Welcome to Eltingville

For the neighborhood of Eltingville, Staten Island, see Eltingville, Staten Island.
Welcome to Eltingville

The title card featuring the four members of the Eltingville club. From the left: Jerry, Bill, Josh, and Pete.
Created by Evan Dorkin
Based on Eltingville
by Evan Dorkin
Written by Evan Dorkin
Directed by Chuck Sheetz
Voices of
Theme music composer The Aquabats
Ending theme "Welcome to Eltingville"
performed by The Aquabats
Composer(s) Denis M. Hannigan
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Executive producer(s) Evan Dorkin
Sarah Dyer
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) Cartoon Network Studios
Release
Original network Adult Swim
Picture format 4:3 SDTV
Original release March 3, 2002 (2002-03-03)

Welcome to Eltingville is a animated comedy pilot created by Evan Dorkin based on his comic book series Eltingville. It was premiered in the United States on March 3, 2002, on Cartoon Network's late night programming block, Adult Swim, but was not picked up for a full series.

Welcome to Eltingville takes place in Eltingville, Staten Island, and focuses on the lives of four teenage boys: Bill Dickey, Josh Levy, Pete DiNunzio and Jerry Stokes, all members of "The Eltingville Club", who have shared interests in comic books and science fiction, among other things. In the pilot episode Bill and Josh enter into a fight over a collectible Boba Fett action figure.

The pilot episode, "Bring Me the Head of Boba Fett", adapts the Eisner Award winning story of the same name, which ran in the third issue of Instant Piano.[1] It was written by Dorkin and Chuck Sheetz and received a positive reception. It has been made available on DVD.

Plot

The Eltingville Club's members, Bill Dickey, Josh Levy, Pete DiNunzio and Jerry Stokes, all get into a fight, wake up Bill's mom and Bill kicks Josh out of the club. The next day, Bill awakes from a nightmare which he called a "freaky premonition," and decides to let Josh back into the club. They end their day at a comic book shop, where they compete in a trivia contest to win an action figure of Boba Fett. While Bill technically wins, they continue their dispute and end up breaking the action figure. They need to combine their funds to purchase the broken toy and all four are then kicked out of the store. Bill angrily walks away with Fett's head and leaves Josh with the body. While Josh weeps on the ground, Willoughby breaks the fourth wall to ask if this is the "end of the Eltingville Club?!"

Production and broadcast

The pilot episode, "Bring Me the Head of Boba Fett", was written by Evan Dorkin and directed by Chuck Sheetz. It was rated as TV-14 in the United States for comic violence, crude sexual references (including sexualized depictions of women), and moderate offensive language. Production on the episode was officially completed in October 2001.[2] The pilot was based on Dorkin's time as a comic book store employee at Jim Hanley's Universe in Eltingville, Staten Island.[3] The pilot's story line was partially based upon the comic story of the same name and the pilot's theme opening and closing themes were written and performed by The Aquabats.

Dorkin took a large role in the pilot's creation and has since stated that if he could have re-done the episode, he would have chosen to delegate more work and to choose an Eltingville story that would show off more of the series' potential and characters.[4] If the series had been picked up for further episodes or a miniseries, potential plot lines for episodes would have included a "Klingon vs. Elf war" between a local Klingon camp and a Renaissance fair, as well as the club members digging through the Staten Island landfill for a collectible item that was mistakenly thrown out.[5]

The pilot episode was originally aired in the United States on Cartoon Network's late night programming block Adult Swim on March 3, 2002, and was originally promoted by "special" by Adult Swim. It has since been re-aired periodically on Adult Swim since its original premiere, including twice on Halloween night, October 31, 2008, as part of an advertised "Halloween Stunt" night.[6]

Cast

Reception

Animation World Network and Ain't It Cool News both praised the pilot episode,[7] and Ain't It Cool News complimented the show on its geek humor, which they considered to be fairly accurate and funny.[8] The characters in the pilot have since made Topless Robot's list of Pop Culture's 10 Greatest Nerds.[9]

Home release

On October 27, 2009, Adult Swim and distributor Warner Home Video released Adult Swim in a Box a seven-disc DVD box set featuring a variety of different Adult Swim shows. Welcome to Eltingville is featured in this set on a bonus DVD along with Korgoth of Barbaria, the pilot episode of Perfect Hair Forever, Totally for Teens, and Cheyenne Cinnamon and the Fantabulous Unicorn of Sugar Town Candy Fudge;[10][11] in June 2010, the bonus DVD from "Adult Swim in a Box", was made available for separate purchase through the Adult Swim website.

See also

References

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