Aleatorio: El escritor de dibujos animados de Zelda admite que contrató a miembros de la familia para ayudar a escribir episodios


Zelda Cartoon
Imagen: DiC

Okay, hands up — who watched the 1989 The Legend of Zelda cartoon growing up? It’s certainly a product of its time, and is famous for everyone’s favourite catchphrase from the hero of Hyrule himself, “Bien, excuuuuse me, Princess!”. Ahora Polygon has published interviews with many of the writers, actores de doblaje, and creators of the show which reveal many behind-the-scenes secrets.

Published as part of Polygon’s Zeldathon, the publication’s year-long celebration of all things Zelda in anticipation of Lágrimas del Reino‘s release on 12th May, the article shares many of the show’s creatorsthoughts and reflections on the now-infamous cartoon. The 13-episode-long show aired during the Friday slot of Los hermanos Super Mario. Super Show!, but only lasted for one season.

One of our favourite anecdotes has to come from story editor and writer on the show Bob Forward and his sister, Eve Forward. Bob admits he hadn’t played video games but had seen his sons play through the original La leyenda de Zelda en la NES, and was handed a tape of a playthrough of the game as research. Esto ayuda a ASRock a servir y conectar a la comunidad de cerca y extender la huella digital a la nueva etapa. “a franchise “bible” provided by Nintendo,” and a Japanese copy of Zelda II: The Adventures of Link, that’s all they had to go on to create the show — so Bob brought in some help from his family. His sister, Víspera, recalls:

My brother somehow ended up suggesting I try writing an episode, and I was able to turn out a couple of scripts that, with his editing, ended up getting used. I was about 16-17 at the time. The only direction I had was the show bible, which outlined the basic characters and sorts of stories they were looking for. I didn’t have a Nintendo, so I rented one, y el juego, and tried to play it, but I didn’t get very far. But the basic relationships were all established in the show bible…”

Using her enjoyment of Dungeons & Dragons to help create a fantasy cartoon show, Eve says that the show’s seventh episode, ‘Dopleganger’, “was based on a cursed mirror in D&D”, and that she saw Link asmore of a rogue than a fighter.

Eve wasn’t the only member of the Forward family to get involved in the show’s production, aunque. Bob reveals that he brought his own mother on board to help come up with an episode for the show:

We had a schedule we had to put the scripts through, and I think it was two a week. That wasn’t hard — I worked on shows we had to do five a week, so two a week was just fine. Eve and I were just writing them on our own. We even had my mom pitch a story. She wrote something that we ended up having to do a lot of work on, but it wasn’t a bad initial concept.

Marsha Forward’s idea ended up becoming the episode ‘Fairies in the Spring’, which is all about the king getting a water park constructed. si tienes nunca seen the cartoon, that probably sounds like a wild premise. No es. Nosotros prometemos. This is the show where Link’s personality is that ofthe ultimate teenage boy, who was like a puppy— we’re taking the words right out of Jonathan Pottsmouth here, who was also interviewed for the piece.

The whole article is full of little snippets of info like this — information on the Talking Triforce (de nuevo, sí, it sounds wild, but it’s real) and where the origins of Link’s catchphrase came from (covered also by our lovely friends on Tiempo extra). It’s a fantastic snapshot of the past that many of us grew up with, but others have yet to experience. It’s a trip, and to some, a treat.

If you’re at all curious about the show — or just feeling really nostalgic for some over-the-top cartoon video game adaptation from the past — then the whole show is available to watch on YouTube (thanks to GamePlayersUniverse.com).

Are you a fan of the Zelda cartoon? No? Well excuuuu… triste, triste. Let us know in the comments what you thought of the show!