The Greatest Adventure Stories from the Bible: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Fish Out of Temporal Water]]
* [[Fish Out of Temporal Water]]
* [[Godiva Hair]] - In the creation story. Also has some [[Scenery Censor|clever scenery placement]].
* [[Godiva Hair]] - In the creation story. Also has some [[Scenery Censor|clever scenery placement]].
* [[Hey It's That Voice]] - Famous guest stars included [[Supergirl (Film)|Helen Slater]] as Esther, [[James Earl Jones]] as the Pharaoh in the Moses story, [[Tim Curry]] as the serpent in the Garden of Eden, [[Beauty and The Beast (Disney)|Robbie Benson]] as David, [[He Man and The Masters of The Universe|Alan Oppenheimer]] as Jonah, [[Tony Jay]] as the High Priest who tried Jesus, and [[Vincent Price]] as Herod.
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]] - Famous guest stars included [[Supergirl (Film)|Helen Slater]] as Esther, [[James Earl Jones]] as the Pharaoh in the Moses story, [[Tim Curry]] as the serpent in the Garden of Eden, [[Beauty and The Beast (Disney)|Robbie Benson]] as David, [[He Man and The Masters of The Universe|Alan Oppenheimer]] as Jonah, [[Tony Jay]] as the High Priest who tried Jesus, and [[Vincent Price]] as Herod.
* [[Large Ham]] - most of the actors playing major religious figures were very big and bombastic. In the retelling of Exodus, Moses and [[James Earl Jones|the Pharaoh]] particularly engage in some delicious [[Ham to Ham Combat]].
* [[Large Ham]] - most of the actors playing major religious figures were very big and bombastic. In the retelling of Exodus, Moses and [[James Earl Jones|the Pharaoh]] particularly engage in some delicious [[Ham to Ham Combat]].
* [[Our Time Travel Is Different]] - Our 20th-century heroes travel through time not so much by any device, as because they keep finding holes in the Space-Time Continuum.
* [[Our Time Travel Is Different]] - Our 20th-century heroes travel through time not so much by any device, as because they keep finding holes in the Space-Time Continuum.
* [[Shout Out]]: Moses wears the same outfit worn by Charlton Heston in ''[[The Ten Commandments]]''. Also, the scene where Egypt's water is turned to blood is a nearly shot-for-shot copy of the same scene from ''The Ten Commandments''.
* [[Shout-Out]]: Moses wears the same outfit worn by Charlton Heston in ''[[The Ten Commandments]]''. Also, the scene where Egypt's water is turned to blood is a nearly shot-for-shot copy of the same scene from ''The Ten Commandments''.
** The Creation of earth bares some resemblance to [[Fantasia]], with all the volcanoes & such.
** The Creation of earth bares some resemblance to [[Fantasia]], with all the volcanoes & such.
* [[Tim Curry]] - Played the serpent in the Garden of Eden. Very well at that.
* [[Tim Curry]] - Played the serpent in the Garden of Eden. Very well at that.

Revision as of 17:12, 25 January 2014

The main characters (in modern-day clothing) listening to the story of The Garden of Eden.
"While surveying the site of some ancient ruins, two young archaeologists, Derek and Margo, and their nomad friend Moki find themselves trapped and sinking in a whirling pool of sand. And when the dust settles, they stare up in awe at a vast chamber, filled with giant relics and artifacts from another civilization... And there, at the far end of the cavern, a door with a strange inscription - 'All who enter these portals pass through time!'"
Opening Narration before each episode

Developed by Hanna-Barbera during the middle to late 1980s and early 1990s, The Greatest Adventure: Stories from the Bible was a 13-episode direct-to-video series that featured three young explorers, Derek, Margo and Moki, traveling through time via unexplained Doorways of Time, which allow them to witness some of the major events recorded in The Bible. Often even within the same episode, they would stumble across one of the Doorways, allowing them to witness events from the same story that took place years later.

Similar to Superbook and The Flying House, the series tried to focus on making the characters from the biblical stories relatable and believable. Surprisingly, it also adhered as closely to the original stories as possible, keeping many of the elements that most Moral Guardians quietly edit out to make the stories "appropriate" for children, editing only the relative closeness of events in order to keep within the 30-minute time frame.

Because of the close adherence, the series took the biblical stories very seriously; it was usually the side adventures of the time travelers that featured any comedy, although they often overlapped with the main story as the heroes tried to help the Biblical figures out in whatever way they could.

These cartoons are still often shown to kids in Sunday School

It also shares an art style with Captain Planet and The Planeteers, as Ted Turner helped fund the project.

Tropes used in The Greatest Adventure Stories from the Bible include: