Dastardly & Muttley in Their Flying Machines is a Saturday morning cartoon produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions for CBS from 13 September 1969 to 5 September 1971. The show is unusual in having only two voice actors, Paul Winchell as Dick Dastardly and the indistinctly heard General, and Don Messick as Muttley and everybody else. Each half-hour episode typically features two stories, plus short "Wing Dings" gags and "Magnificent Muttley" Walter Mitty-style daydream shorts.
Summary[]
Dick Dastardly and Muttley are World War I Flying aces and members of the Vulture Squadron, a crew of aviators on a mission to stop a Homing pigeon named Yankee Doodle Pigeon from delivering messages to the other side.
Characters[]
The Vulture Squadron[]
- Dick Dastardly is the leader of the Vulture Squadron, an ex-Wacky Racer turned aviator. He is still the accident-prone villain he had been in Wacky Races. He is referred to as "DD" or "Chief" by Zilly and Klunk, and as "Rick Rasterly" by Muttley, especially when he is muttering. Although he's sometimes mean to Muttley, Zilly, and Klunk, he says numerous times to himself that he is a nice guy to calm his nerves. When he gets angry, he usually uses his catchphrase "drat, drat and double drat", just before crashing hard into the ground. Although he does not show that very often, Dastardly likes Muttley very much... sometimes during the show, he treats Muttley with a lot more respect than the rest of the squadron.
- Muttley is Dastardly's bungling canine sidekick. He rarely speaks, usually just cursing to himself indistinctly or an excited "Yeah-yeah-yeah." He has a distinctive rasping laugh which he employs whenever something bad happens to Dick, or whenever Dick is describing his latest "foolproof" plot. Since leaving the Wacky Races, Muttley has learned to fly by spinning his tail like a helicopter rotor. This enables him to save Dastardly from falling, which frequently happens, usually accompanied by a cry from Dastardly of: "MUTTLEY!! DO SOMETHING!!", although Muttley usually demands a medal for doing so. During Wacky Races, Muttley's popularity had grown, so when Dastardly and Muttley began production, he got his own segment, Magnificent Muttley, in which he daydreams that he is a different hero each week, usually with Dastardly as the villain.
Other Characters[]
- Yankee Doodle Pigeon is a mail-carrying homing pigeon the Vulture Squadron tries to intercept.
- The General is Dastardly's superior, unseen except for his arm, which occasionally reaches through the telephone earpiece.
- Muttley's girlfriend is only seen in some of the "Magnificent Muttley" shorts.
Development[]
The show's working title was Stop the Pigeon, and the show's theme song (derived from "Tiger Rag" and sung by Dick Dastardly himself) repeats the phrase so often that it is easy for that to be mistaken for the show's actual title. Under the working title, Dastardly and Muttley were not part of the cast; a chubby, heavy-jowled Red Baron-esque pilot and a dachshund in flying goggles were the central figures. It appeared that those figures were not going anywhere insofar as development, so the characters of Dastardly and Muttley were plucked from Hanna-Barbera's earlier Wacky Races for the series.
Like its predecessor, Wacky Races, Dastardly & Muttley in their Flying Machines owes a great deal to the Road Runner cartoons, with Dastardly once again taking the Wile E. Coyote role. Both characters are fanatics, incapable of giving up even in the face of repeated and painful failure. Michael Maltese, who wrote many of the original Road Runner shorts, is also credited as a writer on Wacky Races, The Perils of Penelope Pitstop and Dastardly and Muttley.
Dick Dastardly's appearance in this show was based on the English actor Terry-Thomas, the mustache-twirling villain of Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines, the film which provided the inspiration for Dastardly & Muttley in their Flying Machines.
Plot Similarities[]
Each story features variations on the same plot elements: the Vulture Squadron tries to trap Yankee Doodle Pigeon using one or more planes equipped with Klunk's latest contraption(s), but one or more of the Squadron messes up the attempt and the planes either crash, collide or explode. While they are falling out of the wreckage, Dastardly calls for help, which Muttley either offers or refuses depending on whether Dastardly agrees to give him a medal. Even when Muttley does agree to fly Dastardly out of trouble, Dastardly seldom has a soft landing. At some point the General calls Dastardly on the phone to demand results. Dastardly assures him that they will soon capture the pigeon, but the General disbelieves him and either bellows down the phone or reaches through it and pulls Dastardly's mustache or nose. Klunk then comes up with a new invention and "explains" it in his own unique way. Dastardly says "What'd he say? What'd he say?" and Zilly interprets, before attempting to run away. Once Muttley has "persuaded" Zilly to return, usually by biting or attacking him, the Vulture Squadron take off in their new planes to repeat the whole procedure over and over again. Eventually the Squadron are left to lick their wounds as Yankee Doodle Pigeon flies off over the horizon, blowing his bugle triumphantly.
Episodes[]
- Episode 1 - (13 September 1969)
- "Fur Out Furlough"
- "Barn Dance" - Wing Dings
- "Hot Soup" - Wing Dings
- "Muttley on the Bounty" - Magnificent Muttley
- "Sappy Birthday"
- Episode 2 - (20 September 1969)
- "Follow That Feather"
- "Barber" - Wing Dings
- "Empty Hangar" - Wing Dings
- "What's New Old Bean?" - Magnificent Muttley
- "Operation Anvil"
- Episode 3 - (27 September 1969)
- "Sky Hi-IQ"
- "Prop Wash" - Wing Dings
- "Carpet" - Wing Dings
- "The Marvelous Muttdini" - Magnificent Muttley
- "A Plain Shortage of Planes"
- Episode 4 - (4 October 1969)
- "Barnstormers"
- "Arnold" - Wing Dings
- "Pineapple Sundae" - Wing Dings
- "The New Mascot" - Wing Dings
- "The Bad Actor" - Magnificent Muttley
- "Shape Up or Ship Out"
- Episode 5 - (11 October 1969)
- "Stop That Pigeon"
- "Grease Job" - Wing Dings
- "Robot" - Wing Dings
- "The Big Topper" - Magnificent Muttley
- "Zilly's a Dilly"
- Episode 6 - (18 October 1969)
- "The Cuckoo Patrol"
- "Automatic Door" - Wing Dings
- "Airmail" - Wing Dings
- "Runway Stripe" - Wing Dings
- "The Masked Muttley" - Magnificent Muttley
- "Pest Pilots"
- Episode 7 - (25 October 1969)
- "The Swiss Yelps"
- "Eagle-Beagle"
- "Deep Reading" - Wing Dings
- "Shell Game" - Wing Dings
- "Slightly Loaded" - Wing Dings
- "Movie Stuntman" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 8 - (1 November 1969)
- "Fly by Knights"
- "There's No Fool Like a Re-Fuel"
- "Springtime" - Wing Dings
- "Dog's Life" - Wing Dings
- "Strange Equipment" - Wing Dings
- "Coonskin Caper" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 9 - (8 November 1969)
- "Movies Are Badder Than Ever"
- "Home Sweet Homing Pigeon"
- "The Elevator" - Wing Dings
- "Obedience School" - Wing Dings
- "Aquanuts" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 10 - (15 November 1969)
- "Lens a Hand"
- "Vacation Trip Trap"
- "Parachute" - Wing Dings
- "Real Snapper" - Wing Dings
- "Leonardo de Muttley" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 11 - (22 November 1969)
- "Stop Which Pigeon?"
- "Ceiling Zero Zero"
- "Fast Freight" - Wing Dings
- "Home Run" - Wing Dings
- "Start Your Engines" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 12 - (29 November 1969)
- "Who's Who?"
- "Operation Birdbrain"
- "Bowling Pin" - Wing Dings
- "Shrink Job" - Wing Dings
- "Ship Ahooey" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 13 - (6 December 1969)
- "Medal Muddle"
- "Go South Young Pigeon!"
- "The Window Washer" - Wing Dings
- "Beach Blast" - Wing Dings
- "Admiral Bird Dog" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 14 - (13 December 1969)
- "Too Many Kooks"
- "Ice See You"
- "Echo" - Wing Dings
- "Rainmaker" - Wing Dings
- "Professor Muttley" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 15 - (20 December 1969)
- "Balmy Swami"
- "Camouflage Hop-Aroo"
- "Mop Up" - Wing Dings
- "Big Turnover" (a.k.a. Left Hanging) - Wing Dings
- "Wild Mutt Muttley" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 16 - (27 December 1969)
- "Have Plane Will Travel"
- "Windy Windmill"
- "Tough Break" - Wing Dings
- "The Ice Cream Tree" - Wing Dings
- "Astromutt" - Magnificent Muttley
- Episode 17 - (3 January 1970)
- "Plane Talk"
- "Happy Bird Day"
- "Boxing" - Wing Dings
- "Runaway Rug" (a.k.a. Magic Carpet) - Wing Dings
- "Super Muttley" - Magnificent Muttley
Magnificent Muttley[]
The Magnificent Muttley segment is always introduced by Dick Dastardly saying:
Wake up Muttley you're dreaming again!
You're not Robin Hood and you're not Gunga Din
You're not a brave knight or a king who's been crowned;
You're just plain old Muttley, the snickering hound!
In each of the seventeen episodes, Muttley imagines himself in a different situation. These are the characters he pretends to be:
- Sailor
- Jack and the Beanstalk
- Magician
- Theatre Actor
- Circus Acrobat
- Masked Avenger
- Movie Stuntman
- David Bowie
- Scuba Diver
- Leonardo Da Vinci
- Car Racer
- Olympic Swimmer
- Arctic Explorer
- Inventor
- Tarzan
- Astronaut
- Super-Hero
Trivia[]
- The nationality of the Vulture Squadron is never revealed, but the show is set in WWI and the pigeon is presumably American because of its name, thus making it likely that they are German.
- Although the Wacky Races series is never mentioned, the Mean Machine can be seen in the numerous episodes of Magnificent Muttley.
- During the entire series, the Vulture Squadron destroys 182 planes, 2 balloons, 1 ship, 1 Zeppelin, 1 gas station and 1 train.
- The "Stop That Pigeon" theme song was covered in:
- Saturday Morning Cartoons' Greatest Hits (1995)
- Toon tunes (1996)
- Cartoon Network Toon a Rama (2003)
- Klunk is a vegetarian (this is seen in one of the "Wing Dings" shorts).
- Muttley's birthday is on April 16 (it is seen in the "Sappy Birthday" episode).
- Dastardly likes ice cream with pineapple pieces, and hates lemon pies (this is seen in one of the "Wing Dings" episodes, and on Magnificent Muttley).
- The series was sponsored by Kellogg's cereals in its original run, and the characters appeared in several commercials for the company.
- Dastardly worked in a circus as a trapezist in one of the "Wing Dings" shorts.
- In an episode of Yogi's Treasure Hunt entitled "Yogi's Heroes", in which Yogi Bear and Dastardly were the leaders of warring nations, Dastardly tortured all of Yogi's friends by forcing them to watch episodes of Dastardly & Muttley in Their Flying Machines until the victims were incapable of doing anything more than stumbling around and repeatedly chanting, "Stop the pigeon."
Voice Cast[]
- Paul Winchell - Dick Dastardly, General, others
- Don Messick - Muttley, Klunk, Zilly, Yankee Doodle Pigeon, Narrator, others
Production Credits[]
- Produced and Directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
- Associate Producer: Alex Lovy
- Story: Larz Bourne, Dalton Sandifer, Mike Maltese
- Story Direction: Alex Lovey, Bill Perez
- Voices: Paul Winchell, Don Messick
- Animation Director: Charles A. Nichols
- Production Design: Iwao Takamoto
- Production Supervisor: Victor O. Schipek
- Character Design: Jerry Eisenberg
- Layout: Lou Appet, Ed Benedict, Jim Fletcher, Don Jurwich, Lin Larsen, Jack Manning
- Animation: Ed Barge, Emil Carle, Izzy Ellis, John Garling, Maria Jursic, Carlo Vinci, Jerry Hathcock, Bob Maxfield, Ken Muse, Morey Reden, Veve Risto
- Background Styling: Walt Peregoy
- Backgrounds: Dave Weidman, William Butler, Robert Gentle, Iraj Paran, Curtis Perkins
- Title Desigh: Bill Perez
- Titles: Robert Schaefer
- Music Director: Ted Nichols
- Technical Supervisor: Frank Paiker
- Ink & Paint Supervisor: Roberta Greutert
- Xerography: Robert West
- Sound Direction: Richard Olson
- Film Editing: Pat Foley, Richard Allen
- Camera: Dick Blundell, Bill Kotler, Ralph Migliori, Cliff Shipser, Rex Stevens, Roy Wade
- A Hanna-Barbera Productions Production
Availability[]
Some episodes were distributed on VHS tape by Worldvision Enterprises.
On 10 May 2005 Warner Home Video released the complete series on Region 1 DVD. On 31 July 2006, the series was released on DVD R2 in the United Kingdom but only in HMV stores and its online site as an HMV Exclusive.
In Other Languages[]
- Danish: Dastardly og Muttley i Deres Flyvende Maskiner
- Finnish: Kapteeni Sählä ja Matti-koira
- French: Satanas et Diabolo
- German: Fliegende Männer in tollkühnen Kisten
- Hungarian: Süsü keselyűk
- Italian: Lo squadrone avvoltoi
- Japanese: スカイキッドブラック魔王
- Norwegian: Råttesen og Bumly
- Polish: Dastardly i Muttley w swych latających maszynach or Wredniak i Bałwan i Eskadra Patałachów
- Portuguese - Br: Dick Vigarista e Muttley e as suas Máquinas Voadoras / A Esquadrilha Abutre
- Spanish: Las Aventuras de Pierre Nodoyuna y Patán en sus Máquinas Voladoras
- Swedish: Stoppa Duvan
- Turkish: Hain Baron ve Kopegi
External Links[]