LASSIE’S
RESCUE RANGERS
(ABC, September 15-December 22, 1973)
Filmation Associates
MAIN CAST:
Ted Knight – Ben Turner,
narrator
Keith Sutherland – Jackie Turner
Jane Webb – Laura Turner
Erika Scheimer – Susan Turner
Lane Scheimer - Ben
Turner, Jr.
Hal
Harvey – Gene Fox
Lassie was the creation of author Eric Knight in a story he wrote for
her daughter. Lassie was a collie who faced any odds to be reunited with the
boy she loved. The character made her debut in a short story Knight penned for The
Saturday Evening Post in 1938. He later expanded it into the 1940 novel
Lassie
Com-Home, published by The John
C. Winston Company.
When the novel proved a critical and
commercial success, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
approached Knight about acquiring the rights to the book to adapt into a
feature film. The film version of Lassie
Come Home starring a young Roddy
McDowell was released in October of 1943, ten months after Knight’s death.
The film was a hit, earning almost $5 million at the box office and leading to
a series of sequels; five of them released in the 1940s alone. During this
period, Lassie was also featured in a radio program which originated the
well-known theme song by Les Baxter.
After the seventh film was released
in 1951, MGM had no further plans for the character or Pal, the dog that portrayed
Lassie. Pal’s owner
and trainer Rudd Weatherwax
acquired the rights to the Lassie trademark from the studio in lieu of back pay
and took Pal on the road to various venues. He was approached by television
producer Robert Maxwell about
bringing Lassie to the relatively new media. Weatherwax and Maxwell devised the
boy and his dog scenario set on a weather-beaten, modern American farm. Lassie debuted on CBS in 1954 and ran for an impressive 17
seasons.
Gold Key comic issue depicting the later years of Lassie. |
During the show’s 11th
season in 1964, the decision was made to completely rework the show. Lassie was
moved from the farm to become part of a group of United States Forest Service workers and
stories revolved around environmentalism and conservation. Unfortunately, the
change in the show didn’t fit the changing social views of society and the
ratings steadily declined. When the FCC
passed down new rulings designed to restrict how many shows were produced
directly by the networks in order to allow fair competition for other
companies, CBS took that opportunity to cancel the show. The final episode
aired in 1973, but the show had already been airing in syndicated reruns for
two seasons and would continue to do so for years.
Lassie and Musty. |
Wanting to get a bit more mileage
out of the property, Jack Wrather,
who had purchased the rights to the show in 1957, contracted Filmation Associates to adapt
the concept to animation. They produced a one-hour pilot movie called “Lassie
and the Spirit of Thunder Mountain” that aired during the first season of The ABC
Saturday Superstar Movie in 1972. Lassie (whose vocal effects were taken
from the current “Lassie” at the time, Hey Hey) lived with the Turner family on
a ranch near Thunder Mountain. An unscrupulous contractor named Aaron Lipton
tried to steal the ancestral Native American land from the tribe who lived
there, but the Turners and Lassie stood in his way with the aid of Lassie’s
friends: Old Toothless, a harmless mountain lion; Edgar, a crow; Groucho, an
owl; Fastback, a turtle; Robbie, a raccoon; Musty, a skunk; and an unnamed
rabbit.
The Turners and Gene Fox. |
The following year, Filmation
brought the pilot movie to series. The Turners and were now part of the Forest
Force, dedicated to protecting the forest and those who ventured there. That
brought the cartoon more in line with the shift that the live-action series
took several years prior while still maintaining its original family-oriented
element. They were not only aided by Lassie and her friends, but by Native
American Gene Fox (Hal Harvey) who knew Thunder Mountain National Park better
than anyone. Lane Scheimer assumed the role of Ben Turner, Jr. for the series
from Keith Allen, while
reprising their roles were Ted Knight as Ben, Sr., Keith Sutherland as Jackie,
Jane Webb as Laura, and Erika Schiemer as Susan. As with other Filmation
projects, each episode was followed-up by a Public Service Announcement about
environmental concerns.
Promotional image of the entire Rescue Rangers team. |
Lassie’s
Rescue Rangers began on September 15, 1973 on ABC.
Hal Southerland directed the
entire series, while Ray Ellis
(as Yvette Blais) and producer Norm
Prescott (as Jeff Michael) composed the series’ music. Unlike the earlier
Lassie efforts, Rescue Rangers proved
unpopular with audiences, Weatherwax and the National Association for Better
Broadcasting, who released a statement declaring it the worst show of the
season. The show ended its run that December, with ABC promptly cancelling it.
The DVD cover. |
In the 1980s, Family Home
Entertainment released several
episodes to VHS in North America. Additional episodes
were released in the United Kingdom by V.I.P Video Gems and Channel 5.
In 2006, Universal Pictures UK
released a collection of episodes onto DVD with two
different box cover art designs.
EPISODE GUIDE:
“Lost”
(9/8/73) – The Rescue Rangers try to find a lost boy.
“The
Animals Are Missing” (9/15/73) – A series of earthquakes leads the Rescue
Rangers to discover a valley is more populated than they believed.
“Mystic
Monster” (9/22/73) – A comet crashes in the forest and it may have brought a
visitor with it.
“Lassie’s
Special Assignment” (9/29/73) – Ben is sent to rescue a scientist from an enemy
by a recorded message.
“The
Imposters” (10/6/73) – The Turners are framed and arrested for a crime.
“Deadly
Cargo” (10/13/73) – The Rescue Rangers are kidnapped by criminals as a way to
get their drugs back.
“Grizzly”
(10/20/73) – A grizzly bear prevents the Rescue Rangers from putting out a fire
to save a city.
“Deepsea
Disaster” (10/27/73) – A Navy reject spoils the Rangers’ underwater vacation.
“Black
Out” (11/3/73) – When a town goes dark, the Rangers have to find missing
citizens and contend with a thief on the loose.
“Arctic
Adventure” (11/10/73) – The Rangers have to find missing firefighters so they
can put out a blaze and save a town.
“The
Sunken Galleon” (11/17/73) – The search for a missing diver leads the Rangers
to a sunken treasure ship and an enemy submarine.
“Gold
Mine” (11/24/73) – Gene is taken hostage by the pair his family rescued as they
carry out their plot to rob Fort Knox.
“Rodeo”
(12/1/73) – A series of strange accidents at the rodeo makes it seem like
someone is out to get Ben’s friend Jerry Carr.
“Hullabaloo
in Hollywood” (12/8/73) – The Rangers find trouble during the filming of a
movie.
“Tidal
Wave” (12/15/73) – An earthquake causes tidal waves to attack Florida and
interrupt the Rangers’ vacation.
Specials:
“Spirit
of Thunder Mountain” (11/11/72) – A businessman attempts to steal land from a
Native American tribe.
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