Maybe it’s the nostalgia. Maybe it’s the lighthearted nature of this adventure. Maybe it’s because this series was actually aimed at an older age group. Whatever the reason, “Wanted: Bebop and Rocksteady” was a blast! While we’ve seen the interdimensional crossover before, the addition of 1987 Krang and Shredder to the mix was really fun. It was entertaining to see the show team riff on the original series while still honoring it. They didn’t update the characters to reflect our current time. They were joyously stuck in the past, flaws front and center, with our current heroes ready to call them out on how ridiculous they are. Yet despite the general silliness, Shredder and Krang still proved to be a real threat, even validating the current versions of Bebop and Rocksteady in the process. It all came together in the end, with a big team up between the 2014 Turtles, the 87 Turtles, The Mighty Mutanimals, April and Casey, and Karai, Shinigami, and their Foot Clan.
The adventure begins when Shredder and Krang from the 1987 dimension travel to the 2014 dimension in order to escape their Turtles and take over the world! Since they left their Bebop and Rocksteady at home, they put out a help wanted ad looking for minions. Of course, the current Bebop and Rocksteady answer, dressed in their best interview attire (Bebop added a bow tie and Rocksteady put on a tie that looks like it would be worn by Soviet Donkey Kong!). The whole set up is ingenious and hilarious. Bebop and Rocksteady meet Shredder and Krang in a diner. It looks like it’s broad daylight outside and there are multiple patrons in the diner. The civilians all looked shocked when B & R enter, but they were apparently ok with a guy clad in ninja armor and a disembodied brain sitting in two booster seats. Bebop gave Krang professional head shots, while Rocksteady gave a resume written in crayon. It’s all just so silly, and really sets up the tone of the episode.
Shredder even challenges B&R and his look when they overcome him is priceless. His ego is shattered, but he still thinks of himself as the big bad. The fight with the 87 Turtles comes next, and B&R demolish them too. They rely on all the familiar tropes of the original cartoon; knocking over a stack of cardboard boxes, spinning your enemy on the playground roundabout, blasting your enemy with the water from a fire hydrant. Except this time, they all fail. These Turtles were heroes in their own dimension, but things work differently here. Here, they’re totally incompetent. They’re actively afraid of using their weapons, their fighting is more prank than combat, and their style is transparent to enemies like the 2014 B&R, who despite their usual aloofness, have seen their fair share of combat. Even their attempts at escape are predictable and watching Bebop and Rocksteady foil them is amusing.
Eventually the current Turtles rescue the old Turtles, after escaping capture themselves. The new mission, stop Bebop and Rocksteady from stealing some Kraang energy crystals and a microchip needed to open a portal to Dimension X. Despite the help of the Mutanimals and Karai and Shinigami, our heroes are unable to stop the warthog and rhino and their new army of classic Footbots. And despite insulting the pair at every turn, Shredder and Krang actually warm up to B&R, ultimately thanking them for their success, and giving them the acknowledgement they’ve always wanted.
Unfortunately, their success has made it possible for Shredder and Krang to enact their ultimate plan; open a portal to Dimension X and destroy the world! After some thought (and the realization that Rocksteady just really loves Soviet Russia?!) our new super villains decide they want to be new heroes instead! Rocksteady takes out Krang’s body, setting off a chain reaction that stops the portal! What follows is a triumphant beatdown of the villains from all the heroes, with many catchphrases being tossed about.
Nick’s first foray into TMNT has proven to be an excellent series and “Wanted: Bebop and Rocksteady” distills down all the reasons why. There’s slick action, humor, heart, and lots of references to other Turtle properties. I loved lines like, “You can’t kill us! This is a kids show!” and the brief spot of both Donatello’s playing the alphabetical insult game was a small but excellent nod. I also loved the complete version of the Ice Cream Kitty music video, first shown at NYCC last year (note: was this on Nick when it aired? I buy episodes on Amazon Prime, so I’m unclear if that was aired or just a special feature).
“Wanted: Bebop and Rocksteady” was a solid series finale. It brought all the characters back for one final romp, paid homage to the history of the property, and just generally had a lot of fun with itself. It’s going to be difficult saying goodbye to this series. They found such a great balance of adventure, action, and character growth. I’m glad that they went out with a (rocket to the Technodrome) bang.
17 comments
This is isn’t the Series Final, according to the producer of the show, the Final was actually the Mutant Apocalypse episodes, its the reason why Nickelodeon only aired those episodes plus the Monsters vs Mutant episodes on NickToons, they probably thought it was too scary for for Nickelodeon or something.
Says the show that killed Splinter on screen
Raph’s self-insert Mad Max fanfic…er, I mean, Mutant Apocalypse was the last set of episodes made, but that’s pretty much it. Ciro Nieli may have wanted it to be the finaIe, but that really doesn’t matter. An actual series finale needs to make sense within the context of the series, and not badly contradict previously established canon (as well as make the entire series meaningless).
I agree with Nick on this one 🙂 The Crossover makes a much better finale. It’s better written, frankly: Unlike Mutant Apocalypse, it doesn’t have severely OOC moments (ie, Leo in Mutant Apocalypse) and doesn’t badly contradict canon as far as I can remember. Oh, and it doesn’t completely fridge the strong female characters 🙂
The reason that this aired last instead of MA is because Nickelodeon has proven to be incompetent at scheduling since “Parasitica”. THAT is why this aired last (and was released on DVD before the Halloween, WWC, Usagi, and MA arcs as well)!
Dang! One 10th of a point away from a perfect score! What happened?
I’m gonna miss this version of TMNT. It was the version I discovered the turtles originally and the best 5 years of watching TV for. Pray for that the new TMNT series will be good and like this if you don’t want the new show to be the new Teen Titans Go
Again, the new show deserves the benefit of a doubt. There’s never been a bad TMNT animated series and the show runners are Ant Ward and Andy Suriano. Until I see it, I don’t see these guys messing it up.
How is it unfair? It seems like everything they’ve said about the new show, especially the changes to the characters, is exactly the same changes that happened from the original Teen Titans to Go.
Because of the reasons I just stated. This upcoming series deserves at least a few episodes seen before we decide it’s the first terrible animated series this franchise has produced. And with the guys running it, I actually doubt that will happen.
I like how you keep qualifying the statement with “animated”…
Giving the live actions a pass, are we? 😀
Well I can’t put The Next Mutation, TMNT 3, the two recent live action films, and those music tours (if those count) in the same league with either cartoon series now can I?
Also, the 2007 animated movie is hit or miss–I don’t like it very much myself, but it’s not a series, so yeah, I still say we’ve yet to see a bad one of those.
they didn’t air the ICK music video, and there was a power ranger mask when they were looking on the selfs for the micro chip, and also in the teaser rise of the tmnt video u can see episode titles and a release date
When did the Donatello’s do the alphabet insult game? I don’t remember seeing that
this could explain though why be-bop and rocksteady helped the turtles in the heroes in half shell special
This was not that great an episode. Sure they did a good job of capturing the old Kraang and Shredder while inserting their own versions of B&R, but it really felt incomplete. Where’s Tiger Claw? Hmmmm? Where’s Xever? They didn’t even get a mention on what they’ve been up to! Where was Rockwell, even? If this was supposed to bring the closure to the Hamato vs Foot rivalry that End Times failed to capture, it didn’t do its job. For that, I can’t put it ahead of Mutant Apocalypse so a 9.9 is going quite far. It’s the third best arc of the series behind MA and the Usagi trilogy at #1.
While I personally view Owari as the end of the main canon storyline (with Kavaxas as an epilogue), this arc did make a nice finale for Tales of the TMNT. Much better than the polished turd….excuse me, Mad Max rip-off……excuse me again, Mutant Apocalypse. Nickelodeon actually made a good decision here 🙂
Bebop and Rocksteady were hilarious, Kevin Michael Richardson did a great job as Shredder, and it was so cool to have the voice cast from the original toon again. Brings back some very fond childhood memories.
What a fun finale 🙂
Definitely one of the most fun episodes, and a MUCH better series finale than Raph’s “Mad Max” fever dream. I thought it was better to conclude with one more action-comedy-jammed romp of silliness and epicness than to conclude with the Turtles outliving all of their friends and allies.
Better a happy end than one that leaves you with regrets and loose ends. Mostly regrets, though.
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