![]() ![]() He then joins them on their quest to solve mysteries and fights crime. At some point he ended up frozen in a block of ice for thousands of years, until he was unfrozen by the girl's detective group known as the Teen Angels. He also appeared in a TV show that young Wilma and Betty (as well as their friends Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble) would watch as children, suggesting that these adventures are in seperate continuities. In his early days, he had the secret identity of Chester, an office boy, where he worked with cavewomen reporters Wilma Flintstone and Betty Rubble for a time. As for the mysteries themselves, they’re bargain-basement Scoobs, functioning merely as set-ups for the frequent physical gags Cavey executes, all to the familiar screams of “ Caaaaptain CAAAAAAAVEMAAAAAAAAAN!” (I counted one 11-minute segment that had Cavey yell his catch phrase 13 times-now that’s knowing your audience and what they want).Unfrozen from a glacier by a crime fighting team named the Teen Angels, Captain Caveman, a caveman who was the world's first superhero, uses his powers to fight evil once more.Ĭaptain Caveman was the world's first superhero thousands of years in the past, using various club shaped gadgets to help him out. There’s rarely any context as to why the team shows up somewhere, or how they stumble into the mystery, or why anyone would ask them to help in the first place (and no money changes hands, either…which certainly opens up the question-if you’re sick like I am-as to how those three pretty girls with the perfect stripper names make their money…). ![]() ![]() Whereas Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels‘ main influence, the original Scooby-Doo, Where are You!, took pains to at least make a show of logically setting up its mysteries, Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels‘ plots just… happen (any excuse to pad out the plot holes are filled with a little haunted house animated segue that’s employed a ridiculous amount of times during each mini-episode). As it plays today, Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels: The Complete Series is typically goofy 1970s H-B fare which should entertain young kids while giving you a nice nostalgic kick.Ĭlick to order Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels: The Complete Series at Amazon. For whatever reason, Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels (or at least Cavey) is beloved by kids who grew up during the late 70s and early 80s, proven by the fact that you can pretty much pull anyone aside from that age group, scream “ Caaaaptain CAAAAAAAVEMAAAAAAAAAN!” in their face, and they’ll know instantly where you’re coming from, pop culture-wise. and get them to send us free product (rather than helping ourselves off the shelves when that sales associate at Wal-Mart takes his break), we’re reviewing another fun Archive Collection title, this one released through their popular Hanna-Barbera Classics Collection line: Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels: The Complete Series, the animated mystery comedy voiced by Mel Blanc, Laurel Page, Marilyn Schreffler, and Vernee Watson, that originally aired on ABC from 1977- 1980. In yet another shameless attempt to stroke Warner Bros. Yes, you didn’t read that clickbait headline incorrectly: we have MORE Charlie’s Angels review action coming your way! Yes! The original show! Another season! The sixth! Well, not the sixth exactly, but still the original! Well…maybe not the original show, but pretty close! Pretty close! Almost the same thing! I mean, well…. ![]()
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