Bump In the Night was a stop-motion animated series on ABC Saturday Mornings during the mid-90s, created by Ken Pontac and David Bleiman. Unfortunately, it was canceled right after Disney bought ABC. Part II of "Farewell 2 Arms"
i used to watch this show all the time and i loved it untill they took it off the air on tv. but now i can watch it whenever i want on youtube! thanks to you! haha :D
Yes, Reboot was on around the same time as 'Bump in the Night,' I believe, and both were on ABC (The best network for Saturday Morning Cartoons back then, as I recall).
So, you're friend's gone crazy. And turned into a cybernetic monstrosity that wants to tear your head off. More shows should deal woith issues like this, I think. ...hey, anyone notice that Bumpy isn't even in the climax of the episode?
I think the lesson is more along the lines of "Don't compromise the integrity of a character by just giving them more physical strength" an error that Modern Disney does a lot these days
I bet that little girl was scared to death to see this creepy doll that she was holding, I bet that she was thinking that her brother pulled some kind of prank on her to scare her to death and stole her doll
Hear, hear! I'm almost 25, and I feel the same way! It seems like a lot of the "Children's" TV from back when I was a kid (The 90's) was stuff that really appealed just as much to adults as to kids. Kids' TV now is so mindless and amateurishly made, nobody over the age of 14 could probably watch it without feeling really embarrassed. Probably the saddest case is what happened with Nickelodeon. That network was once a staple part of my childhood, but now it's a complete crap- chute!
Jeeze, you'd think the little sister would cuddle Molly a little more before tossing her into a damn wall. XD Sure, she's a little too small to be a bed-time doll, but still...
There was no one single "actual doll", it was several hand made props designed to LOOK like a doll. There were a few figures and plushes made, there was even a full sized Molly COSTUME-- But the actual show props are privately owned by either the creators or whatever company owns the rights now. Also, all of those things are EXTREMELY rare-- the show never got huge, and it was all made in the early/mid nineties. I DID recently hear that one of the creators GAVE AWAY a show used prop of Molly to a fan, but I don't know the details.
Gail Matthius, a 1990s voice actress who got her start on Saturday Night Live's sixth season in 1980 (which was the first of many times SNL's quality would hit the skids).