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- Of course, the war had been going on for quite a long while, and their massive armies were at constant war. They could not possibly go on without supplies. Even commercial ships had been repurposed to suit the military's needs.Alas, victory was no cheap prize.Nothing worthwhile ever was.He dug in, hoping the smaller ration would not weaken him.
- Doodle Doug: 40,010 - 100,000 Points Dueling Diego: 30,010 - 40,000 Points Wizardblox/Sorcery Stones: 750,000 - 999,999 Points-Tier 7 You will win 650 gold, PLUS three bonus items Doodle Doug: 100,000+ Points Dueling Diego: 40,010+ Points Wizardblox/Sorcery Stones: 1,000,000+ -Please post your prizes along with the score.
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KI Free Games launched today morning with some of the few popular Wizard101 Mini Games such as Doodle Dug, Dueling Diego, and Sorcery Stones. It looks like Kingsisle listen to the community of Wizard101 as I remembered people asked to have mini games on the web. Good job Kingsisle! One of my favorite parts of it would be the prize codes you get at the end of a game, that is if you passed the mark point. Easy for most to give out as prizes to others or just to keep. ;) I have to say the best mini game to be playing for the easy grabs would be Doodle Dug; great prizes at low points. Now if I could only get that potion... Well see ya!Dick Dastardly | |
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First appearance | 'See-Saw To Arkansas' |
Created by | William Hanna & Joseph Barbera |
Portrayed by | Porter Flynn (2013) |
Voiced by | Paul Winchell (1968–1999) Michael Bell (The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera) Rob Paulsen (Yo Yogi!) Jim Cummings (2000–2008) Eric Bauza (Uncle Grandpa) Peter Woodward (2017–2019) Tom Kenny (2018) Jason Isaacs (Scoob!) Richard McGonagle (Jellystone!, 2020–present) |
In-universe information | |
Species | Human |
Dick Dastardly is a fictional character and antagonist who appeared in various animated series by Hanna-Barbera Productions from 1968 onward.[1] Dastardly's most famous appearances are as a main character in the series Wacky Races (his initial appearance) and its spin-off, Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines where he appeared as a protagonist. He is partly based on the English actor Terry-Thomas.[2]
The character was originally voiced by Paul Winchell, using a characterization that Winchell would also employ several years later to voice the Smurfs' nemesis Gargamel. Winchell's facial structures were caricatured in the related character design as well. In a live action version played by British actor Porter Flynn[3] a prosthetic nose and chin were employed to replicate Dastardly's exaggerated features from the original cartoon.
In subsequent depictions of the character, Dick Dastardly was voiced by Rob Paulsen and by Jim Cummings (the latter of whom was notable for voicing other characters previously voiced by Winchell, including Tigger and Zummi Gummi).
Dastardly's catchphrases in the cartoons were 'Muttley, do something!', 'Drat, and double drat!' and occasionally 'Triple drat!' or 'Curses, foiled again!', otherwise.
Appearances[edit]
Wacky Races[edit]
In Wacky Races, Dastardly was one of the drivers who competed in each episode for first place, in a long and hazard-filled cross-country road rally. As his name implies, Dastardly aimed to win solely through cheating and trickery. His race car, numbered double-zero and named 'The Mean Machine', featured all sorts of devious traps for him to use against his opponents. As Wacky Races is inspired by the film The Great Race, so was Dastardly derived from the film's chief villain, Professor Fate, played by Jack Lemmon. Dastardly in this series wore old-fashioned racer's gear — a long blue duster overcoat often worn by early motorists, along with long red gloves, a large striped hat with driving goggles attached, and sporting a handlebar mustache.
Dastardly was aided in his schemes by his sidekick, a scruffy anthropomorphic dog named Muttley who had a distinctive wheezy laugh, heard most often when Dastardly's schemes failed. Despite Dastardly and Muttley's attempts, the 'double-dealing do-badders', as the opening narration of Wacky Races describes them, failed to win a single race. Dastardly came close to winning on several occasions, but has always failed, either through his own actions or bad luck, such as posing for his picture as it was a photo finish, stopping to sign an autograph for Muttley, and having Muttley sabotage his own vehicle (Dick told the hound to 'stop the winning car'). On one occasion Dastardly did cross the finish line in first place, but was revealed to have extended the nose of his car at the last moment, and was disqualified in favour of Penelope Pitstop; this despite the fact that other characters had pulled similar stunts in the past without punishment (and indeed the original footage showed that Dastardly had not extended the nose of his car). In one episode in which he accidentally crossed the finish line first he was still disqualified; due to a series of crazy car mix-ups, Dastardly and Muttley were in the wrong car!
It seemed likely that if Dastardly had not bothered to cheat, he might have won many of the races fairly: The Mean Machine was the fastest car on the grid, and Dastardly's driving ability was often shown to be superior to the other racers. (Alas, Dick seemed bound to a code similar to that of wrestler Gorgeous George: 'Win if you can, lose if you must, but always cheat!' In fact, in one episode he came close to crossing the finish line first without cheating, but chose not to win and let the other racers finish before him, as he did not want to win fairly).
Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines[edit]
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Dick Dastardly continued his villainous career in the Wacky Races spin-off Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines. The series was inspired by the 1965 film Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines and Dastardly's appearance is based on the film's villain, Sir Percival Ware-Armitage, played by Terry-Thomas. Dastardly and Muttley flew with two other pilots: Zilly, a coward who would hide in his own clothing when ordered to deploy, and Klunk, the mechanic/inventor, who speaks a language largely composed of strange sounds that only Zilly can understand.
Together, they comprised the 'Vulture Squadron', presumably working for Germany and Central Powers in World War I. The squadron constantly attempted to stop a messenger pigeon, 'Yankee Doodle Pigeon', from delivering messages to an opposing army (seemingly American and/or the Triple Entente), often with the song 'Stop the Pigeon' playing. A typical scene shows the Vulture Squadron all converging from different directions on Yankee Doodle Pigeon, only to end up crashing into one another—while the bird remained unharmed. As in Wacky Races, Dastardly continued to fail miserably at his mission, only coming near to success on a single occasion. Muttley, despite showing enough competence to win various medals (which Dastardly was constantly threatening to revoke), seemed to delight in Dick's failures, displaying his trademark snickering laugh.
Yogi's Treasure Hunt[edit]
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In later years, Dastardly and Muttley were the nemeses for Yogi Bear and his friends in the 1980s series Yogi's Treasure Hunt. This time, Dick repeatedly failed at discovering hidden treasure before Yogi and his team. It was in this series' episode Yogi's Heroes that Dick's full name was revealed; as the leader of an island named Dicaragua, he introduced himself as Richard Milhous Dastardly (an obvious play on former U.S. President Richard Milhous Nixon). One episode shows that Dastardly and Muttley are the greediest creatures in the world.
Fender Bender 500[edit]
Dick Dastardly and Muttley were in the 'Fender Bender 500' shorts on the early 1990s short-lived series Wake, Rattle, and Roll. In those segments, the duo once again appeared in a suped-up version of the Mean Machine as a monster truck called the Dirty Truckster (a pun on the phrase 'dirty trickster'), but raced against such Hanna-Barbera stalwarts as Yogi Bear and Quick Draw McGraw. In this series, they were actually able to pull off a win when racing to Russia's 'Red Square' where it was announced that the prize was itself the Red Square. Unfortunately, their prize was simply a red square of paper, and not the deed to the Russian capital as the title of 'red square' would imply. In another Fender Bender race (The 'Hit 'n' Mississippi 500'), he played on Yogi Bear's famous catchphrase of being 'smarter than the average bear' by claiming to be 'smarter than the average cheat'.
Yo Yogi![edit]
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Dick Dastardly (alongside Muttley) appeared as a child (known as Dickie) in the short-lived series Yo Yogi!, voiced by Rob Paulsen. In the series he rides a bicycle that resembles the Mean Machine and his clothes resemble his ones from Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines. Dick Dastardly would often come up with various plots which would often backfire on him.
Scoob![edit]
Dick Dastardly is the main antagonist in the animated Scooby-Doo film Scoob!, voiced by Jason Isaacs.[4] This version of Dick lacks the hat and goggles he usually wears, and his overcoat is now a dark purple longcoat. According to his police report, this version of Dastardly is 6' 5', 295lbs. He is also depicted as more of a supervillain than a racer, having robotic minions called Rottens and being an enemy of the Blue Falcon. He operates a giant airship that is loosely based on his racing vehicle, the Mean Machine. During a scheme to steal the treasure horde left by Alexander the Great in the Greek underworld by use of a dimensional portal, Dastardly lost Muttley in the underworld when the portal was found to be one way only. He then seeks out the three skulls of Cerberus and Scooby-Doo because as the last descendant of Peritas, Alexander's dog, he is the key to opening the gates to the Underworld and reuniting with Muttley; though at the cost of unleashing Cerberus onto the world. After achieving this, Dastardly and Muttley try to escape with treasure but are captured by the reformed Rottens, and taken into custody by Blue Falcon, Dynomutt, and Dee See Skyes. At one point upon his capture, Dick tried to do a double-mask move by making them think he was a disguise of Simon Cowell. During the credits, Muttley breaks Dastardly out of prison.
Wacky Races (2017)[edit]
In the 2017 reboot of Wacky Races it is revealed that the Dick Dastardly who flew in World War I (voiced by Tom Kenny) was the father of the Dick Dastardly (presumably Dick Jr.) of the original Wacky Races. In the new version, Dick Jr.'s son/descendant, Dick Dastardly III, technically wins in the episode 'Sister Twister' - winning the 'Great Sportsman of the Year' trophy after he made a bet with Peter Perfect that involved him being nice and not cheating for once. He won due to Pandora disguising herself as Penelope who proceeded to act unsportmans-like and so the judges gave the win to Dastardly - however - to Dastardly's horror, he won by due to the sudden shift in his personality, such saying nice things to the others races and not cheating. The event also had involved race, which Dastardly of course lost, though it had no effect on who won the trophy.
In the episode 'Grandfather knows Dast' the original Dick Dastardly (World War I flying ace) rides with Dick Dastardly III, and chastises Dick Dastardly III for cheating instead of winning and ultimately causes them to lose the race just as they were about to win.
Other appearances[edit]
- Universal Studios Florida formerly had a motion simulator ride titled The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera which was a tribute to Hanna-Barbara cartoons; Dastardly (voiced by Michael Bell) alongside Muttley kidnap Elroy Jetson, so Yogi and Boo-Boo Bear have to travel across the various worlds of Hanna-Barbera to rescue him. At the end of the ride Dastardly is arrested and sent to a flying jail cell.
- Dick Dastardly, Muttley, and the Mean Machine returned as a boss car in the 2000 Wacky Races video game, voiced by Jim Cummings and Billy West. They are the protagonists in the earlier 1991 version.
- Dick Dastardly made a non-speaking cameo in the Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law episode 'Death by Chocolate'.
- In the pilot of Wacky Races Forever Dastardly (voiced by Jim Cummings) and Muttley are the main villains, working for the vice-president of Perfect Industries in an attempt to stop the other racers from crossing the finish line. The series was not picked up by the network.
- Dastardly and Muttley were to appear in the series The Perils of Penelope Pitstop, where they (especially Dastardly) would have been perfect villains given the tone and the Perils of Pauline references, rather they were imagined to be the bodyguards of a younger brother of Penelope. However, this was only in the first sketches of the series, and the two did not appear in the final work. In the first of their encounters, the Hooded Claw did ask Penelope 'Who did you expect, Dick Dastardly?' possibly in reference to the above unshot scene.
- Dastardly and Muttley cameo in the South Park episode 'Handicar' as participants in the return of Wacky Races.
- Dastardly and Muttley cameo in the Uncle Grandpa episode 'Uncle Grandpa Retires' as attendees at the Big Race. Eric Bauza lent his voice to Dastardly.
- Dick Dastardly appears as one of the main characters in 2016's Wacky Raceland. In this version, it is revealed that before the apocalyptic event that ravaged Earth, Dick Dastardly was a world-famous pianist named Richard D'Astardlien, who agreed to enter the race to Earth's last known paradise Utopia, so he could have a chance of seeing his wife and son being reborn.
- Another version of Dick Dastardly appeared in Dastardly & Muttley, also published by DC Comics under the Hanna-Barbera Beyond initiative. This version is Lt. Col. Richard 'Dick' Atcherly, a United States Air Force pilot who is sent to shoot down the rogue drone 'War Pig One', and is mutated by the mysterious element 'unstabilium', becoming increasingly insane and subject to cartoon physics.
- Dastardly and Muttley appear as contestants in a futuristic car race against Philip J. Fry, in Futurama Comics #82.
- A live action version of Wacky Races[5] was created for a campaign for Peugeot in 2013 in which Dastardly (played by actor Porter Flynn) and Muttley (puppeteered by Mark Jeffris) race through the city against Penelope Pitstop, Peter Perfect, The Red Max, The Slag Brothers, The Ant Hill Mob, The Creepy Coupe and The Army Surplus Special.[3]
- Dick Dastardly and Muttley will appear in the upcoming series Jellystone!.
- Dick Dastardly will be voiced by Richard McGonagle, and Muttley will be voiced by archive recordings of Don Messick.
- Dick Dastardly was voiced by Jason Isaacs, and Muttley was voiced by Billy West and archive recordings of Don Messick in the animated Scooby-Doo film Scoob! (2020), in the film, who tries to catch Scooby-Doo with some robots to steal Alexander the Great's treasures from the Underworld.
Wizard101 Doodle Dug Prizes Game
References[edit]
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- ^Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 234–236. ISBN978-1476665993.
- ^McCann, Graham (December 2011). '5'. Bounder!: The Biography of Terry-Thomas. Aurum Press. ISBN9781845137564. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
Terry-Thomas ... and Eric Sykes ... formed a very effective on-screen double-act, (which ended up inspiring a pair of cartoon alter egos – Dick Dastardly and Muttley – in the popular Hanna-Barbera/Warner Brothers series Wacky Races.
- ^ ab'Wacky Races'. 1 April 2013 – via www.imdb.com.
- ^D'Alessandro, Anthony (May 10, 2019). 'Mark Wahlberg & Jason Isaacs Board Warner Bros' 'Scoob''. Deadline. Retrieved May 10, 2019.
- ^Young & Rubicam Brasil (2 May 2013). 'Y&R - Peugeot 208 - Wacky Races' – via YouTube.