If YOU had your own animated series...

For cartoon buffs with a taste for the dark side, I'd recommend The Villian Academy (a la Ahhhh!!!! Real Monsters!!!!) where up and coming villians learn how to be super villians.

Then there's The Bridal Commandos, in which five gorgeous dressed brides use their army skills and weapons to take all things evil and criminal to the cleaners.
 
I've had a few different ideas. I had this one idea I liked called "Halloween Knights" which was basically about a pair of kids, (a boy and a girl) the girl's monster-hunting uncle and their sidekick, a rather rude, slightly amoral talking pumpkin as they hunt down 13 magic monster masks before the next Halloween (when the barriers between worlds are weakest) in order to keep them out of the hands of demons that want to use them to open a doorway to their world. The cool part being that the kids can use the masks to transform into the monsters, but they have to be careful not to let the powe of the masks take them over.

The idea was that it was sort of an homage to the "monster-crazy" era of kids' toys and entertainment. You know, the Monster in My Pocket, Mighty Max, Goosebumps period during the '90s.

I figure my ideas aren't really going to take wing anytime soon, so I'll let that one go.
 
mines older

in fact when I started it the idea branched in to 4 separated show ideas and I hope they could connect to each other and have their own "universe"
 
I'm actually working on one right now; an animated comedy that features more diversity instead of the usual stereotypes we see every day...
 
My idea is something like focusing on various characters, more in the spirit of old cartoons I used to watch and enjoy, like something like the Looney Tunes, single contained cartoons. Something crazy that actually makes people laugh unlike today stuff.

My other idea is a more serious action show meant for an older demographic, something more for my serious side. A show that makes you think that "huh... I never saw that from that angle"

My other idea is a combination of both. How that would work... I haven't a clue, but I thought it would work on some levels.

I had ideas, never shared them, but for some reason, I see alot of them being made. It's like someone is monitoring me from my house when I'm not on the computer.
 
Ya know, considering how I share my cartoon ideas with other people, like close friends, I think I can share it with you guys. But through comparison, because people will start doing it eventually, anyway.

I have a cartoon ideas that are like:

Digimon Adventure (first movie)
Sabrina: the Teenage Witch
Fushigi Yugi + Super Mario Galaxy
Codename KND
Darkstalkers + Pokemon
Xialon Showdown
Out of Jimmy's Head + Naruto

...among others.
 
Before I start on these, I want to get my feet wet by writing my own fan comic*--just to see if I can do it.

But I expect in the next few years to work out the series bible on three ideas. The common themes to these stories:

1. No more kids and teenagers doing normal stuff. If I want to watch paint dry, I'll paint my apartment.

2. Action, adventure, suspense, drama, romance. Comedy mixed in.

3. A bit of 90s sophistication, a dash of 2K flair, and a whole lot of 80s madness(cool madness).

In sum: Ordinary people, extraordinary situations.

= = =

Any story I do will involve kids outside the #1 plot concept. And now:

1. Set in outer space five hundred years into the future. It has the quasi-sophistication of Star Trek, but with more variety in aliens that cartoons will allow for. The main story involves a species returning to their ancient homeworld after five hundred years to retake it from a brutal empire that brought the world into turmoil. The twist here is that the ancient homeworld...is Earth.

The show stars two kid crewmembers: a human 10-year old who's always very serious(and more mature than her age suggests)--she never smiles, and a rogueish alien 16-year old from a planet with no rules. I don't know who'd voice the girl, but the teenager is definitely Rob Paulsen.

For you see, this involves starships, and a Starfleet-like organization. It should have an Avatar-like feel to it, with plot twists and character growth.

The character design has an anime flair to it, except that it will look a bit cartoony (particularly with the numerous aliens).

2. Set in present-day Charleston, South Carolina; it's about a team of three secret agents working tirelessly to foil the plots of a pair of megalomaniacal twins. The twist here is that the lead agent's a kid, the lady character's a Bionic Woman, and the trained Asian assassin's a silly, gentle giant wearing a bowler hat--at least, so it seems. One very kid-like(although brainy and British) kid(voiced by Ben Diskin, using his NUMBUH ONE voice), two competent adults.

The villains are also based in Charleston; the lead villain is pretty goofy(although sharp in a world-wise kind of way)--but succeeds in many of his objectives for three reasons: one: his twin sister, who's pretty smart(yet idealistic); two, his son(about the same age as the lead hero)--who acts as head of his board of advisers and warns of any swiss-cheese holes in his dad's schemes, and three....

...the blinkered stereotyping from the hero, who thinks that the lead villain is too stupid to be the mastermind of world domination schemes. He's rather stubborn, and when he has a set idea, he won't let it go.

The plot structure will be akin to Duck Tales, where there are 5-ep multi-parters and stand-alone eps; a sort of episodic continuity will persist. This will be a fairly short 65-ep series with a beginning, middle and end.

Character design has a strong Hartman influence, with bits of Schooley/McCorkle.

3. The third was inspired in part by Bratz: Genie Magic and Disney's Aladdin. Only here's the kicker: the jinn are the stars--along with two teenage girls; one from the US, and one from Japan.

Three female jinn come under the command of the two teen girls; the girls have to share the trio's power. In the early part of the series involves misadventures as each girl tries to outsmart the other out of the three jinn.

However, the tone changes as the main villain is revealed: a cruel, brutal and ancient god who enslaved all the jinn to his service thousands of years ago. While the god was defeated, he sealed the jinn to containers in a final act of spite--to create enmity between jinn/other supernatural beings (angels, youkai, kami, elves and what have ye) of the spiritual realm and mankind. The three jinn want to destroy this god once and for all, and liberate their embittered brothers and sisters.

= = =

I'd also like to do a remake of the Impossibles; and I still have that old idea of idealized warrior country avatars battling it out--a history show turned into DBZ with shoujo aesthetics.

I have another history show involving a time-traveling genius girl and her hip older sister from the distant future, traveling into parts of American(and sometimes world) history.

Another old idea I'm still kicking around involves a cartoon starring a semi-modernized (they dress and speak in a modern fashion, but in character) William Shakespeare and Jane Austen; they host a show that features other writers. All of their works are episodes of shows; any poets become musicians. There are interviews that serve as primers to learn about the writers. Sometimes other historical figures appear.

Not to worry: the Bard's own numerous works get the star treatment--as he'll comment. Jane Austen gets to counter with her dry yet witty commentary.

I'll give the title for this one: Writers Block (with Will and Jane).

= = =


* as to the fan comic: it's an homage to the 80s(and beyond), starring those two sets of form-changing robots: the G1 Transformers and the original, Machine Robo-based Tonka Gobots.

A huge metaseries of the cartoon crossover I would have loved to see, and--except that Hasbro played a bit of dirty pool, combined with the fact that Hanna Barbera really didn't know how to push the concept as well as Marvel/Sunbow--we might have been able to see it.

I anticipate having the first issue out on the web by the end of January 2009.

= = =

My brain, it's always at work. :D
 
In just about every stoy I think through in my head, I end up putting a cataclysm at about the halfway point. I kill a mentor, or half the cast, or an entire city--or all three in one instance! I leave the surving cast in a daze, and eventuyally tweak all of their personalities. Usually separating them into two faction: one grim do-whatever-it-takes faction, and one morosely optimistic faction. And they typically remain at odd (even coming to blows) until a final reconciliation at the end. Never a 'happily ever after' ending, but at least a 'the conflict is over' ending.

One other thing I really want to do: revenge of the minor character. In the early-going, frequently use a non-spectacular character--in the vien of Yamcha or Pilaf. Then steadily introduce better, stronger, cooler characters, until aforementioned character fades into the background. Ignore the character entirely for half a season. Then reintroduce character with a bang, in the presence of newer characters who have never met (or maybe even heard of) the old character. Bonus points if I can introduce the character with a radically altered personality and/or powers. Extra bonus points if character has switched sides entirely. (Hey, they were ignored. People don't like being ignored.)

Lastly, if the story takes place in 'the real world' set it in a real location. That is not New York. Or California.
 
A show about kids with wacky adventures in high school.

Yeah... I actually want to make my own take on the concept. I suppose that's why there's so many versions of it, people all want to try their own version.

Another is a sort of "teen solves cases around his school" ala Veronica Mars (though he's not a detective or related to one, he just sort of gets involved by accident and ends up solving them accidentally), but I'd probably prefer to have that in live-action than a cartoon. I'm not sure.
 
I'd want to do a sentai-style concept, but I think I'd try to deconstruct it a bit. Why do these people meet? Who's bringing them together? And more importantly, how are they getting around? You're not going to bring five people from the corners of the globe and expect them all to get along. Let's play with that a bit.

I'd never write about kids in high school. Once is enough, thank you.
 
Ideally it'd be something with a fair amount of action (one should really take advantage of how the medium doesn't need to be realistic), but my favorite Flash shorts I've done have been rather talky. Mostly because it requires less actual animating, and because casting voice actors for my characters is fun.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OPdPVJo6uz4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3v2uOOCqkYY

When I do actiony toons, they always come up extremely short and devoid of plot or point.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fICjecMOhMg
http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/315827
http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/285331

They're probably better than my dialogue-heavy ones, since they don't pretend to be anything better. I tried to combine the two once, but I ended up with sloppy animation and awful voices.
 
Well, yeah, of course. I figured that went without saying for an action toon with any sort of ongoing story. My cataclysm is in addition to the big final crisis. Usally it does set up event that lead to the eventual crisis. Or at least it shakes up the status quo durring the run up to that crisis.
 
http://scythemantis.deviantart.com/art/Invasion-Invasion-80571015
-Doodles and descriptions of invading races from my Invasion series idea.

http://scythemantis.deviantart.com/art/BAGGUUU-70686594
-Doodles for the untitled cockroach-world project. Human protagonist would never be seen outside either a radiation suit or a comically crappy insect costume.




Thanks! I'll be sure to watch some of your stuff the next time I can sit down for some flash cartoons. I think you'll find eps 4 and 5 of Fear Hole the funniest. They're certainly the most popular so far, and the two I'm happiest with myself.
 
Hey, thanks for checking it out! Yeah, flash has its limitations, but I actually managed to get a fair amount of movement and motion into the fourth episode. Namely the scene where Jellybean wrestles a pig:

jbcloseup300.jpg
JBairdborne300.jpg
PIGSFACE300.jpg


It is possible, it just takes some manuevering.
 
I am working on a comic series, but with some adjustments it could work as a animated series. Because some others members here have warned me about that others might steal it from me I won't reveal to much about except it would be like a sort of cross between Kolchack the night stalker and The Real Ghostbusters.
 
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