Fruit Brute
Since 1983.
OFFICIAL
RETRORATING: 12
RETRORATING: 15
- HOME
- YOUTUBE
- ARTICLES
- VIDEOS
- THEATER
- CLASSIFIEDS
- VHS COVERS
- CEREAL BOXES
- GAME BOX ART
- READ ALONGS
- PODCASTS
- FORUM
- FAQ
- POINTS STORE
Don't mess
with the bull.
JOIN!!!
A Look Back at Tales of the Gold Monkey
And if you're interested in owning the series on DVD, Amazon has it here for $31.67
Foods Long Gone
Vaporman87 Posted on Aug 02, 2015 at 04:17 AM
I hope to catch this series some time. Perhaps on YouTube or elsewhere. I hate that I missed it on it's first go around. This is something that would have interested me in my youth. I like shows like this and Fantasy Island. Anything with a bit of intrigue and mystery/adventure.
mickyarber Posted on Aug 01, 2015 at 10:29 AM
Since I missed out on Tailspin, I never made the connection myself. As for dog fights...eh. Some chases and stuff and some small fights. You never got the feeling, at least I didn't, that the show was under budget though. At least not then. Watching it again recently, you can see where a slightly bigger budget could have helped a lot though. It really is a fun series though. Well worth a look if you haven't seen it.
And I too was a big fan of Just the Ten of Us. But I watched it in it's original run on ABC when it was part of TGIF! That was always a really fun block of programming too.
jkatz Posted on Aug 01, 2015 at 10:02 AM
I was going to say this reminds me a lot of Talespin. But I love pulp adventures and this one seems as good as any. Was the show's budget big enough to have dogfights like the ad implies?
Hoju Koolander Posted on Aug 01, 2015 at 01:40 AM
So this was really less of an Indiana Jones clone and more of a live action pre-cursor to Tailspin, huh? Never caught this one during my USA Network watching, but reruns of Just The Ten of Us were hard to beat!
THE WOLVERINE!Art by John ByrneChronological Wolverine facts as revealed to the reader part XIIIContinuing our journey to understand the Wolverine c...
Every generation has their defining fantasy escape that they latched on to as kids. For Gen X, it was Star Wars and Indiana Jones, for older millennia...
Far back into my years as a youngster of the 1990s, reading short but thoroughly interesting stories became a new window of opportunity outside of rot...
The 1980's: When Nerds Became CoolThe 1980s was the era when nerds emerged from being perceived as unpopular losers to being heroes with their own u...
Andy Mangels’ Hollywood Heroes was a news column that appeared in the pages of Wizard: The Guide to Comics magazine, and Hero Illustrated in t...