Zazoo U (TV Series 1990–1991) Poster

(1990–1991)

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8/10
U Matta, I Matta, our Alma Mata's Zazoo U
q_leo_rahman2 March 2014
The 1980s and 1990s was an animation renaissance: it was a major boom with all sorts of animated series releasing in different styles, of different subjects and for different audiences. Some made it big (TRANSFORMERS, HE-MAN, DUCKTALES, BATMAN and X-MEN) and some didn't, like ZAZOO U. It was created by philanthropist Shane DeRolfe, who wanted to make a series that could impart morals to children but in a fun manner unlike the (by then) stodgy Filmation shows.

The show's basic premise is simple enough: a school is host to a cast of dysfunctional students and teachers, who attempt to deal with a crisis a specific character is dealing with. But no matter how eccentric the characters and their personalities are – a slovenly pig, two Romanian acrobats, a piano-playing mammoth, a scholarly walrus – the crisis is real and relatable enough (our place in the world, loneliness, stage fright) and the lesson that character learns hits home even today.

The animation and humor is rather freestyle, but that enhances its charm even more: it's a universe run amok, where anything can and would happen and is unashamedly chaotic in its comedy scenarios. This however stays in balance with the seriousness of the issues the characters try to face and cope with, which makes for a remarkable blend of humour and drama. The story is able to appear to all ages, not just with dressing up the story with jokes and gags, but also providing a little poem that sums up the fable. Very few shows (or no other show I've seen anyway) combine philosophy with funny in such a appealing and endearing manner.

The show kind of got lost in the animation flood. Which is a shame, because it's quite an outstanding little gem that appeals to all ages, and deserves a second chance.
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Neat cartoon
eskovan17 October 2003
This show ran about 13 episodes in the fall of 1990 on Fox on Saturday mornings. It was a kid's cartoon, but it had some pretty creative plots & characters including a cockroach who talked like Jack Nicholson and an elephant that sounded like Nixon.

The show was very 'artsy' and I mean that in a good way. More effort was put into the scripts and voices than the animation. Each episode would revolve around some type of 'life lesson' but didn't cram it down your throat.

Way back before the internet I asked about this show on a CompuServe forum. Apparently it was created & bankrolled by a sort of hippie guy who inherited money from his family's mannequin empire(!) He was listed in the credits, Shane McSomebody, I can't quite remember. Each episode was based on a poem he had written and each poem was read by the narrator at the end of each show.

Anyway, apparently the show was so different and 'artsy' that most of the Fox affiliates refused to air it. A few even demanded that Fox drop it, they though it was so weird and annoying. Remember this was the days before The Powerpuff Girls, Samurai Jack or Dexter's Lab. This was still the time of The Smurfs, Muppet Babies and Ninja Turtles.
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Bizarre!
Klaatu-831 January 2001
I stumbled onto this cartoon in the morning while getting ready for work. It was quite bizarre yet entertaining. The main character Boink was a great character. Hope to catch it again some time on Cartoon network or some other cable network.
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