Adventure Time: The Suitor

Adventure Time: The Suitor

Adventure Time TV Series Collection 6 – The Suitor DVD, featuring 16 episodes. Peppermint Butler thinks that Princess Bubblegum is working too hard in her lab, so he tries to get her a suitor named Braco. Braco ends up bothering Princess Bubblegum so much that she creates him a cyborg-clone of herself to give to him. In the meantime, Peppermint Butler strikes a deal with a demon that makes Braco the object of everyone's desire, but physically deformed. Special Features: Reversible cover art Awards for the series Annie Awards 2013 – Nominated for Best Animated Television Production for Children Annie Awards 2011 – Nominated for Best Animated Television Production for Children Primetime Emmy Awards 2013 – Nominated for Outstanding Short-Format Animated Program Primetime Emmy Awards 2012 – Nominated for Outstanding Short-Format Animated Program Primetime Emmy Awards 2011 – Nominated for Outstanding Short-Format Animated Program Primetime Emmy Awards 2010 – Nominated for Outstanding Short-Format Animated Program Teen Choice Awards 2013 – Nominated Choice TV: Animated Show Television Critics Association Awards 2013 – Nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Youth Programming Adventure Time TV Show Reviews “Adventure Time” is an amazing blend of animation with fantasy and plenty of comedy. It is trippy, strange and completely weird but impossible not to love…this show is for “kids” of all ages.” 5/5 MediaMikes.com “…Adventure Time is on fire, pretty much from the start of the series. The humor is lightning-fast and refreshingly funny. And the show takes no time settling into a chill groove, with each episode playing better than the next. This has been Adventure Time's greatest strength – it never tries to repeat itself. The show is always circling fresh, new ideas and exploring hilarious avenues. Rarely does a bad episode surface…” IGN “The realm of kid-centric animated programming has long been dominated by disposable garbage, but every now and then a gem will rise to the surface. Batman: The Animated Series. Avatar: The Last Airbender. Justice League Unlimited. Animaniacs. Spongebob Squarepants. You get the idea. Now we can add the incomparable Adventure Time to that list, one of the strangest and most weirdly hypnotic pieces of children's en­tertainment to hit the small screen in quite some time…There's really no way to capture Adventure Time's distinctive tone in a review, other than to say that it plays like a low-budget, G-rated (or at least PG-rated) cross between Scott Pilgrim vs. the World and a host of Adult Swim programs sprinkled with dashes of Game of Thrones, The Chronicles of Narnia, Feist songs, and Monty Python sketches…Very few kid-friendly shows have managed to make me laugh out loud quite as frequently as Adventure Time.. Some of you will find its manic energy and indie-film whimsy exasperating, but I suspect a large portion of you will find it an inventive delight.” DVD Verdict (season 1) “Adventure Time” is extremely random and that's its charm. Its brilliance is in the little songs that Finn and Jake come up with, their amazing made up phrases, and the eccentric characters they encounter along the way." Examiner.com “A positively outrageous second season that solidifies Adventure Time as truly unique, experimental, and stand-out animation, this series of twenty-six mini episodes is both enticing to look at and highly amusing. Recommended for the kid in you, and for fans of animation.” Blu-ray.definition.com (season 2) “Bursting with imagination, sweetness, and a ridiculous sense of humor, "Adventure Time” quickly became a runaway hit on Cartoon Network with kids and adults alike…If you're not familiar with “Adventure Time,” the show follows Finn the Human (Jeremy Shada) and his best friend Jake the Dog (John DiMaggio) as they quest across the Land of Ooo. They have a regular rivalry with the Ice King (Tom Kenny), who kidnaps princesses to be his bride. More importantly, he focuses most of his attention on the lovely Princess Bubblegum (Hynden Walch), who is almost as happy to have Finn rescue her from the Ice King's evil plots as he is to rescue her. Other recurring characters include Lumpy Space Princess (series creator Pendleton Ward), video game machine Beemo (Niki Yang), and Marceline the Vampire Queen (Olivia Olson), who drop in on Finn's adventures from time to time. Cartoon Network has made a name for themselves with cartoons that appeal to adults, and some of the weird, goofy comedy of “Adventure Time” fits right in next to “The Venture Bros.” or “Space Ghost: Coast to Coast” (although, “Adventure Time” rarely gets more risque than a PG). What sets this show apart from the others is its boundless creativity in the universe the show takes place in, which is filled with hilarious riffs on every kind of fantasy trope a D&D player can imagine…Highly recommended" DVD Talk (season 1)