Fred and Wilma try to teach a wayward boy about values.
Credited cast: | |||
Henry Corden | ... | Fred Flintstone (voice) | |
Jean Vander Pyl | ... | Wilma Flintstone (voice) | |
Frank Welker | ... | Barney Rubble (voice) | |
B.J. Ward | ... | Betty Rubble (voice) | |
Didi Conn | ... | Stella (voice) | |
Christine Cavanaugh | ... | Stony (voice) | |
Rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
Charlie Adler | ... | (voice) | |
Hamilton Camp | ... | (voice) | |
Nick Jameson | ... | (voice) | |
Megan Mullally | ... | (voice) | |
Robert Ridgely | ... | (voice) | |
Kath Soucie | ... | (voice) | |
John Stephenson | ... | Mr. Slate (voice) | |
Alan Young | ... | (voice) |
Fred and Wilma try to teach a wayward boy about values.
Firstly, let me acknowledge that perhaps I am being a bit too extreme when I toss out the word `sacrilegious' as it relates to this special. As a moderately religious person myself, I am certainly not an individual who usually goes around passing judgement on these kind of things. But I do raise this question: how on earth can a society living in the stone age celebrate a holiday that honors the birth of Christ?
I suppose we could let this slide (after all, this is not the first Christmas-themed Flintstones special), but there was one particular scene in this special that really took me aback: The Flintstones pose for a Christmas family photograph, which is taken and then shown with the following writing below it: `Flintstones Christmas BC'. If there was ever an opportunity to use the words `blasphemy' and `oxymoron' in the same sentence, that's it.
That aside, this is a pretty bland, by-the-book half-hour of Christmas television viewing. As with most modern Flintstones specials, it doesn't hold a candle to the sheer delightfulness of the original television series. There are better Flintstones Christmas specials than this one.