Adults Are Useless: Part of the series' charm was that the kids would regularly (and unintentionally) teach the adults a lesson.Spanky, initially shocked, can't help but join them. Actually Pretty Funny: Buckwheat and Porky begin laughing at Alfalfa's predicament at the end of Two Too Young.Little Rascals films with their own pages: A direct-to-video sequel, The Little Rascals Save the Day, directed by Alex Zamm, released in April 2014.įor the Saturday Morning Cartoon produced by Hanna-Barbera in 1982, see this page.It won Young Artist awards for no fewer than six members of the cast: Ross Bagley, Juliette Brewer, Bug Hall, Brittany Ashton Holmes, Travis Tedford and Kevin Jamal Woods. A 1994 feature film, directed by Penelope Spheeris and released by Universal Pictures.
A 1979 animated Christmas Special on NBC, whose voice cast included Matthew "Stymie" Beard and Darla Hood, as well as a series of public service announcements.A series of clay-animated Little Rascals Color Specials, produced for television in the 1960s, presumably by Bura and Hardwick, the British studio responsible for Camberwick Green.The cover of the first issue featured an unnamed girl who was probably intended to be Darla Hood but bore a greater resemblance to Dorothy DeBorba. It featured Spanky and Alfalfa, along with some original characters. Dell Comics published a 12-issue Little Rascals comic book series from 1957 to 1962.After it fared poorly at the box office Hal Roach went back to making shorts. General Spanky, actually an Our Gang feature film from 1936.The earliest issues of The Dandy in the late 1930s featured a Comic-Book Adaptation of Our Gang, drawn by legendary comics artist Dudley Watkins.Ever since then, each iteration of the series had at least 1 black child, who in the shorts got to play with their white counterparts, eat in the same places as them, and even go to school with them! This is not to say racial humor wasnt ever used (see below), but it was radical enough that Southern theaters often complained or outright refused to show the series. Hal Roach was actually planning to make a whole series out of Ernie Morrison, one of the first black child stars in Hollywood, but when distributors said it wouldnt fly, he put Morrison in the Our Gang films alongside Allen Hoskins as Farina and the white child actors for the rest of the group. Part of the reason why the series is remembered even to this day is that it showed black and white children playing together as equals, which was more or less unheard of for films of its day.