon in Europe) is in that way not only suitable for all young adults grown up with this great adventure, but also for the current young MTV/Nickelodeon generation. Let them experience the adventures we encountered when we were young, made in a time when cartoons were nothing but cartoons, but in a way no other cartoon of today can compete with!
animal_8_5 A syndicated animated television series created in the good old USA by Ken Forsse, but actually posed in Canada, then animated, in-betweened and colored in Korea. The 65 episode series was produced in conjunction with the wildly popular Teddy Ruxpin franchise of toys, books and audiotapes marketed by Alchemy II and Worlds Of Wonder.Along the way, the "big three" (Teddy Ruxpin, Grubby the octopede and inventor Newton Gimmick) encounter Leota the woodsprite, Wooly Whatsit, Fobs, the Grunges, Illipers, Anythings, as well as bad dudes Jack W. Tweeg, Eleanor Tweeg (Tweeg's mom), L.B. Bounder, the gutangs, the mudblups, Quellor: the leader of the Monsters And Villains Organization (M.A.V.O.) and a host of others. Eclectic and very politically correct for its time. I believe this was one of the first cartoons that ever depicted a paraplegic character. One episode even depicted key characters "signing" to communicate to a hearing-impaired character.Teddy Ruxpin was the nicest, most wholesome character in 1980's television cartoons. The only harm he ever did was rough up a couple of gutangs. And then only so he could steal their costumes to infiltrate their braintrust.At times Teddy's adventures parallel that of Joseph Smith, the father of Mormonism. Particularly when his mother holds two cooking trays, one over another, to reveal a message meant just for him. Other than that, the show really doesn't preach any message, except for good old fashioned, sugar-coated American conformity.One of my favorite websites is "Jump The Shark" and Teddy Ruxpin REALLY jumps the shark as soon as Teddy and his archrival, Tweeg, start finding their long lost dads and trying to re-establishing ties with them again. This either indicated a subliminal lack of paternal presence in the lives of the scriptwriting team, or a dearth of good ideas for plot lines in the show's late going...While I never thought much of the show at the time, this cartoon seemed to develop a keen and loyal following in the late eighties and early nineties. Most of the kids who loved watching Teddy as four and five year-olds are the young adults forming our world of today.First National Pictures began marketing 2 volumes of the series onto DVD by February 2006. Exactly 3 years later, in February 2009, Mill Creek Entertainment released all 65 episodes onto DVD.
Merik Oh, wow, I can't believe how long ago it was that I watched this. I think I caught the series in bits and pieces during several repetitions on a Canadian station we got from over the border on an antenna. I barely remember the show, except for the name of the protagonist and the way the other semi-heros of the show looked, but I miss it so much now. I don't think I ever appreciated it enough when I was younger. Teddy Ruxpin was one of perhaps two cartoons I watched that had a coherent storyline -- something I'm constantly searching for in comics and TV shows now. The other one was the excellent but ill-marketed cartoon Droids, which was written for a Star Wars audience of perhaps 10 or 11, but shown along with an unfocused Ewoks cartoon best for 5 or 6 year olds.Teddy Ruxpin was, essentially, a good show, perfectly suitable for very young kids early on and then better for somewhat older kids as the solid storyline emerged. It was rather well-drawn, neither as stiff and careful as the old Transformers cartoon or as "loose" with form as current cartoons tend to be. I don't remember it being especially "funny," like Inspector Gadget, but it wasn't as preachy about things as Captain Planet or Care Bears could be. What it was, was an engaging, well-written cartoon that could hold interest without touching the throw-away or beat-until-dead jokes of most cartoons.I find myself wishing this cartoon had continued for several more years, as I look back and see the kind of influence this - one of my best-remembered and most-favored cartoons of my young childhood - had on my interests and hobbies up to this day.