Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears

1985

Seasons & Episodes

  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1

7.5| 0h30m| TV-G| en| More Info
Released: 14 September 1985 Ended
Producted By: Walt Disney Television
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Join the world’s sweetest heroes for high adventure in a mystical land of giants and wizards, ogres and dragons, and wondrous creatures both good and evil. Meet Gruffi, Zummi, Cubbi, Grammi, Tummi, Sunni, and all the legendary Gummis as they laugh, play, foil dastardly plots, and fight for what's right.

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Reviews

OllieSuave-007 When I get home from elementary school, I would turn on the TV and watch the Disney Afternoon - a collection of cartoon shows that usually begins with The Adventures of the Gummi Bears. This show features, as IMDb puts it, a group of human-like bears who possess magic and advanced technology and who were at odds with human beings, thereby, forgetting their purpose. But, after crossing paths with some trusted humans, the Gummi Bears get an opportunity to explore their lost heritage.I don't remember too much from the show, but it did create nice memories and I did remember it being a whimsical but adventurous story with courageous characters; the Gummi Bears jumping around like bouncing balls resonates in your mind.It's a very nostalgic cartoon as well that will remind you of your childhood - a show that is miles better than much of those teenage flicks that Disney dishes out today.Grade B
Seth Nelson Disney entered the TV business - the "cartoon" TV business, that is - in 1985 with "Gummi Bears," a very nice, very moral animated series about, well, the Gummi Bears!!!!!Man, when did this go off the air, like, 1992 or something? I don't have much to say about this show because I was just a little baby in the late 80s when this series was on. I do know, however, that this was part of "The Disney Afternoon," if I am correct, in 1990 or so. I remember that this was a cute show, and it had one thing that Disney cartoon shows up until the early 2000s had - adventures. And originality, too! Can't forget that! Those two things were the foundations that all good Disney shows were built upon! (Hey, don't forget to see my say on "DuckTales" and "TaleSpin" soon!)"The Gummi Bears" will be getting a DVD release this fall, so you can finally put the Gummi Bears back in your living room for the holidays! (Now THAT'S warming.)10 stars indeed!!!!!
HulkamaniacUM I remember watching Gummi Bears on TV in my younger days, but until recently, all I had to remember the show was the annoying theme song...Gummi Bears / Bouncing here and there and everywhere / (Something something something something something) / I love the Gummi BearsAs I sat down to focus my memories, I seem to remember the show's setting being medieval England, or at least a place not unlike it. The Gummi Bears, hunted by the evil duke, had a recipe for a magic potion that gave them super agility and rapid bouncing skills. Combined with their insatiable thirst for justice and peace, these mad bouncing skills helped the Gummi Bears foil the forces of evil every episode.I love the Gummi Bears.
ajolipa Whenever I mention watching Gummi Bears, people can't help making the oh-so-witty comment "Huh? You actually watch a show about little candy bears?" "No," I patiently explain, "They are not the candy. They are Gummi Bears, members of an ancient medieval civilization with advanced technology, culture, morals, history, traditions..." By that point whoever I'm talking to has usually raised their eyebrows and started to back away slowly, or to laugh.But it's their loss, because the Gummis are anything but little candy bears. This show goes further than any other Disney Afternoon show that I've seen in truly developing a whole mythology and culture that the viewer can actually learn from, while watching witty and entertaining plots involving adventures around the kingdom of Dunwyn. The show revolves around the Gummis of Gummi Glen, which used to be the center of a thriving Gummi culture that coexisted with humans, until the humans began to clash with the bears forcing them to flee overseas. A few were left behind in hiding, however, with the duty to protect the kingdom of humans from greedy people who might want to take it over (eg Duke Igthorn, a bitter exiled Duke who covets the throne), and to keep Gummi Glen functional until the other Gummis can return, at a time when humans will once again accept them without conflict. At the time of the show, the group living in Gummi Glen is composed of: Gruffi, the practical and cynical one who believes in hard work, living each day "the Gummi way", and not going out of his way to help silly humans (although in the end, he'll always go along to help); Grammi, whose work as the woman of the house cooking and cleaning and mending clothing hides an adventurous and daring nature; Zummi, the absent-minded and wise keeper of the library and ancient Gummi wisdom, including magic--which he is forever screwing up, in a truly endearing way; Tummi, whose name reveals his great love of food, although he also loves to garden and work on various crafts projects, and who has a patient and generous nature, sometimes to the extent that he can't say no to anything even when he should; Sunni, who's energetic and romantic, always dreaming of being a princess, but at the same time she's spunky and determined, and learns a lot as she grows up; Cubbi, who dreams of becoming a great knight and defending justice, and also just loves to play and to annoy Sunni; and finally Augustus, aka Gusto, who joins them later and doesn't live in Gummi Glen--he's an artist who doesn't believe in living life by strict rules and discipline, and so of course is constantly on Gruffi's nerves. In addition, there's Calla, Sunni's best friend, the princess who would rather be a tomboy or a knight, and Cavin, Cubbi's best friend, a page at the castle.So that's the basic cast, plus a few others. Every character is multi-dimensional, and in particular, the development of their relationships is fascinating and complex and often touching. But in addition to the individual characters, the whole Gummi culture is well-developed and interesting. They are more advanced than the humans of their time, with wisdom and technology that the medieval humans have lost, now that they're in this era of rejecting the Gummis as silly myth. There are Gummi holidays and traditions, as well as sayings--my favorite of those being: "Though the first step is the hardest, and the last step ends the quest, the long steps in between are certainly the best." And of course the spells are great, with poor Zummi never picking up on the simple language they're written in. (One funny line is when Zummi's trying to create a small tornado, and misreads his paper: "Wumind Blumow Humere!" And then as the tornado suddenly starts up right under him: "I mean, Thumere!!") There are other centers of Gummi culture other than Gummi Glen, such as Ursalia, an ancient deserted city now inhabited by "Barbic" Gummis whose culture conflicts with the Glen Gummis' ideas of civilized culture, and also Gummadoon, the city that's under a spell to reappear for a day every hundred years. And of course, there's Gummiberri juice, the juice made from the secret recipe that allows the Gummis to bounce around, and makes humans extremely strong--hence it had better not fall into the wrong hands!But not everyone will find a made-up culture of colored bears all that interesting. Even if you don't, the shows are well worth watching simply for the wit and entertainment of their plots and character interactions. The dialogue is sharp and amusing, the background music is charming, and the plots are sweet and entertaining. In my opinion, this is one of Disney's most intricate and well-developed and truly endearing shows. Highly recommended to anyone of any age who's willing not to be cynical about it.