The Funky Phantom

1971

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 Don't Fool With A Phantom Sep 11, 1971

When a gang learns that a farmer may lose his farm, they decide to enter the Looney Dooney in the race, and donate the prize money to him. They convert the vehicle into the Monstermobile. But that night, a criminal called the Raven steals it to keep them out of the race. They go to an abandoned saw mill to get it back. After Mudsy rescues them from a near-fatal ride to the grindstone, they recover the Monstermobile, enter the race, and win. They discover that Raven is Otis Carter, the bank president who wanted to foreclose on the farm.

EP2 Heir Scare Sep 18, 1971

The group stops at Conway Manor when the Looney Dooney is stuck in a bog. They discover that Mike Conway is being threatened by a Marsh Monster.

EP3 I'll Haunt You Later Sep 25, 1971

The gang investigates ghostly occurences at Fort LaFitte.

EP4 Who's Chicken Oct 02, 1971

April Learns that her Uncle Henry, Owner of Chicken Delicious, may be put out of business by the Chicken Man. She and the boys get jobs there to find out who they're up against The Chicken Man turns out to be Mr. Angus, owner of a rival restaurant chain.

EP5 The Headless Horseman Oct 09, 1971

In Sleepy Hollow (YES, THAT SLEEPY HOLLOW!), The gang meets Ichabod Crane, who's descended from the original Mr. Crane. He tells them that the Headless Horseman is riding again, and is after him this time. Will history repeat itself?

EP6 Spirit Spooked Oct 16, 1971

During the Mexican road race, the kids encounter the ghosts of Montezuma and the Sun God. They also meet two men who both claim to be archaeologist Proffessor Lundgren.

EP7 Ghost Town Ghost Oct 23, 1971

When visiting a western town for it's Wild West Day, the kids are thrown in jail for not wearing cowboy outfits. They are released when Elmo wins a stagecoach race. But their problems all begun. The staged bank robbery becomes a real one, and the crooks drive off with the money, April, Skip and Boo. This conceives the Mayor that the teens are young bank robbers. Can they clear themselves?

EP8 We Saw A Sea Serpent Oct 30, 1971

While vacationing at the lakeside resort, the group discovers a sea serpent living in the water.

EP9 Haunted In Inn Nov 06, 1971

A ghost seems to be scaring guests out in the Widow Wilson's Inn. Strangely, all the frightened guests end up at the Sand And Surf Motel, the only otherr lodging place in the vicinity. Could someone be trying to put Widow Wilson out of business? The Kids and Mudsy decide to find out...

EP10 Mudsy Joins The Circus Nov 13, 1971

The circus comes to town. The kids see a man disguised as a gorilla rob the box office.

EP11 Pigskin Predicament Nov 20, 1971

The kids return to their high school for the big ball game (""You two are players, I'm the cheerleader, and Elmo's the mascot""). Two robbers steal a rich lady's necklace, and hide in the football, they disguise themselves as players to get the necklace back. Naturally, they're found out, and arrested.

EP12 The Liberty Bell Caper Nov 27, 1971

Following atrail of rhyming clues and wax dummies, the gang goes after the Parrafiend, who has stolen the Betsy Ross flag and the Liberty Bell, and kidnapped April.

EP13 April Foolish Day Dec 04, 1971

The kids are preparing to meet professional racer Winfield Wheelie. April is so taken with this Andretti wanna-be that she volunteers to be his navigator. But behind the scenes, a crook named Road Hog intends to throw a monkey wrench into the racer's plans

EP14 The Forest's Prime-Evil Dec 11, 1971

In this episode the whole gang is out on a quest to find and capture a Bigfoot-type creature.

EP15 The Hairy Scarey Houndman Dec 18, 1971

In this episode of Funky Phantom the whole gang is at a dog show and Meets a Bulldog formally known as Cromwell. Cromwell is none other then a rich dog who's owner a rich lady, has been targeted for a dognapping by the Houndman. In confusion Houndman's goons take Elmo by mistake.

EP16 Mudsy And The Muddlemore Manor Dec 25, 1971

Yet another classic episode featuring Jonathan Wellington ""Mudsy"" Muddlemore, April Stewart, Skip, Augie, Elmo, and Boo. In this episode the whole gang visits visits the Muddlemore Mansion. Later a portrait of Muddsy's family is discovered.

EP17 Ghost Grabbers Jan 01, 1972

Muddsy and Boo finally inform the whole gang why they ran away from the Redcoats. They tell them about a few incidents including hiding in a clock that later trapped them and then being kidnapped by men disguised as Redcoats, and forced to dig up the treasure the Brits buried. But now, it's under water.
6.4| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 11 September 1971 Ended
Producted By: Hanna-Barbera Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Three teenagers and their dog solve mysteries with the help of two ghosts from the 18th century.

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Reviews

Blueghost Funky Phantom is a re-invention of the Scooby Doo formula of kids going around solving mysteries, as is so often with so many other Hanna Barbera offerings that pervaded the 1970s. I don't want to make this another cruel review of Hollywood animation post 1940s, but I need to get the bad out of the way. Funky Phantom used recycled voice talent with little variance on the characters they were voicing. Couple that with a cheaper animation approach, look and feel, and you get a series of cartoons that aren't worth a whole lot.If you were a kid who came home after school in the 70s and 80s, or even the 60s, and you saw Warner Brothers or MGM classics from the 30s, 40s and even 1950s, then you noticed a difference in quality between the guys who were offering Bugs and Daffy as well as Tom and Jerry, and the guys who were offering Scooby Doo, the Chang Clan, Funky Phantom, Wakcy Racers, Stop the Pigeon, Huckleberry Finn, Yogi Bear, and just a whole host of animated offerings that had a cheap look and recycled feel that, and I can only speak for myself, had me turning the channel. Funky Phantom comes from that post corporate industrial period when the Hollywood social psychologists felt they had to create something for the kids that was beyond the slapstick antics of classic studio animation. Funky Phantom was part of an effort to get kids to stop and think about their fears or people presenting fears. Scooby Doo did this, even the Flintstones or the Groovy Goolies, and in particular the "Super Friends" (Justice League of America) all did this by trying to offer something that had stories that tried to be more sophisticated, but, again I can only speak for myself, came across as cheap and ham-fisted.Reason; Japan was already offering more sophisticated action mystery animation for children that didn't rely on condescending tropes of including cute side kicks (Scrappy Doo for Scooby Doo) or kid audience avatars like The Wonder Twins for the Justice League or their substitutes Wendy, Marvin and Wonder Dog. Japanese animation had full fledged violence with bloodshed realizing that children knew how to accept violence without becoming programmed by it, and to this end also realized that it was important to put the violence in its proper context so that good young healthy minds could make their own decisions about it based on their parents' values of how to judge said actions.Funky Phantom attacked American children with the usual cheap animation techniques that didn't have an ounce of artistry in Japanese offerings, and certainly were not as smooth as Disney or classic pre 1960s animation. Funky Phantom, like all of the other Hanna Barbera offerings, takes all of the aforementioned elements and gave American children a repackaging of what was essentially the same theme of trying to teach children to be critical of the world about them.In my opinion not only did it not succeed in this, but the cheap presentation of 1970s animation really had a lot of kids turning the channel. Just look at the number of reviews on Amazon between the DVDs of classic animation and the Hanna Barbera shows in the 1970s. I remember talking with kids my age about which cartoons were good and which were bad. We all agreed that classic cartoons from MGM and WB simply outclassed anything Hanna Barbera could throw at us.Funky Phantom, with a perpetual re-use of voice talent (Dan Butler re-using the same character for the phantom that he did for Snaglepuss) re-use of the same set of sound-effects from the same sound studio in Burbank, and using the same formula of young kids solving mysteries and taking on crimes, couldn't be a bigger flop in terms of social objectives.The proof is in the pudding; the UFO, ESP and astrology social phenomenons hit an all time high in the 70s and 80s. Religion fundamentalism continued to be on the upswing in the bible belt and beyond. And mysticism of all forms, and just a fascination with the supernatural, continued to grow among the same audience that watched Hanna Barbera's offerings.Funky Phantom was poorly animated. Had a laugh track because it wasn't funny. Relied on cute characters to try and rope in boys and girls. And didn't even look good nor was it well animated. That's on top of all the social psychology injected into it and its cousin shows made by the same animation studio. And that's pretty much what I think of Funky Phantom and all of Hanna Barbera's offerings from the late 60s up through the 80s. Not a memorable show other than the fact that it was produced. If you need a nostalgia blast, well, there are better shows out there. Funky Phantom is another product of the cultural depression that was the 1970s in the United States of America. Thank goodness that era is over with.
O2D This cartoon seems highly unoriginal but since it was before my time I can't say for sure what has been ripped off from other cartoons.I do know that Mudsy has the exact same voice as Snagglepuss, a carbon copy even.I also know that voice is an impersonation of Bert Lahr(the Cowardly Lion from The Wizard of Oz).Most people will call it a Scooby-Doo rip off but that's only because they haven't seen the countless other cartoons it "borrows" from.I noticed another review on here that said "Even more amazing is a Shaggy-like character complete with goatee!".That statement not only proves that he has never seen this show because there is never one person on screen with any facial hair, it also proves he has never seen Speed Buggy, which has an actual Shaggy clone(albeit without the facial hair).Even Jabberjaw had a "Shaggy-like character", guess he never saw that either.I just watched every episode of this today and never once thought any of the characters were "Scooby-Doo- like".I did however notice that two of characters can't pronounce "helicopter" and I found that to be extremely disturbing.If you can look past all the stuff they stole, you will see a somewhat original show.A lot of the stories center around the Revolutionary War and New England.You will never see another cartoon do that.Plus the dog doesn't talk.It doesn't get more original than that.Overall I'd say if you like cartoons you should watch this.Just watch it with an open mind and you might have a good time.I just checked and Speed Buggy came after this show so they stole the dune buggy idea from this show.This show is more original than people will admit.
raysond The short-lived animated series "The Funky Phantom" was another example of Hanna-Barbera trying to cash in on the astounding success of "Scooby Doo,Where Are You?",and not to mention a slew of rip-off copycats that were using the same exact formula that ran throughout the entire decade of the 1970's. But this one followed the exact Scooby formula,but with an unusual twist: A trio of teenagers who solve mysteries and clues with the help of a friendly ghostlike character(voiced by Daws Butler)who acts as their companion as they go from one town to another to basically solve crimes,deal with the supernatural, and fight off evildoers as they unravel the clues and bring in the usual villains. How did they meet this ghost? A trio of teenagers,April(Tina Holland),Skip(Mickey Dolenz of "The Monkees" fame),and Augie(Tommy Cook)take refuge from a storm one night to reset the clock to the proper time of midnight. This released the still-nervous ghost of Jonathan Muddlemore known as "Muggsey",who would join the teens in their Looney Duney buggy. Muddlemore was a cowardly New Englander hiding from the British in 1776 in his mansion's grandfather clock found the spirit of himself and his cat Boo freed almost 200 years later,thanks to an accident.Some major difficulties were caused by Muggsey and Boo,who typically became invisible whenever any sort of fear struck them. And who reappear whenever the kids got themselves in trouble with some diabolical villain or help them to escape from certain harm. The teens had their own pet to help out with the mysteries,their bulldog named Elmo. This was a copy of the Scooby Doo formula. Hanna-Barbera stockplayer Daws Butler reprises his Snagglepuss character for this short-lived series and it shows in some of the episodes. The series premiered as part of ABC's Sunshine Saturday Morning schedule from September 11, 1971 until September 1, 1973. Produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions. Out of the 17 episodes that were produced,the original episodes ran on ABC from September 11,1971 until September 2, 1972. Its second season consisted of repeated episodes that ran from September 9, 1972 until September 1, 1973. In 1980,the gang returned to Saturday Mornings as part of NBC's The Godzilla Super Power Show" in repeated episodes.
koconnor-1 A Scooby Doo clone - teenagers and a goofball sidekick with a gimmick travel the country tackling baffling mysteries and unmasking the bad guys. The difference here is that ghosts are real... as evidenced by the title character, Sir Muddlemore, a timid ghost who's afraid of his own shadow, and his sidekick kitty, "Boo". Muddlemore was voiced by Daws Butler, and his voice characterization is virtually indistinguishable from animation's own "Master Thespian", Snagglepuss ("Heavens to Mergatroid!").