Here is my first cartoon crush Velma Dinkley of Scooby Doo in various pieces I have deen.
Velma Dinkley (last name revealed to be an Americanization of Von
Dinkenstein) is a fictional character in the American television
animated series Scooby-Doo. She is prone to losing her glasses.
She is usually seen wearing a baggy orange turtleneck, short pleated
skirt (or in later episodes an A-line skirt, or sometimes shorts), knee
socks, and Mary Janes. She is seen as the brain of the group.
Throughout
her various incarnations, Velma is usually portrayed as a highly
intellig ent young woman with highly specific interests in science
(which in the
Scooby and Scrappy Doo series leads her to pursue a
career as a NASA research scientist) or merely being very well read on
obscure fields, such as Viking writing (as in the third Scooby-Doo
series
The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries). In
Scooby-Doo! Abracadabra-Doo,
Velma is described by her younger sister Madelyn as being "born with a
mystery book in her hand". Consequently, Velma is usually the one to
figure out the mystery, sometimes with the help of Fred and Daphme. The
Velma character was inspired by the brainy tomboy Zelda Gilroy, as
played by Sheila James, from the late 1950s/early 1960s American sitcom
The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis.
A running gag in
Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! and
The New Scooby-Doo Movies
is Velma's severe nearsightedness and her trouble with keeping her
glasses on her face (often resulting in them falling off while she is
being chased by the villain). Another running gag is that despite the
fact that she is the smallest of the Scooby Doo gang she can actually
carry away the whole gang in her arms from a villain.
When
Scooby-Doo is too afraid to volunteer to help with a mission, Velma
often offers him a dog treat called a "Scooby Snack" as a bribe. Her
catchphrases are: "Jinkies!," and "My glasses! I can't see without my
glasses!" (when she accidentally loses her glasses).
Velma has been captured by some bad people and kidnapped. They have
stripped here down to underwear, but some reason left her eyeglasses on.
Go figure
It is a very bad for Velma Dinkley of
Scooby Doo fame. She has lost her glasses when the "ghost" captured her. Now she has been tied in her underwear by the villain.
Once again one of my favorite toon girls has been captured. Velma Dinkley has been captured by the crook in the ghost mask.
We have for Western Civilization Board August Art Theme:
Space Babes
Sci-Fi babes in skin tight outfits and futuristic bonds is the tone for
this month. You can also work in alien abductions and monster DiD’s.
Jinkies, it seems that Scooby Doo Gang were investigating a mysterious
power outage that is being done by a space monster from Venus. It seems
that Velma has run into the alien and it is not a guy in a rubber
mask. It is the Venusian from Roger Corman's
It Conquered the World and
now she being held the Venusian as it created mind control devices.
This is based what happens to one of the characters not controlled by
the thing from Venus.
The film is infamously known as one of the
worst desgins of the alien. The design of the creature was Corman's
idea, and he thought that coming from a big planet,
It would have
evolved to deal with heavy gravity and would therefore be low to the
ground. Corman later admitted this was a mistake, saying the creature
would have been more frightening had
It been larger or taller. When Beverly Garland first saw the creature, she commented "
That conquered the world?" and kicked
It over. Charles Griffith, the one of screenwriters of this gem, on the creature prop:
I
called it Denny Dimwit and somebody else called it an ice-cream cone. I
was around when Paul Blaisdell was building it, and he thought the
camera would make it look bigger. I have some photographs of it in
construction, probably the only ones in existence. I asked for my name
not to be on that picture, so I was unbilled. Surprisingly, it got good
reviews.
It was deservely mock on
Mystery Science Theatree 3000 and it was also used in the movie
Elvira: Mistress of Darkness.
It Conquered the World
is an independently made 1956 American science fiction film, produced
and directed by Roger Corman, starring Peter Graves, Lee Van Cleef,
Beverly Garland and Sally Fraser. The film was distributed by American
International Pictures.
It Conquered the World concerns an
alien creature from the planet Venus that secretly wants to take
control of the Earth. The creature makes radio contact with a
disillusioned human scientist, who agrees to help because the scientist
believes such an alien intervention will bring peace and save a doomed
humanity from itself.
Dr. Tom Anderson (Van Cleef), an embittered scientist, has made
contact with a Venusian creature, while using his radio transmitter. The
alien's secret motivation is to take complete control of the Earth by
enslaving humanity using mind control devices; the alien claims it only
wants to bring peace to our troubled world by eliminating all emotions.
Anderson agrees to help the creature and even intends to allow it to
assimilate his wife (Garland) and friend Dr. Nelson (Graves).
The
Venusian then disrupts all electric power on Earth, including motor
vehicles, leaving Dr. Nelson to resort to riding a bicycle.
After
killing a flying bat-like creature which carries the mind control
device, Dr. Nelson returns home to find his wife newly assimilated. She
then attempts to force his own assimilation using another bat-creature
in her possession, and he ends up being forced to kill her in
self-defense. By then, the only people who are still free from the
Venusian's influence are Nelson, Anderson, Anderson's wife and a group
of army soldiers on station in the nearby woods.
Nelson finally
persuades the paranoid Anderson that he has made a horrible mistake in
blindly trusting the Venusian's motives, allying himself with a creature
bent on world domination. When they discover Tom's wife has taken a
rifle to the alien's cave in order to kill it, they hurriedly follow
her, but the creature kills Claire Anderson before the two doctors can
rescue her. Finally, seeing the loss of everything he holds dear, Dr.
Anderson viciously attacks the Venusian by holding a blowtorch to the
creature's face; Anderson dies at the alien's hand as it expires.
We have Velma Dinkley of the Hanna Barberra
Scooby-Doo franchise being kidnapped by some ghost dressed as a hula dancer. This was an actually outfit that she wore in the episode "
A Tiki Scare is No Fair"
This is for Western Cicilization Board Art Jam
JANUARY - WESTERN:
Western girls setting means cowgirls, Indian girls, bar maids etc.
Plenty of cartoons and versions of these characters to fill the month.
Also not hard to come up with scenarios. We have Velma Dinkley of
Scooby Doo from
the episode "Go West, Young Scoob" where the Scooby go to a robot
western town Cyber Gulch. Things are going wrong in Cyber Gulch where
robots are misbehaving. Well it seems that Velma has run into some
outlaws human, robot, or ghost now faces the classic train track peril.
Here is one of cartoon crushes Velma Dinkley of Hanna Barberra's
Scooby-Doo franchise in the
Scooby-Doo! Frankencreepy when
it seems Velma undergoes a change of personality and began building a
monster. Eventually even planning to use Shaggy's and Scooby's brains
for the monster. This plan makes Dracula's plan to put Costello's brain
in the Frankenstein monster in
Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein seem really brilliant
. For the Western Civilization Board
January Art Theme :
NERD GIRLS: A
month dedicated to all the brainy smart girls and genius girls that
needs the Damsel in distress treatment. Velma Dinkly, Nanao,
Jinora,Yomiko Readman etc. So we have my cartoon crush Velma Dinkley of
Hanna Barberra's
Scooby Doo franchise has fallen into the peril that usual happens to Daphne "Danger Prone" Blake and Velma is not happy.
Here is Scooby Doo's Daphne and Velma Daphne is in a burkini and Velma is tied up in a bikini.
Daphne Anne Blake is a fictional character in the long-running American animated series
Scooby Doo.
Daphne, depicted as coming from a wealthy family, is noted for her red
hair, her lavender high heels, her fashion sense, and her knack for
getting into danger, hence her nickname "Danger Prone Daphne". Daphne
has appeared in more adaptations than the other characters, aside from
Shaggy Rogers and Scooby Doo.