Thundarr the Barbarian (TV Series 1980–1981) Poster

(1980–1981)

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7/10
An Honest Review
generationofswine2 April 2017
Conan...I mean Thundarr!!!! So he wore fur and he was Conan but named differently and he rode around on strange looking horses long after a comet destroyed earth and left us in a new Hyborian Era...

But, he also had a best friend who was like Chewie from Star Wars, but had a face kind of like that angry Timi thing from Space Ghost and they hung out this princess who was all legs.

While they were fighting mutants who also cohabitant the earth and occasionally their adventures take them underground where they find the ruins of subways and realize that there once was a more advanced civilization.

And if that doesn't convince you to watch it, then the fact that Thundarr has a lightsaber shaped like a hand-and-a-half should.

And the little kid in me is drooling. DROOLING. Cartoon overload. Awesome.
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7/10
Conan knock-off.
haildevilman10 May 2011
Mind you....that isn't a bad thing.

Spice it up with more sci-fi and give him regular companions and we have Thundarr. Which is a cool name by the way.

The apocalyptic intro seems more frightening as a 10-14 year old. (Which I was at the time.) But it sets a great stage. Also the lack of a running story made it a little more fun. However, it also suggests a lack of faith in the project.

This was on a little later in the morning on Saturdays so it was probably aimed at older kids. I didn't see it as much as I'd liked. But it's worth remembering. I'm surprised your comic-con and "cosplay" types don't go here more often. Princess Ariel seems like an American anime at times. Only smart.

Thank you Cartoon Network/Boomerang for bringing it back.
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From a girl's point of view....
angelia_20 May 2001
'Thundarr the Barbarian' has been one of my favorite cartoons for years, holding a place beside 'Dungeons and Dragons', 'Heavy Metal' and 'Pirates of Dark Water'. I started watching it when I was about 8 years old, and it was the coolest cartoon out there. You had a post-apocalyptic world full of mutated creatures and awesome sorcery. You even had the occasional army of robots. What's not to like? While Thundarr did refer to the females as 'woman', it was always amusing to me. He was the epitomy of what a barbarian would and should be; big and dumb. And Ariel just plain rocked! She could do anything from creating bridges to levitating Ookla, no small feat. Even though she was a sorceress, she always seemed to take the logical route in a battle, like locking Gemini's face plate shut so he couldn't shoot rays from his eyes. Ookla the Mok was like a cross between Chewbacca and a lion, and had one of the weirdest horses I ever saw! The animation was great and it inspired me to want to do animation. The show gave me an interest not only in animation and magic, but also in science. Everything about it was cool, and even now I enjoy the episodes so much, I have them on tape. It's really a shame that more weren't made. Demon dogs!
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10/10
miss it!!!
keela3225 May 2006
Thundarr was one of best cartoons that has ever been made. I had to clean up my room every Saturday morning before I could watch it but it was worth it. At 32,I try to let the kids experience the things I grew up with. And they love them.Thank you for the memories and please bring them back.Is there any way these cartoons like Thundarr and the Herculoids be brought back to TV? Can we start a petition to these rolling? I would love my son be opened up to these cartoons I loved so much.Some can teach lessons that can be valuable in life. Remember how conservative Ariel was? How she was so calm in a crisis and Thundarr was so gungho. The love I have for this cartoon is extreme. Thanks for listening.I thought this cartoon was lost to the hands of time.Sometimes I look at the things that is on today and wonder where in the world do they get this stuff. They could teach a thing or two about friendship because they would never leave one another behind and that is #1 rule of being a friend.
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10/10
Best! Cartoon! EVER!
tonymisfeldt30 December 2014
I was six years old when this series first aired in 1980. As I was already an avid fan of Star Wars, and had recently been introduced to the works of JRR Tolkien by my sisters (who took me to see the Ralph Bakshi animated film "Lord Of The Rings", which I also loved), Thundarr The Barbarian was the greatest thing I think I had ever seen on television at that time.

The stories were interesting, the action was compelling, and the characters were very well written. Thundarr was your stereotypical "Sword & Sorcery" barbarian, who was big on muscles and courage, but lacked patience and an education. Princess Ariel was the brains of the outfit, and unlike most female characters in these types of shows was far from the typical "Damsel In Distress". Her knowledge of Pre-disaster Earth often comes in very handy, and her vast repertoire of magic spells makes her a match for nearly any evil wizard they may face. And then there was Ookla The Mok. Obviously inspired by Chewbacca The Wookiee, Ookla was the comic relief of the show, often accidentally destroying an object as he's looking at it or something similar. However he was also strong enough to lift entire dump trucks and throw them at his enemies, as well as loyal to a fault.

As I live in Canada, the official Thundarr DVDs are not available for purchase here. They can only be purchased through Warner Brothers' website, and they only ship orders to locations within the United States (so glad they think so highly of their other fans from around the world). However, I was able to purchase some very high end bootleg DVDs of the show back before the series was available through Made- To-Order sales, so I am able to enjoy the series on a regular basis, despite WB's stupid shipping policies. If you're able to, I highly recommend you buy a copy of the DVD. Whether it be through official channels, or bootlegs, it doesn't matter. Just introduce this series to as many people as you can. The whole world will be better for it.

I have also been doing my best to introduce this great series to a whole new generation of fans. I have written several fan fiction stories, which can be found online at www.fanfiction.net. I have also written a screenplay for a live action film adaptation, which I plan on trying to get produced.
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10/10
Classic 80's Saturday Morning TV
triffid_9818 July 2012
The 1980's definitely had their fill of cheese, but this series was legitimately good. For those that call it a Conan knockoff, note that this came out several years -before- the Conan movie.

It was essentially a mash-up of Conan-esque characters from Robert E. Howard's books in a post-apocalyptic setting. The most hilarious part has to be Thundarr's pathological hatred of wizards and his 'Princess' Ariel (Sorceress) companion.

Like a lot of these morning adventure gems (I'd include the late 1970's Filmation Rotoscoping efforts like Tarzan and Buck Rogers) this one never made it to DVD, so your only legitimate source is to catch it on something like the Boomerang network. It's too bad this one only made it through a year and a half of production.

PS. 'Lords of Light' makes an excellent drinking game. He has several signature phrases repeated throughout all the episodes but this is one is repeated multiple times in each 20ish minute episode.
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10/10
Post Apocalyptic Barbarian
hellraiser79 April 2015
Fantasy and sci-fi have always been my favorite genres, part of the reason is because both are always about possibilities and believing that the impossible could be possible. When combined together the possibilities are just endless.

This is one of my favorite animated shows of all time, and it's another childhood relic since I was a kid from the 80's; when I saw this show it just blew my mind and still does to this day.

The combination of the post apocalyptic sub genre and fantasy I think is a beautiful combination and it's one I honestly don't see much. The only other ones I can think of are the movie Ralph Bashi's "Wizards" and the pulp comic book series "Mighty Sampson" which may have been a partial influence to this cartoon due to the uncanny similarity.

The characters their not deep their simply there to serve their functions. But lets face it were all in this for the adventure and action and this show delivers well on both.

I really love the animation, sure it old but sometimes old fashioned can still be the best way to go and it has a retro charm for me. The character animation is good but it's really the background animation that impresses me the most.

It's a bit unnerving seeing how much of our world is in ruin because it also means a lot of culture that we thought would survive forever hasn't. For example, in one episode Thundarr sees a movie poster of "Star Wars" and Thundarr has no idea what the heck it is, let alone what a movie even is. It was a little disturbing but that little moment just shows how the things we take for granted once their gone their gone forever, which made me treasure things I love like "Star Wars" all the more.

However at the same time despite the ruin it also means new possibilities have opened up like with the film Ralph Bachi's "Wizards" we see there is magic back in our world along with some advanced technology which is scarce but still around all the same. These things just created a sense of broadness and made me wonder what more this world holds.

And the action is great and choreographed solid. I really like seeing the team just go on adventures and kick some asses that deserved to be kicked. They have to deal with Sourcerers, Evil Mad Scientiest, Robots, Monsters, Mutants, Faciests, Aliens, just a corn a coppia of bad which just makes it all the more tasty. Of course the highlight of the action is that Sun Sword which is obvious a rip on the light saber but all the same awesome, just seeing Thundarr using it to cut all things like butter and even block lazer bolts, you were almost indestructible with that sword. Along with seeing both Thundarr and even the Chewbaca like character Oo Loc both use their brute strength and force and Arial with her mystic powers which is also cool.

I would love to see a revival, where may'be we can have a little more depth on the characters as well as a developing plot line concerning on of the villains. As well as may'be even more depth into the ruined world, where it could take place further in the future and we would see what kind of technological advancements were made which could advance the plight of the villains but also question whether we were already on a way to ruin. Let alone an explanation where Thundarr got his sun sword, may'be he stumbled onto some ancient ruins and this was a mystical object from their society, I don't know something along those lines, but all the same the idea should be considered.

Overall, if you have a knack for retro toons then this show is one to check out, this series has plenty of thunder.

Rating: 4 stars
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9/10
An old series that deserves a new generation...
julianmarku13 August 2021
Wow, I am glad I am the first person/user to review this series in the 2020s, nearly 7 years since someone else reviewed it.

This series is honestly one of the best series from the 80s that deserves a new reboot. It has some of the best ingredients for a great animation story. It would look amazing with today's animation styles and given that we are living in a period where anime and manga have completely beaten cartoons and comicbooks, it is a perfect environment for some reboots of a series like this.

Now, about the series itself, it has some of the most solid ideas: here is me selling it to you: Cartoon is a post-apocalyptic cartoon (so the background is mostly destroyed buildings and monuments), humanity has been decimated by climate disasters and human wars for survival. 2000 years later, human society has devolved into tribes and human life has regressed into a barbaric lifestyle. The world is abused and enslaved by wizards who use the power of advanced science and mystical magic to rule their territories and even fight among themselves for more power.

Only one barbarian stands in their way, Thundarr. A barbarian who escaped his shackles of slavery and vowed to released his human brethren from slavery and defeat the power hungry wizards who have abused humanity long enough. With the help of a powerful sorceress named Ariel and a strong beast named Ookla, Thundarr travels the world helps the human tribes defeat mutants led by powerful wizards and bring peace to the new world.

I wish we could escape the labels that people have been giving great cartoons for years now: "A Saturday Morning Cartoon!", "A cartoon made to sell toys", etc. What is that?! It's a conversation stopping argument. I supposed the Mona Lisa was made to Sell Tickets and Red San Francisco bridge is made for cars to travel on! And the Statue of Liberty was made to make money for Tourism! What is wrong with giving boys and girls something they want!?

Well you know what my friends, the last 7 years of cartoons comicbooks have been about introducing agendas and social messaging to kids. Do you know the consequences of that? The death of cartoons and comicbooks. Today anime and manga rule the entertainment for kids. You can trick people and studios especially if they lack diversity of ideas, you can't trick the free market. People will always say the truth with their money, not with words.

I hope we can ressurect the era of action cartoons and western animation. Just a few weeks ago we got a Masters of the Universe spinoff story and we are getting a new He-man reboot soon. Is this the sign that the world is ready to change? Streaming services are Carte Blanche of environments for new animations. I hope someone remembers that the cartoons of the 70s, 80s and were a big influence to the first great animes that made Japan the animation powerhouse of the world today.

Thundarr definitely deserves to be remembered.
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A grown up cartoon for its time.
HyperPup28 July 2005
I'll never forget the first time I saw Thundarr. My mom actually watched it with me out of fear it my be some new wave of cartoon that would prove too mature for my still immature sensibilities. I won out and got to keep watching as the action proved not to much for me to indulge in. Thundarr was a fresh landscape for me. I hadn't really immersed myself in the "Post-Apocalptic" genre of scifi but this and a little Mad Max soon got me on my way. The stories were fantastic and though I am an animation snob now in my adulthood, back then I could really care less about the nuances in quality. It was just good ole fashion fun. I will say this though I remember very few of the actual episode story lines I remember a sense of sadness for the characters after the show ends. The idea that these rag tag warriors would be forever traversing the Earth, fighting for their lives and the lives of others and with the possibility of never knowing peace or true joy seemed very likely. I guess I was still too much the idealistic scifi dreamer to realize this was the only world Thundarr knew and would live in until society advanced beyond the means they existed in.
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Sword and sorcery at its finest.
Figaro-84 June 2000
Ahh, another Saturday morning gem. I liked (and still like) cartoons from my childhood like this one because they never talked down to kids. This series was a post-apocalyptic sword-and-sorcery epic, and it was treated exactly as such. There was some great animation and the post-apocalyptic backgrounds were just amazing. And Thundarr had the ultimate weapon--a sunsword! I really like the fact that there were no cute sidekicks here. There was Ariel, the sorceress, who was the smartest in the bunch. And then there was Ookla the Mok, one of the most awesome sidekicks ever to fight for the cause of good. You just had to admire his "horse" as well! Cartoon Network aired this one for a while, and I wish they would air it again.
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"Ariel, Ookla........ Ride!"
grendelkhan8 February 2003
The year 1980, from out of the void of Saturday morning tv comes a runaway show, hurtling between the Superfriends and the latest Scooby Doo revamp. It's a show of savagery, super science, and sorcery. But this show burst its bonds to fight for freedom. With his companions Ookla the Mok and Princess Ariel, he pits his strength, his courage and his fabulous Sun Sword against the forces of boring cartoons. He is Thundarr the Barbarian!

Thundarr was the greatest adventure cartoon of its day. Combining great characters with an imaginative setting and incorporating designs from such masters as Alex Toth and Jack Kirby, it transcended the usual Saturday morning fare. It boasted writing from comic book greats Steve Gerber and Martin Pasko, and direction from Doug Wildey, creator of Jonny Quest. The only strike against it was the strict guidelines from network censors tended to hamstring the action; but, the creators found interesting ways to deal with the handicap.

Thundarr is the big dumb barbarian who punches first and asks questions later. Ookla is the leonine biped who growls and smashes things. Ariel is the Asian sorceress with a knowledge of the lost past and is the voice of wisdom and reason.

The world is a post-cataclysmic Earth, with long dead cities and devastated lands. It is populated by humans, mutants and evil sorcerers/scientists. There are giant, savage beasts and monstrous war machines. What's not to like?

The late 70's/early 80's cartoon adventure shows were a pretty tame lot. The Superfriends had moments, particularly Challenge of the Superfriends, and Filmation's Tarzan and Batman shows were pretty entertaining; but nothing could hold a candle to Thundarr. It was so imaginative and so much fun you had to watch it. Sure it borrowed/stole from every sci-fi idea under the sun, but so did Star Wars and other works of print and celluloid sci-fi. There are no original stories; just retellings. Yes, the Sun Sword looked like a lightsabre and many of the villains conjured up Darth Vader, but Flash Gordon had flaming swords in the 30's and Vader bore close resemblance to the Lightning, from the serial Fighting Devil Dogs.

One of my great pleasures is watching the episodes on tape, along with Jonny Quest and Batman, the Animated series. All are great adventures, put together by master craftsmen. Too bad all cartoons, and even live shows, don't reach this level of quality. Now where's the DVD collection?
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Great Saturday Morning Show
Sargebri3 October 2003
This had to be one of the best animated shows of the early 1980's. The plot was pretty simple; a barbarian, a witch and a mutant creature known as a mock travel across the United States a thousand years after a disaster destroys most of the world. They go around fighting wizards and other assorted creatures in hopes of bringing order back to the world. This main thing I loved about this show was the fact that it wasn't like most of the animated shows at the time that felt they had to give a weekly ethics lesson. This show was just pure action from start to finish and it was just great entertainment without any hidden messages. I think this show will always stand the test of time and will always be recognized as a great action/adventure series.
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This was one of the coolest cartoons of its day!!!
raysond27 September 2003
In the fall of 1978,long time collaborated animated partners Joesph Ruby and Kenneth Spears set out to beginning their own animated production studio after there long term success with Hanna-Barbera. There years with Hanna-Barbera were absolutely brilliant as the team produced a string of hits including "Wacky Races","The Herculoids","Space Ghost", "Scooby Doo","The Hair-Bear Bunch","Speed Buggy","Jabberjaw","Josie and the Pussycats",which proceeded throughout the decade of the 1970's. All of that was about to change when the team produced there own production company....Ruby-Spears Productions.

The company would produced shows like "Fangface","Plasticman","The Heathcliff and Markaduke Show",and the best ever made,"Thundarr The Barbarian".

"Thundarr The Barbarian",was without a doubt their greatest achievement ever conceived and it was a winner with the kids on Saturday Mornings and a big hit in the ratings as well during the three years that it had kids in total amazement as part of ABC-TV's Super Saturday Morning Line-Up during the 1980's. However,Thundarr would come out two years before Arnold Schwarzenegger came out with "Conan",but this show just by itself was one action-packed a minute Saturday Morning cartoon show with surprises and unexpected twists at ever turn,in other words the greatest adventure cartoon of its day. "Thundarr" was part science fiction,part superhero,and it got most of its material from the Star Wars films. Combinating great characters with an imaginative setting and incorporate designs from such great animation masters as Alex Toth and Jack Kirby(whom were also behind the designs for several Hanna-Barbera cartoons including "Jonny Quest","Space Ghost" and others),it was totally different from the usual Saturday Morning fare.

It also boasted some brilliant writing from comic book greats Steve Gerber and Martin Pesko,and some breathtaking direction from director/animated artist Doug Wildey,the creator of the "Jonny Quest" television series and one hellvua musical score from composer Dean Elliott,whom was behind a lot of theme-oriented Saturday Morning animated series and specials,and still is to this day. As for the story line,well Thundarr is the big dumb barbarian who punches first and asks questions later plus takes out the villains and supercreatures with his sunsword. Ookla is sort of the Chewbacca character here and is the leonine biped who growls and smashes things in his path. And Ariel is the Asian sorceress,who was the smartest in the group,could levitiate things at will and had a knowledge of wisdom and reason.

The world is a post-cataclysmic Earth where man's own civilization is cast in ruines with long dead cities and total devastation across the land. It is populated by humans,mutants, and evil sorcerers/scientists and villains with powers far beyond the imagination. It had some far-out creatures that were awesome as well. This show had it all...What's not to like about giants,savage beasts and monstrous war machines and gigantic spaceships from other worlds? This was a kid's show.

During the decade of the late 70's/early 80's cartoon adventure shows were pretty tame with the excess amount of violence added,which some of them were not to be seen especially with the strict guidelines from the censors whom made sure that these shows follow them. With some of the shows that were out back then.....The Superfriends had their moments until the producers changed the formula with the course of the show with The Challenge Of The Superfriends which was particularly good; Godzilla was a good show,but it was very tame with the giant lizard doing good and fighting the forces of evil,and the one where they had this knockout blonde whom the censors says it was too explicit,but it was tame too with a female Tarzan character...Remember Jana Of The Jungle? Even Filmation's Tarzan and Batman,not to mention here as well the He-Man shows were pretty entertaining as well;but when it came to delivering the goods,nothing could hold a candle to Thundarr. It Rocked!

Thanks to Cartoon Network's sister station,Boomerrang,you can watch these classic episodes everyday!!! It's too bad that nowadays they have The Superfriends shows out of DVD,but where is Thundarr The Barbarian??? This show was the standard of shows that came out during the late 70's/early 80's but Ruby-Spears Productions,whom would give us shows like "Turbo Teen","Goldie Gold and Action Jack","Mister T","Alvin And The Chipmunks",and the animated shows featuring Hulk Hogan,Chuck Norris, and even Sylvester Stallone's character "Rambo". Check it out!!!!
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Kids loved him, moms loathed him...
Jedi Clerk2 August 2000
Honestly, one of my favorite saturday morning cartoon shows from the early 80's. This Kirby-spawn only lasted 2 seasons... perhaps because of the fact that Thundarr often referred to his ally the sorcereress Ariel as simply "woman"... oddly enough, more often than not Ariel was the sole member of the group who saved their buns from the fire. Lots of great dialog. Possibly inspired by the role-playing game "Gamma World" (which is, sadly now out of print)... Basically when you are 11 years old and a post-apocalyptic barbarian with a lightsaber (read as "Sun Sword") and a cool Chewbacca substitute named "Ookla the Mok" show up on a Saturday morning world of Smurfs and Superfriends you think this is really cool!
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Wonderful series...
SteveM-111 August 2002
....even if it did borrow a lot of concepts from the popular Star Wars movies. Thundarr with his Sun Sword (lightsaber), wise cracking Princess Ariel (Princess Leia) and a large hairy, growling companion, Ookla the Mok (Chewbacca).

All these aside, it was still a great series. I liked how the items that are so common in our world, become totally new things in the Devastated Future World. It was also kind of interesting to see the new landscapes and realize that they were actually standing in ruined Los Angeles, Washington D.C., etc.

It was somewhat hampered by the cheap animation common to Cartoon Series of the day. I would love to see the series re-made with today's animation techniques. I'm sure it would be even more astonishing.
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duh duh duh DUH DUH DUH DUH duh duh
Shizznit2516 November 2005
OK what do you get if you cross Conan the Barbarian with Star Wars with the end of the world? Thundarr the Barbarian, that's what. OK, so like... guys come on. This show was like the most awesome concept of it's time if not of the last thirty years. So what if it had to be sold as Saturday morning tripe for eight year olds... IT ROCKED and still does. I was only like three or four years old when I saw this show for the first time and I remember watching it religiously. My Saturday mornings were not complete if I did not get to see Thundarr kick some butt. I am just now getting around to re-collecting (ie downloading) shows. The owner's are kinda of dumb not to release it on DVD... they would absolutely make a lot of money. More over... they should re-create the show and get the franchise rolling. Thundarr will be just as good in near-apocalyptic 2005 as it was in near-apocalyptic 1980. Well, they might have to change the cataclysm from 1994 to like a later date... but I'm sure they they can figure it out in another time traveling episode or something. And if not that.. movie rights guys? Hello... every comic book and lame super hero is being turned into a live action film these days...
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Funniest quote (in my opinion) from this cartoon **SPOILER?**
Akzidenz_Grotesk27 July 2004
Warning: Spoilers
It was in the episode entitled "Raiders of the Abyss" which is on a 3-episode tape I got at a yard sale. In it, there is a scene with the evil wizard Morak sitting on his throne and being saluted by his henchmen. These aren't the exact words, but you get the idea:

Henchmen: All hail Morak! All hail Morak! All hail Morak!

Morak: I cannot live on just cheers... bring me my supper!

The flippant, sneering "cheers" comment is unexpected because Morak seems to be poking fun at the Saturday morning cartoon convention of evil leaders and their mindless followers! It's hilarious! (to me, anyways!)
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