Gophers (TV series)
Television series | |
---|---|
German title | Gophers |
Original title | Gophers! |
Country of production | Great Britain |
year | 1990 |
Episodes | 13 in 1 season |
genre | Comedy , sitcom , fantasy |
idea | Mark Mason |
First broadcast | 1990 on Channel 4 |
German-language first broadcast |
February 22, 1992 on RTL |
occupation | |
|
Gophers is a British puppet comedy series produced by Zenith Entertainment Ltd. was produced.
action
The Gopher hamster family is moving to their new home in Sycamore Heights, right next to the Burrows rabbit family. But at first they are not very welcome in the neighborhood, for example the vegetables buried in the garden are planning an uprising several times. The Mexican cockroaches Nacho, Mimi and Lupe who already live in the house try to steal the gophers' food. In addition, the ferret Dr. Wince, a scientist, to conquer the earth with the help of a reptilian being named Sly.
Trivia
- The English word "gopher" generally means a small rodent .
- In the original English version, the puppets' actors did not speak their own characters, but were spoken by another actor in the series. For example, the female character Lilian Gopher was played by the male actor Jeremy Stockwell, but the character was given the voice of Flaminia Cinque, who "directed" the character Merv Wombat.
Broadcast Notes
Gophers was broadcast, mostly on Sundays, on the British television channel Channel 4 in the children's program. In Germany, the series has only been featured once in the spring of 1990 - Saturdays at 6:15 p.m. - on RTLplus .
Individual evidence
- ^ Internet Movie Database
- ↑ a b English-language Wikipedia
- ↑ a b classickidstv.co.uk
- ↑ Broadcasting notes ( Memento of the original from September 27, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. at fernsehserien.de
Web links
- Gophers in the Internet Movie Database (English)