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All Rise...Judge David Johnson likes to hunt Boohbah. The ChargeThe Boohbahs are tormenting my dreams. The CaseBoohbah is the latest creation of "Ragdoll," the kids-oriented production studio responsible for siccing the Teletubbies on an unsuspecting civilization. I remember when I first laid eyes on Tinky-Winky and the rest of the crew—I was mesmerized by the sheer weirdness of the program. Since then, the baby-head sun and the talking flowers have become common place in our pop culture. But now comes the newest little kids phenom, and, brothers and sisters, Boohbah has recaptured that original dose of the surreal that I first was smacked with way back when. Apparently, the Teletubbies make too much sense and weren't trippy enough, so here we have a new breed of creature to torch your children's reitnas. There are five "Boohbahs": Humbah, Jumbah, Zumbah, Jingbah, and Zing Zing Zingbah. They are, of course, uniquely colored and love to dance around. What kind of animal they are…well, that's a good question. They look like bipedal blobs of toothpaste. They waddle around with huge, fuzzy guts, their foreheads light up, and they appear to communicate with their eyes. Each 20-minute show follows a strict game-plan: the Boohbah emerge from their crystalline pods and begin a unique movement which they eventually perform in tandem; following that, some kids bring a present, which rockets into the air in a blaze of special effects, and we're ushered into our next phase of the show: Storyworld. In Storyworld, one of eight mute characters—Grandpapa, Grandmama, Mrs. Lady, Mr. Man, Brother, Sister, Auntie, or Little Dog Fido—interact with the gift somehow after being introduced by an utterly disinterested Englishman. So the characters do their thing, and we're back at the Boohbah hangout (which looks like Superman's Fortress of Solitude). The Boobahs do some more moving, and that's a wrap. It's all very psychedelic and wonky, but apparently there's a method to the madness. Ann Wood, the creator, speaks of the research-grounded thrust of the show (the movement, the two-dimensional story characters, the colors, the patterns) in one of the extras. I don't what know that all means, but she's British, so I'm just going to go with it. This disc features three Boohbah episodes: • "Big Windows" • "Big TV" • "Long Dink" Give us your feedback!Did we give Boohbah: Big Windows a fair trial? yes / no Other Reviews You Might Enjoy
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