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Lunar Jim

Canadian animated series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lunar Jim
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Lunar Jim is a Canadian science fiction stop-motion animated television series that aired from 2 January 2006 to 19 October 2007. The show focuses on Lunar Jim, an astronaut on the Blue Moon L22.

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The show, produced by Halifax Film Company and Alliance Atlantis in association with CBC Television, Radio-Canada and BBC Kids, was based on an original concept created by Alexander Bar. The Director, Benny Zelkowicz, voiced Jim in the series.

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Premise

Jim and his team – Rover the Robot Dog, Ripple the Super Space Mechanic, Eco the Farmer and T.E.D. the Technical Equipment Device – live on Blue Moon L22, the second-to-last moon on the edge of the Milky Way. Focusing on exploration and inquiry, Lunar Jim intends to promote such life-lesson skills as problem-solving, persistence, creativity, and cooperation, with an emphasis on "pre-science skills". His catchphrase is "Let's get lunar!"

Season 1 features only the main six characters as they explored the moon and they are depicted as the only people of the time to live on a moon. Season 2 established that they are part of a larger network of moon-dwelling astronauts and introduced three new recurring characters.

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Characters

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Main

  • Lunar Jim (Benny Zelkowicz), the show's main protagonist. He is an adventure- and mystery-loving astronaut and is curious about his surroundings.
  • Rover, a robot dog, who is always by Jim's side. Rover likes to play fetch and always helps Jim on his lunar missions. He speaks only in beeps and Jim and T.E.D are the only ones who can understand him.
  • Ripple (Gil Anderson), the African-Canadian engineer on the moon and is the only female until Skye joins. She is always coming up with new inventions to help Jim and often helps him on his missions. She drives the Scooter.
  • Eco (Jim Fowler), the farmer on the moon who works in the Eco dome growing plants and raising the animals. Eco loves to collect rocks and plants to study and help Jim. He doesn't typically go on missions because he is far too busy farming in the Eco dome. He usually drives the Hopper.
  • T.E.D. (Technical Equipment Device) (John Davie), a humanoid robot. He is the clumsiest on the moon and his clumsiness creates some simple slapstick comedy. He is somewhat paranoid, being afraid of many non-existent things. However, he is quite smart and sometimes solves the problem in the story, though much of his main plot elements involve him being completely arrogant. T.E.D. represents a child and, essentially, the show's target audience.
  • Pixel (Kristin Bell), the computer that helps Jim and his friends find things on the lunar surface and tells them their jobs for the day.
  • Daisy, an anthropomorphized cow. Lunar Jim and his team get their milk from Daisy.
  • Delores, an anthropomorphized chicken who yields eggs for the team.

In the second season, three additional characters were added to the show:

  • Skye, a young trainee astronaut who comes to Moonaluna for "hands-on" training.[1]
  • Yik Yak, a turtle-like alien who speaks in rhyme. He visits Jim and his friends often, but his visits usually result in some sort of unintentional problem. Although he only speaks in season 2, he does make a cameo in the first season.[1]
  • Zippity, A space mailman who sounds like a robot, but is never described as such.[1]

Supporting

In the TV show, there are minor characters who make an appearance, and cause some trouble.

  • Colby the Collector – Used to collect objects on the Moon to study. He makes more than one appearance and was he sent on the Moon before Jim and his friends arrived.
  • The Garden-bot – Built by Ripple to help Eco garden, but malfunctions and destroys all the plants.
  • The Lunar Worm – An anthro worm that lives in a compost crater who eats the peels of fruits and Jupiterbugs.
  • The Fluffies– A small species of animals on the moon who reproduce on the double. They are sometimes seen in the background of a few episodes.
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Setting

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Blue Moon L22

Blue Moon L22 is the moon where the show takes place. For the show, the moon is divided into sectors (e.g. sector "L" or sector "12"). Each sector also contains certain locations, such as "The Crystal Caves" or "The Chime Flower Meadow". Lunar Jim usually explores these sectors in each episode and is always finding new ones.

Moonaluna

Moonaluna is the little settlement where Jim and his friends live. The settlement includes the Eco dome, Mission control, Jim's home, Ripple's home (never mentioned) and a windmill which is also never mentioned. Mission control is the building where Jim "gets lunar" and where all the vehicles are stored. The Eco dome is a lunar greenhouse which is the place where Eco is typically found farming and taking care of the livestock, Daisy and Dolores.

Jim's home is where he and Rover live and is often the place where each episode starts. In Season 2, the Moonport (a spaceship landing, refueling and repair port) is built, although few other spaceships visit. The places where T.E.D. or Eco live are never mentioned. In many episodes, it has been mentioned that there are other colonies of astronauts on the moon, but they're never seen in person.

Vehicles

When Jim "gets lunar", he chooses one of the following vehicles for his mission:

  • Lunar Scrambler – The fastest vehicle on the moon. It is a blue scooter-like vehicle and is little and sleek for getting to a mission fast.
  • Lunar Lifter – A yellow hovering vehicle. Its main use is using the built-in winch on the bottom.
  • Lunar Scooter – Similar to the Scrambler, only it is red in color, has a winch at the bottom and is only used by Ripple when she accompanies Jim on a mission.
  • Lunar Crawler – An orange simple backhoe on tracks. The vehicle's arm can be fully customizable with a selection of attachments that can be chosen for a mission and once had a voice control unit.
  • Lunar Hopper – A green tractor-like vehicle and the only wheeled vehicle on the moon at the cost of being the slowest. It comes with a trailer and a winch.
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Episodes

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The show aired as either a full 22-minute series with two segments in each episode, or as a single 11-minute episode with one segment.[2]

Season 1 (2006)

More information No. overall, No. in season ...

Season 2 (2007)

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Telecast and home media

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The show was both premiered in Canada and Latin America on 2 January 2006, on CBC Television and Discovery Kids Latin America, respectively.[2]

Other broadcasters who premiered/acquired the show at the time included ABC TV in Australia on 14 March, CBeebies in the United Kingdom on 3 April (where it was re-dubbed with British voice actors), KiKA in Germany on 13 April (with ZDF premiering the series at a later date following KiKA) and CBC's French-language system Ici Radio-Canada Télé on 15 April. Other broadcasters who acquired the show included France 5 in France, have planned to premiere the show within a Fall 2006 window.[2]

The show was also aired on the Spanish-language V-me in the U.S. along with foreign broadcasters: TG4 (Gaelic-language) in Ireland, Cultura in Brazil, Canal Panda in Portugal, MiniMini in Poland, EBS in South Korea, NRK Super in Norway, Boomerang in Spain, ABC 4 Kids in Australia, Nickelodeon in the Netherlands, eToonz in South Africa and Hop! Channel in Israel since 2007.

On 9 October 2006, Alliance Atlantis appointed BBC Worldwide as the British DVD license for the show. The show's first British DVD release, titled "Let's Get Lunar", was released within that week and contains 10 episodes.[3]

As of 2023, the show is currently streaming on Tubi in English, but the show's original language is heard after not airing over the air in the U.S. for many years.

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References

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