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Category:    Home > Reviews > Children's Television > Puppets > Animation > The Chap With Caps - Between The Lions set

The Chap With Caps & More – Between The Lions set

 

Picture: C+     Sound: C+     Extras: C     Episodes: B-

 

 

Though it is meant for a younger audience, Between The Lions (1999 onward) is a series that (following Reading Rainbow) finally fills the gap The Electric Company left behind decades ago when it was sadly and disturbingly cancelled.  WGBH Home Video has issued a triple DVD set of the series under the name The Chap With Caps & More that offers a generous helping of some of their best shows.

 

Instead of people, lion puppets are the stars, and these are not from the Muppet people.  That is a breakaway for PBS, whose puppet programming was responsible for putting them and creator Jim Henson on the map.  Here, the lions and occasional humans do a fine job of constructing ideas about grammar, spelling and pronunciation throughout the show.  The result is one of the key children’s TV series.  The episodes on the following DVDs are Pecos Bill Cleans Up The West (also including Lionel’s Great Escape Trick and Touching The Moon), Shooting Stars (also including There’s A Fly In My Soup and Pandora’s Box) and Fuzzy, Wuzzy, Wuzzy? (also including The Boy Who Cried Wolf and The Chap With Caps).

 

Each show is about a half-hour and is just non-stop entertainment, intelligent and fun stimulation to encourage reading throughout.  It does take a while to get used to non-Muppets educating you, but maybe it is not as hard for the new generation of pre-schoolers, et al.  The production is good, with money put into the show and this includes some animation.  The shows are also very colorful and child-friendly, so it is definitely worth having on DVD, as young children can access the educational aspects any time they want, over and over in a way broadcasts cannot.  That is why there were records and books in the pre-video days for shows like Electric Company, Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood and Sesame Street.  Now, they can have both.

 

The 1.33 X 1 full frame image is good for a current analog video production, employing digital where needed.  The puppeteering is good, as well as the taping, though the animation is made under different circumstances.  There are detail limits, but they are not too bad.  The Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo has no surround information, but this sounds nice and clear just the same.  The music is not bad either.  Extras include songs from the show, three “Play Story” sections from the episodes accessible separately on each DVD, a “Leading The Way To Literacy” segment and two DVD-ROM PDF activity pieces for parents and children separately.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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