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The Man Called Flintstone - their first full-length movie - the original 1966 theatrical release - Top Secret - DVD - Warner Brothers - Fred Flintstone

The Man Called Flintstone (1966) starring the voice talents of Alan Reed, Mel Blanc, Harvey Korman

One of my favorite childhood movies was The Man Called Flintstone—released after the end of the original TV series, it uses the well-worn plot line of Fred being an identical duplicate of some ‘important’ person (in this case, secret agent Rock Slagg).  Slagg’s boss, Chief Mountmore, decides to use Fred to complete Slagg’s mission—the capture of the evil criminal genius, the Green Goose (voiced with glee by Harvey Korman) before he can take over the world.  Fred accepts his patriotic duty, and tries to keep his mission a secret from his wife Wilma and their best friends, Betty and Barney Rubble (voiced by Mel Blanc)—but with mixed results.  A very funny spoof of the then-popular spy genre (this takes place during the time of the early James Bond films, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Get Smart, etc.), it’s a movie that I would love to watch again, and again.

Editorial review of The Man Called Flintstone courtesy of Amazon.com

One of the odder bits of pop culture cross-pollination from the 1960s, The Man Called Flintstone thrusts Fred Flintstone into the spy game for a feature-length animated musical adventure that’s probably best appreciated by die-hard fans of the modern stone-age family. Released to theaters immediately after the network series left the air in 1966, Flintstone reunites the vocal cast from its final two seasons--Alan Reed as Fred, Mel Blanc as Barney, Jean VanderPyl as Wilma, and Gerry Johnson, who replaced Bea Bernadet as Betty--for this tale of mistaken identities and international intrigue. Veteran voice actor Paul Frees is secret agent Rock Slag, who is injured in his pursuit of the villainous Green Goose (Harvey Korman). His identical twin (Fred Flintstone, natch) is recruited to impersonate Slag and continue the chase in “Eurock,” with Wilma, Barney and Betty in tow under the pretense of a joint family vacation. Flintstone has its moments, most notably a musical number featuring the voice of Louis Prima, but on the whole, it pales by comparison to the smart writing of the series (which addressed several of the feature’s plotlines in individual episodes). Still, Reed, Blanc and the rest are game, and nostalgists may enjoy this rare feature-length outing, which has gone unseen save for sporadic TV broadcasts since its release. Flintstones scholars may note that Henry Corden, who took over as the voice of Fred Flintstone following Reed’s death in 1977, provides Fred’s singing voice in musical numbers. --Paul Gaita

Trivia about The Man Called Flintstone

  • This movie was produced right after production of the original “The Flintstones” (1960) series ended, and was intended as a swan song for the characters.
  • Henry Corden, who provided Fred Flintstone’s (uncredited) singing voice, also voiced several incidental characters on “The Flintstones” (1960) and would later take over Fred’s voice after Alan Reed’s death in 1977.
  • During the “Teammates” musical number, when Fred and Barney’s airplane falls apart, it becomes the “Flintstone Flyer”, the pedal-powered contraption featured in the very first episode of the series.
  • Unusually, Wilma is seen wearing a blue dress in this film rather than her usual white.
  • The airplane The Flintstones take to get to Paris has “Qantas” - the name of a real-life airline - written on the side.
  • The DVD was released outside the United States only, because Columbia Pictures owns the rights to the songs used in the movie.

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Raynbow the Clown

About the Author

Tom Raymond, aka. Raynbow the Clown, is a professional clown working out of Madison, Wisconsin, and is available for ministry events, conventions and conferences.
Posted by Tom Raymond, aka Raynbow on 06/01 at 01:54 PM
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