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Tripping the Rift is an adult CGI science fiction comedy television series. It is based on two short animations published on the internet by Chris Moeller and Chuck Austen. The series was produced by CinéGroupe in association with the Syfy network. Following its cancellation by that cable network, CinéGroupe continued producing the series for the other North American and international broadcasters.[2] The series aired on the Canadian speciality channel Space in 2004. Canada's cartoon network Teletoon began airing the series in August 2006. Teletoon participated in the production of the third season, and aired it in 2007.[1] A feature-length movie version was released on DVD in 2008.

Tripping the Rift
Title Card
Created by
Directed byBernie Denk
Jon Minnis
StarringStephen Root
Carmen Electra
Maurice LaMarche
Jenny McCarthy
Gina Gershon
ComposerMario Sévigny
Country of originUnited States
Canada
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes39
Production
Executive producers
  • Jacques Pettigrew
  • Michel Lemire
  • John Hyde
ProducerAndrew Makarewicz
Running time20 minutes
Production companiesCinéGroupe
Film Roman
Original release
NetworkSci Fi Channel
Space
Teletoon (Series 3)[1]
ReleaseMarch 4, 2004 (2004-03-04) –
December 13, 2007 (2007-12-13)

Setting

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The universe is modeled largely after the Star Trek universe, with references to 'warp drive' and 'transporter' beam technology, occasional time travel, the Federation and the Vulcans. The series also includes elements borrowed from other sources such as Star Wars, 2001: A Space Odyssey and Battlestar Galactica.

The general setting is that known space is politically divided between two superpowers: the Confederation (led by Humans, and a parody of the Federation from Star Trek) and the Dark Clown Empire (a parody of the Galactic Empire from Star Wars). The Dark Clown Empire is a totalitarian, tyrannical police state, led by the evil Darph Bobo. In contrast, the Confederation is technically a democratic and free society, but in practice, is dominated by mega-corporations and bloated bureaucracies. Ultimately, both superpowers end up exploiting and restricting their inhabitants, albeit in different ways. For example, the value placed on life is so commercialized in the Confederation that clearly sentient robots and androids are reduced to essentially slave-status. The Dark Clown Empire practices actual slavery, and while the Confederation does not, most of its inhabitants (including the Human ones) are openly described as living in wage slavery. The only place that anyone can truly be free is in the border region between the two superpowers, which is directly controlled by neither. This borderland is known as "the Rift", hence those outlaws on the fringes of society who cling to their freedom by moving back and forth around the Confederation/Dark Clown Empire border to evade detection are said to be "Tripping the Rift". The series follows one such group of outlaws led by Chode aboard the spaceship Jupiter 42, taking odd-jobs and usually pursuing various get-rich-quick schemes.

Characters

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  • Chode McBlob (voiced by Stephen Root) — The captain of the ship. Chode is a purple, three-eyed alien who is described as a street-savvy, strong scoundrel and sex hound. He typically gets his crew to do what he wants through manipulation and threats. Chode is extremely self-centered, selfish, conceited, loathsome, and has total disregard for others. He desires wealth and a better life and is driven by nothing but sex, money and food.[3] According to the Sci Fi website, Six is his "sometimes-lover." His twin brother, Philbrick, is the king of planet Moldavia 5.
  • Six of One (voiced by Patricia Beckmann and Terry Farrell in the pilot (two versions), Gina Gershon in season 1, Carmen Electra in season 2 and Jenny McCarthy in season 3) — The ship's science officer. Six is an intelligent gynoid who was first designed as a sex robot, but was later given a conscience and a sense of decency thanks to a programming upgrade by Chode. She often gets the crew out of trouble by using either her smarts or her skills in bed. The final episode of the second season revealed that she was modeled after a stripper named "Haffa Dozen" (voiced by Patty Hearst), who later switched to a life of crime. Six's name is a play on the Star Trek: Voyager character Seven of Nine and the phrase "six of one, half a dozen of the other."
  • T'Nuk Layor (voiced by Gayle Garfinkle) — T'Nuk is the ship's ill-tempered, triple-breasted, quadrupedal, amorous pilot and cook. While most of the other characters consider her as grotesquely unattractive as she is unpleasant, she is considered attractive on her (unknown) home planet. She was chosen as the pilot because she is skilled at keeping the Spaceship Bob in check. Her name is based on the word nuclear, while her name spelled backwards says Royal Kunt.
  • Whip (voiced by Rick Jones) — Whip is a green, teenage reptilian and Chode's dim-witted nephew. He serves as the ship's foreman, though he is rarely seen working and prefers to slack off. He is typically impulsive.
  • Gus (voiced by Chris Moeller in the pilot, Maurice LaMarche in the series) — Gus is Chode's robot servant. He is the ship's engineer and is implied by the others to be homosexual (a running joke, he frequently denies his sexuality, often while engaging in stereotypical homosexual behavior). Though smarter than those around him, he is forced to serve them, as silicon organisms like him don't have the same rights as carbon-based life. He has a cynical and sarcastic attitude, resulting from the many failures he has experienced due to his less intelligent carbon-based bosses' actions. His appearance and voice is a parody of C-3PO (in the opening credits, as he uses a vacuum cleaner shaped like R2-D2).
  • Spaceship Bob (voiced by John Melendez) — Bob is the A.I. that controls the spacecraft Jupiter 42 (a reference to Lost in Space and possibly The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy). He suffers from agoraphobia, and often has panic attacks at inconvenient times. Only T'nuk's insults can snap him out of his panic attacks. He also desires Six, even though she says they're just friends. Bob is a parody of 2001: A Space Odyssey's Hal 9000. In fact, in one episode, a Hal program takes over the spaceship, impeding their actions as he is a computer program that "refuses to do anything".
  • Darph Bobo (voiced by Chris Moeller in the pilot, Terrence Scammell in the series) — Darph Bobo is the supreme leader of the Dark Clown Empire. He wants to take over the universe because he was teased as a child (mostly by Chode). He attended high school with Chode, and the two also spent time in prison together. He has a belittling wife, Bernice, and two daughters, the teenager Babette and an unnamed younger child. Bobo is often seen with his "clown trooper" guards - a parody of Storm Troopers, while the name is a play on clone troopers. His creepy clown appearance looks similar to Pennywise from It, while both his name and outfit are a parody of the Darths from the Star Wars movies, as is his desire to construct a "Death Orb", a deadly battle station, which is a parody of the Death Star.
  • Captain Adam Francis Shatner (also called Commander Adam) — Captain Adam is the captain of a Confederation ship. He has a domineering wife, Nancy, and a cloned son named Adam 12. He has been known to blackmail Chode into doing his dirty work. Adam's halting and exaggerated speech pattern is a parody of William Shatner's portrayal of James T. Kirk. Adam 12 is a reference to Adam-12, the police-themed television show. A running gag throughout the series is that he and his son each have a very small penis.

Production and development

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In 1997, Chris Moeller, who was working on the animated TV series King of the Hill and who had been producing animation shorts with Dark Bunny Productions, met Chuck Austen and pitched their idea for a science fiction comedy to animation studio Film Roman. In early 1998, they launched the first pilot Love and Darph on the internet. The Chode character first appeared in the 1994 short, Wisconsin.[4] In 2001, Film Roman released the Oh Brother teaser for episode 2, and Chris claimed the full version was made, but its release was left up to Film Roman.[5]

In 2002, CinéGroupe acquired the rights to the five-minute short Love and Darph and approached animator Bernie Denk to direct the series, which was produced in association with Sci Fi US. Bernie Denk's team worked in Montreal on preproduction (character design, modeling and textures) while the Malaysian studio Shanghai Cartoon worked on animation using Autodesk 3ds Max software, lighting and compositing. Keyframe animation was chosen for its quality and animating control capabilities.[6]

Episodes

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Pilots

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  • "Love and Darph" (1998) (two versions with differing dialogue and voice actresses for Six)
  • "Oh Brother" (Teaser) (2001)

Season 1 (2004)

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  1. 03/04/2004 "God Is Our Pilot"[7] — Chode and Gus hijack a time-traveling vacation ship to the dawn of time, and accidentally kill God, causing a reality where impossible things happen because of God's death.
  2. 03/11/2004 "Mutilation Ball" — The Federation will drop all charges against Chode if he can bring in Malik, a retired Mutilation Ball player for one last game...and things get complicated when T'nuk has sex with Malik and discovers that he's a robot while the real Malik has become a bloated mess whose being exploited by his wife.
  3. 03/18/2004 "Miss Galaxy 5000" — Chode enters Six (who despises beauty pageants because of how sexist and demeaning they are to women) in a beauty contest against the daughter of his archenemy, Darph Bobo. Meanwhile, Gus trains T'nuk to be a beauty pageant contestant.
  4. 03/25/2004 "Sidewalk Soiler" — Chode is set to be executed for spitting gum on a planet where littering is punishable by death.
  5. 04/01/2004 "The Devil and a Guy Named Webster" — Chode sells his soul to the Devil to avoid a catastrophe and his only hope is Emmanuel Lewis (TV's Webster).
  6. 04/08/2004 "Totally Recalled" — Gus's model has been recalled while Chode gets a visit from his grandfather.
  7. 04/15/2004 "2001 Space Idiocies" — Chode is suckered into a scheme by Darph Bobo to corrupt a planet of primitives.
  8. 04/22/2004 "Power to the Peephole" — The crew arrive on planet Floridia 7 in the middle of the Dark Clown Confederation's presidential election. Chode is chosen to get dirt on the Dark Clown Federation's candidate, George Goodfellow, while T'nuk takes a page from Monica Lewinsky's autobiography and tries to trick Goodfellow into sexually harassing her so she can get famous.
  9. 05/06/2004 "Nature vs. Nurture" — Chode trades places with his long lost twin brother, the king of Muldavia 5.
  10. 05/13/2004 "Aliens, Guns & A Monkey" — On the way to deliver a monkey diamond, the crew get stuck on a planet where everyone carries a gun.
  11. 05/20/2004 "Emasculating Chode" — Darph Bobo kidnaps Whip (who feels like he's being treated like a child) and severs one of Chode's tentacles, which causes Chode to have a crisis over his masculinity.
  12. 05/27/2004 "Love Conquers All...Almost" — Chode plays matchmaker to the children of his mortal enemies (Darph Bobo's daughter and Commander Adam's son) in order to get money to repay a huge debt.
  13. 06/03/2004 "Android Love" — Six comes across an old boyfriend working in a male strip club.

Season 2 (2005)

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  1. 07/27/2005 "Cool Whip"[8] — Whip becomes famous on a planet after accidentally taking control of the ship.
  2. 07/27/2005 "You Wanna Put That Where?" — Chode and company try to sell off cases of lubricant on an all-gay planet. Chode and Six are jailed for having straight sex.
  3. 08/03/2005 "Honey, I Shrunk the Crew" — After Chode steals his identity and credit card, Darph Bobo seeks revenge.
  4. 08/10/2005 "Ghost Ship" — After running out of fuel, the crew must face their greatest fears on a ghost ship.
  5. 08/17/2005 "Benito's Revenge" — Chode's grandfather is caught up in one of Darph Bobo's schemes.
  6. 08/24/2005 "All for None" — Chode's crew quits after Chode won't give into their demands for better amenities.
  7. 08/31/2005 "Extreme Chode" — Chode bets Commander Adam that Whip can beat Adam's son, Adam 12, in a spaceboarding competition at the Intergalactic X-Games.
  8. 09/14/2005 "Roswell" — Chode flies the ship through a time warp to escape from two Grey Alien scam artists, who are piloting a flying saucer. Both ships are sent back to 1947, where they crash land in a city called Roswell on the planet Earth.
  9. 09/21/2005 "Santa Clownza"
  10. 09/28/2005 "Chode and Bobo's High School Reunion"
  11. 10/05/2005 "Creaturepalooza"
  12. 10/12/2005 "Chode's Near-Death Experience"
  13. 10/19/2005 "Six, Lies and Videotape"

Season 3 (2007)

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  1. 09/06/2007 "Chode Eraser"
  2. 09/13/2007 "Skankenstein"[9]
  3. 09/20/2007 "To eBay or Not to eBay"
  4. 10/11/2007 "23 12"
  5. 10/18/2007 "Chuckles Bites the Dust"
  6. 10/25/2007 "The Need for Greed"
  7. 11/01/2007 "Hollow Chode"
  8. 11/08/2007 "Raiders of the Lost Crock of */@?#!"
  9. 11/15/2007 "Witness Protection"
  10. 11/22/2007 "The Son Also Rises"
  11. 11/29/2007 "Extreme Take-Over"
  12. 12/06/2007 "Battle of the Bulge"
  13. 12/13/2007 "Tragically Whip"

Broadcast

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The show aired on Space in Canada and the Sci Fi Channel in the United States in March 2004. Sky One began airing the show in the United Kingdom in early 2005. Space and the Sci Fi Channel aired the second season in the fall of 2005. In Australia, the show appears on the Sci Fi Channel.

In Latin America, it appeared on Adult Swim. In Russia, a music television channel Muz TV aired season 1 & 2 in 2007, and season 3 in early 2008. Later it aired on channel 2x2. In Germany, DMAX showed season 1 & 2 starting in March 2009. In Bulgaria, PRO BG aired season 1 & 2 starting in September 2009, and season 3 in October 2009. Other major territories include France, Italy, Belgium, Portugal, Sweden, Spain, and Central-Eastern Europe (Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary, and Romania).[10]

Re-runs of the show aired in Canada on SPACE. In 2006, the series was picked up for rebroadcast on Razer and The Comedy Network.

Tripping the Rift: The Movie

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Anchor Bay released the 75-minute unrated Tripping the Rift: The Movie on DVD on March 25, 2008.[11] The story revolves around Chode's birthday party and the events that occur during and after it, all of which prompt his nemesis Darph Bobo to dispatch a time-traveling killer clown android to assassinate Chode.

The movie consists of footage from the season three episodes "Chode Eraser", "Skankenstein", "Raiders of the Lost Crock of *@#?!" and "Witness Protection" with new bits of additional footage stitching them together into a loosely cohesive whole.

While the movie was promoted as uncensored, only dialogue was left uncensored, with nudity still obscured by "censored" balloons.

The main DVD extra is "Captain's Log: Making of Tripping the Rift: The Movie". A Best Buy exclusive featured a second DVD with three episodes of the series centered on Six.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Ball, Ryan (Nov 10, 2006). "More Rift being Tripped". Retrieved Oct 16, 2019.
  2. ^ Rogers, Troy (n.d.). "Pushing Brand Boundaries with SyFy President David Howe". TheDeadbolt.com. Archived from the original on December 31, 2009.
  3. ^ "trippingtherift.tv". ww38.trippingtherift.tv. Archived from the original on October 6, 2019. Retrieved Oct 16, 2019.
  4. ^ A chronological history Chris Moeller, Dark Bunny Productions
  5. ^ Dark Bunny blog Chris Moeller, 2002-11-23
  6. ^ Tripping the Rift: Interviews: Director Bernie Denk Archived 2007-10-22 at the Wayback Machine SadGeezer.com, 2004-04-24
  7. ^ "Tripping The Rift (Улетный Трип).God Is Our Pilot.Сезон1.Серия 1". 13 August 2015. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved Oct 16, 2019 – via youtube.com.
  8. ^ "Tripping the Rift - Cool Whip". 3 November 2015. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved Oct 16, 2019 – via youtube.com.
  9. ^ "Tripping the Rift - Shakenstein". 30 November 2015. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved Oct 16, 2019 – via youtube.com.
  10. ^ "trippingtherift.tv". ww38.trippingtherift.tv. Archived from the original on February 24, 2022. Retrieved Oct 16, 2019.
  11. ^ "Tripping the Rift: The Movie". Anchor Bay Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2008-03-03. Retrieved 2008-03-29.
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