I loved this show as a kid. I need to pick it up again. I was young enough though that the cheaps gags of AoStH keep me away from boredom when Ren and Stimpy's vulgar antics weren't on, but SatAM was the kind of show even really young kids could get emotionally invested in and make them think. (Also, PINGAS!... Sorry, I had too.)
It's really is sad such a remarkable cartoon was canceled, right at a cliffhanger. (What is it since good 90's cartoons getting cancled right at cliffhangers? *cough* Reboot with a villain reappearing with new powers*cough*)Since I believe the Archie comics series continued the plot line SatAM left off, I might get into those someday. It's the longsest running video game comic, though, so the archive binge scares me.
webkilla said:
In the words of the nostalgia critic, part of the brilliance of the show was that it was a kids show with a SUBTLE environmental message
I mean - evil robot industrial empire VS woodland rebels - but the environmental message was never rubbed in our face: It was always just about sabotaging robotnik's robot industry and military
The subtlety also probably works better than the other shows that were in-your-face about any message they were trying to teach. Captain Planet was so cheesy that Ted Turner might as had painted himself blue, put on that spandex costume and ran around schools saying "plants tree, pollution is eeeevil," for all the good it did. I was more interested the celebrity-voiced villains getting foiled by a super hero than the environmental and social aesops they were pushing.
Sonic's show and Sonic CD (and the other games, to a much lesser extent) handled the "nature vs technology" concept much better. They were about balancing the two. The roboticizer was invented to help the weak and sick. Robotnik was just a monster that used tools for evil, that were meant for good. Even with the Sonic media staring mostly anthropomorphic animals, they was more like the real world than having a mutant rat-man named Verminous Skumm dump barrels of toxic waste in rivers, because that's just how he rolls.