Rubik, the Amazing Cube
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox television Rubik, the Amazing Cube is a 1983 half-hour American Saturday morning animated series based on the puzzle created by Ernő Rubik, produced by Ruby-Spears Enterprises and broadcast as part of The Pac-Man/Rubik, the Amazing Cube Hour block on ABC from September 10 to December 10, 1983 and continued in reruns until September 1, 1984. The Rubik half hour was broadcast in reruns as a standalone series on ABC from May 4 to August 31, 1985.[1]
The program features a magic Rubik's Cube named Rubik who can fly through the air and has other special powers. Rubik can only come alive when he is in a solved state.[2] The voice of Rubik, Ron Palillo, told TV Guide in 1983 that for the role, he spoke very slowly and then technicians sped up the tapes and raised the pitch in an Alvin and the Chipmunks–esque manner. Palillo said Rubik's giggle was very different from the trademark laugh of Horshack, his character on the TV series Welcome Back, Kotter, and that it was pretty "for an inanimate object".[3] It was also one of the first American animated series to feature a mainly Hispanic and Latino American roster of characters, along with voice actors.
Premise
Rubik falls out of the stagecoach of an evil magician, who later becomes the main villain of the series. Rubik helps Carlos, Lisa, and Reynaldo Rodriguez in foiling the magician’s attempts to recover him.
Some episodes also deal with more normal adversaries, such as a bully trying to thwart Reynaldo's efforts to impress a girl.
For dramatic purposes, Rubik often gets easily fully scrambled, such as by being dropped or grabbed by the family dog. The puzzle is usually solved quickly by the Rodriguez children, although in stressful circumstances it takes them longer. When scrambled, Rubik can only be heard speaking gibberish and can sometimes be heard saying, "Help."
Cast
- Ron Palillo as Rubik
- Michael Bell as Reynaldo Rodriguez
- Jennifer Fajardo as Lisa Rodriguez
- Michael Saucedo as Carlos Rodriguez
- Angela Moya as Marla
Additional voices: Jack DeLeon, Alan Dinehart, Laurie Faso, Takayo Fischer, Bob Holt, Tress MacNeille, Tysun McMullan, Neil Ross, John Stephenson, Janet Waldo, Alan Young
Theme song
Tying into the human characters being Hispanic Americans, the theme song was sung by Puerto Rican boy band Menudo. Featured in the song were Johnny Lozada, Ricky Melendez, Charlie Masso, Ray Reyes, Raul Reyes, Robby Rosa, and Roy Rossello.[4]
Episodes
Template:No plot Template:Episode table
References
External links
- Template:Trim/ Template:Trim at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:WikidataCheck
- Episode indexTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore at the Big Cartoon DataBase
Template:Children's programming on the American Broadcasting Company in the 1980s Template:Rubik's Cube
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- ↑ Super Saturday: ‘Rubik The Amazing Cube’ (1983)
- Pages with script errors
- 1983 American animated television series debuts
- 1983 American television series endings
- 1980s American animated television series
- 1980s American children's television series
- American animated television spinoffs
- American children's animated adventure television series
- American children's animated fantasy television series
- American English-language television shows
- Fictional cubes
- Fictional talking objects
- Anthropomorphic objects
- Television shows about talking objects
- Hispanic and Latino American television
- Rubik's Cube
- Television shows based on toys
- Television series by Ruby-Spears
- American Broadcasting Company animated television series