The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show

The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show

1983
The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show
The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show

The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show

7.4 | en | Animation

Your favorite Peanuts stories come to life in this animated television series. With short sketches featuring these classic and much-loved characters, it's easy to, as the opening song suggests, “have a party with Charlie Brown and Snoopy.”

View More
AD

WATCH FREEFOR 30 DAYS

All Prime Video
Cancel anytime

Watch Now

Seasons & Episodes

2
1
EP5  Sally's Sweet Babboo
Oct. 12,1985
Sally's Sweet Babboo

Charlie Brown reflects on his most memorable Christmas while Sally and Lucy prepare for Valentine's Day and Peppermint Patty writes an award-winning essay on Snoopy.

EP4  Peppermint Patty's School Days
Oct. 05,1985
Peppermint Patty's School Days

Peppermint Patty's struggles in school are chronicled. Snoopy's develops a cool trick after his antics begin to wear on the kids' nerves. Schroeder doesn't know how to get to piano camp. The gang flies him there on Snoopy's doghouse.

EP3  Snoopy's Robot
Sep. 28,1985
Snoopy's Robot

The gang goes to computer camp. Linus starts a clinic for kids with security blankets. Snoopy goes to visit Spike in the desert. Charlie Brown and Peppermint Patty go on a date. Later Marcie and Peppermint Patty both develop a crush on Charlie Brown.

EP2  Snoopy's Brother Spike
Sep. 21,1985
Snoopy's Brother Spike

Peppermint Patty asks Charlie Brown for help with her team. Linus waits up for the Great Pumpkin while Charlie Brown and Peppermint Patty go bowling. Snoopy's older brother Spike vists.

EP1  Snoopy And The Giant
Sep. 14,1985
Snoopy And The Giant

Snoopy breaks his foot and must wear a cast. Meanwhile, Woodstock grows a beanstalk to the sky, where he and Snoopy meet a cookie-hoarding giant. Finally, the youngest of the Van Pelts has to deal with various problems.

SEE MORE
SEE MORE
7.4 | en | Animation , Comedy | More Info
Released: 1983-09-17 | Released Producted By: Charles M. Schulz Creative Associates , Lee Mendelson Film Productions Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Your favorite Peanuts stories come to life in this animated television series. With short sketches featuring these classic and much-loved characters, it's easy to, as the opening song suggests, “have a party with Charlie Brown and Snoopy.”

...... View More
Stream Online

The tv show is currently not available onine

Cast

Bill Melendez , Jeremy Schoenberg , Gini Holtzman

Director

Chuck McCann

Producted By

Charles M. Schulz Creative Associates , Lee Mendelson Film Productions

AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.

Watch Now

Reviews

ShelbyTMItchell You have to love the Peanuts in order to love this show by the late and great Charles Shultz. As it shows the cartoons actually were from the comics. As Charle Shultz at first refused to do a weekly show but gave into CBS on the condition it is written for the comics thing.We see Charlie Brown still getting no respect, Lucy being her usual crabby self, Linus and his loving blanket and being the moral conscience of the strip and show, Snoopy in his own fantasy world and doghouse and friends with Woodstock, Schroder and his toy piano, and Sally loving her sweet baboo Linus.The list goes on and on. Too bad it only last one or two years. But still you can't go wrong with the Peanuts!
tedg I suppose "Peanuts" is the most popular newspaper comic ever. Shultz did what all leaders do, perfected the four-panel abstraction of grand emotions. Its a matter of abstraction and his intuitions were perfect. Part of the formula was that the situations weren't inherently comic: loneliness, betrayal, failure, irrational fantasy, obnoxious behavior, sometimes theology. Compare it to Garfield for instance. Its a sort of Norman Rockwell formula — deep values, cute presentation — but so much better tuned. When you read it, you get a few lines on the page and very few words that sketch a sometimes profound emotion. It forms a spine around which you can fill in your own riches.In 1965, and enterprising guy made a TeeVee cartoon, "Charlie Brown Christmas." It worked, and has since become a staple. It worked, I think, because Christmas is a ball of notions that are in the center of Shultz's world, so enriching the images by movement, color and voices couldn't hobble it. Especially since the music was that remarkably apt Guaraldi tune.Over the next 40 years the same enterprising guy has been mining the Peanuts vault, giving us ever more than the idea can tolerate. This is the worst, a TeeVee series that was supposed to be as everyday as the comic.But in this case, the overloading of the abstract 4-panel spine is so overloaded with TeeVee jokes and pratfalls, plus ordinary child stuff, not the abstract stuff of Shultz.I doubt whether any recurring show can be made of this material (and stay a cartoon) and keep the abstract nature of thing, the pure thing that gives it its power.Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
Debbie Perry This was Schulz and Melendez's attempt at a Saturday Morning series, which didn't quite pan out as well as they'd hoped. "...we didn't have the time to do it right", Schulz himself once said. The shows often seemed like they were rushed through production, with small things like timing and bigger things like the animation itself showing the results of this process. But it is a charming (if flawed) series, showcasing Schulz's characters as themselves, in their usual settings from the daily and Sunday strips, rather than in a motocross or river rafting or some such bigger plot. Perhaps Schulz's humor was a bit too sophisticated and slow paced for the crowd weaned on the Smurfs and Alvin and the Chipmunks, as the series vanished after 13 episodes, to return in 1985 with just five more (probably to fill holes in CBS's schedule when sporting events weren't scheduled) with a slightly different format, (and an obnoxious new theme song) featuring just three segments at the same length rather than the previous episodes where the material seemed to dictate how long a sequence ran, as well as a few "kiddified" stories, "Giant", a retelling of Jack and the Beanstalk with Snoopy and Woodstock and "Snoopy's Robot" in which the kids go to a computer camp.
Ryan N If anybody has read any previous comments by me then they have been on cartoons, which tells you I am an expert Cartoonist and cartoonist critic at age 12. To second with, I don't bother writing a comment unless it's a good one, so all comments are good. Anyways this is a great show for adults and kids alike, it involves many of the truths in life in the humor of Charles Schulz' acclaimed cartoon. It involves many of the comic strip themes into the show (e.g. "Baseball", "The Cat Next Store", "Show and Tell".) What cracks me up though is that these children act so adult part of the time and completely ignorant the next. I just love sweet old Charlie Brown always being so good yet such a complete failure that he makes us laugh. I love Linus' intelligence and "Security Blanket", as much as I love his sisters crabbiness. I would also like to comment on Schroeder's music craze, and Snoopy's humanlike attributes. Although these are my favorite characters what cracks me up in the show is Sally's comments, like when she's playing football with Linus "Why should I kick the ball, it hasn't done anything to me." "Just kick it" "What if it kicks me back...I've decided not to kick the ball" (Air leaks out of the ball). "The ball is hissing at me" "Maybe it's sprung a leak" "No this ball is definitely hissing at me..." (the ball goes flat) "I think it passed out". To me this is funny, these are events that happen to most regular people through kids. If you like Peanuts or feel you need to laugh at life then see this movie, you'll enjoy it.