We like to think of Japanese animation as brilliant
world-class entertainment, able to hold its own against the cartoon arts from
around the globe. Occasionally that’s
the case. But often what we see from Japan
is, like the TV cartoons from anywhere else, hastily-assembled, produced on a
punishing deadline by stressed-out minimum wage employees, and aimed only at
filling a few minutes of broadcast airtime and selling a few ads for toys or
candy.
It’s this ‘makin’ the donuts’ attitude that’s allowed
Japan to produce a prodigious amount of TV animation in the past fifty years,
and like anything else, there are flashes of brilliance, stunning failures, and
a lot of in-between (and a lot of in-betweening, that’s an animation
reference.) Every once in a while, the surging tides of production come up
against the shoals of ineptitude, the rocks of budget constraints, and the pillars
of “just get it done already”, and we’re served up something that by its very
awfulness has mutated into a singular viewing experience that becomes
interesting in spite of itself. Something like Mysterious Thief Pride, or as
we’d call it, Dr. Zen.
Dr Zen is the world’s greatest thief, and as befitting his
criminal status, he dresses like a stage magician in top hat and tails, with a
giant mustache flanking his bulbous nose. He flies around in a rocket ship,
like all great thieves do, with his assistant Walter, who is a dog. Together
they plan the most incredible crimes ever devised, like stealing toys from
children and using an enlarging machine to enlarge, say, a toy car, into a
real-size car. Because you couldn't steal a regular car, apparently. Opposing
these dastardly crimes is the young detective Doublecheck, his giant pal Gabby,
and their friend Honey, who is a bee with a woman’s head, a horrific nightmare
right out of a Vincent Price movie. Meanwhile, the “official” detective
Supersnooper bumbles around getting in the way and occasionally having his
clothes ripped off. Thus the amazing adventures of Mysterious Thief Pride
enthralled Japanese youth in the mid 1960s.
105 5-minute segments of Kaito Pride aka Mysterious Thief
Pride were produced by Japan Tele-Cartoons aka Terebi Doga aka TV Films in
1965, perhaps designed to fill that important “rain delay” or “technical
difficulties” programming segment of any TV station. Created by Kazuhiko “Panda And The Magic Serpent” Okabe, future stars like Noboru Ishiguro would hone their anime skills
on this series. Kaito Pride would likely have remained as unknown to us as many other short-subject anime TV programs like Pinch & Punch or Shadar, but TV
Doga knew of America ’s
hunger for cartoons and thought our good mysterious thief might be a good
export.
Doublecheck and Honeybee the Woman-Headed Bee |
Returned for re-grooving, Kaito Pride emerged in color as
Dr. Zen, ready for the American market. But was the American market ready for
Dr. Zen? Apparently not; only a few
segments of Dr. Zen were produced and it’s unknown if they ever made it to
broadcast television. Turns out American syndication, which cheerfully aired drek
like Super President, Spunky & Tadpole, and Clutch Cargo, finally found a
cartoon they couldn’t use. And I don’t blame them, because Dr. Zen is one
hundred percent terrible.
The animation is barely there, the character designs seem
like they were taken directly from elementary-school sidewalk chalk drawing,
and the slow pace of what little story there is makes a five-minute segment
feel like that Andy Warhol film of the Empire State Building - and that movie is eight hours long! The narration and
voice work hit all the marks - squeaky, raspy, inaudible, comically low, and
mumbly. Animation, design, story, and
sound, all bad, assemble to make Dr. Zen a difficult viewing experience that
pummels the forebrain into submission, a hypnotic, consciousness-lowering
ritual that lowers the IQ and suffocates higher mental functions beneath staticky
fuzz. This is anime on downers, the cartoon version of a hangover. I cannot
imagine the damage this show would inflict upon impressionable young people,
and I applaud the good sense of America ’s
broadcasters in keeping it from our children.
some of Dr. Zen's quality animation |
a giant turtle laughs at Dr. Zen. No, you're not on drugs. |
So if it never aired, how did we see it? That’s thanks to Something Weird Video. This
cult video distributor is a champion of the forgotten, the sleazy, and the
otherwise unmarketable, and is single-handedly responsible not only for keeping
the films of Harry Novak and Doris Wishman accessible to the public, but also
in releasing compilations of movie trailers, educational films, commercials,
and shorts that would otherwise have never seen the light of day. It’s on one
of Something Weird’s compilation videos that I first found Dr. Zen, and it is
Something Weird we must thank for this, and so much more. It’s with sadness
that we note the recent passing of Mike Vraney, Something Weird’s founder, a
pioneer in preserving and showcasing the legacy of the offbeat and the
exploitative in film. Perhaps giving Dr. Zen to America
was one of Something Weird’s lesser accomplishments, but it’s an accomplishment
nonetheless.
It is Something Weird we must thank for shedding light on
one of the mustier corners of Japan ’s
anime legacy, unleashing Dr. Zen from his 16mm film-can prison and allowing him
to run free stealing toys and punishing viewers. Thanks, Something Weird, for
proving the low end of Japanese animation can always get a little lower.
Dr. Zen will return? I sure hope not. |
Thanks for reading Let's Anime! If you enjoyed it and want to show your appreciation for what we do here as part of the Mister Kitty Dot Net world, please consider joining our Patreon!
"105 5-minute segments of Kaito Pride aka Mysterious Thief Pride were produced by Japan Tele-Cartoons aka Terebi Doga aka TV Films in 1965, perhaps designed to fill that important “rain delay” or “technical difficulties” programming segment of any TV station."
ReplyDeleteOr else, an easier excuse to copycat what Crusader Rabbit, Ruff & Reddy, Spunky & Tadpole and Col. Bleep did before.
"Kaito Pride would likely have remained as unknown to us as many other short-subject anime TV programs like Pinch & Punch or Shadar, but TV Doga knew of America’s hunger for cartoons and thought our good mysterious thief might be a good export.
Lord knows if Marine Boy alone gave them high hopes in that case.
"That’s thanks to Something Weird Video. This cult video distributor is a champion of the forgotten, the sleazy, and the otherwise unmarketable,"
Just like that episode of "Prince Planet" they snuck in on the Starman DVD, long before MGM knew what to do with it.
"Dr. Zen will return? I sure hope not."
Or how about this... (yes, this is not anime-related, but it was in the back of my head)?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkmPBkcBLgo
LOL, this is awful!
ReplyDeleteI want to travel in Japan!! I like Japanese culture and anime.
ReplyDeletewhich something weird compilation is this one? I need to see these!
ReplyDeleteIt's on their compilation Classic Cartoon Rarities Vol. 3 - http://www.somethingweird.com/product_info.php?products_id=22956
ReplyDeletei saw dr. zen on american tv around 66 or 67. it was an early morning cartoon, laughably awful. i'm glad i'm not the only one who thought so. i have no recollection of who aired it. had to be one of the 3 networks.
ReplyDeleteNo, you're not the only one...
ReplyDeleteI watched it as a kid in the late 60s in Lima, Peru. It was on on Saturday mornings, and I found it entertaining considering I was about 7 or 8 years old. Looking at it now I realize just how bad the animation was.
ReplyDelete