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<text id=90TT0829>
<title>
Apr. 02, 1990: Lean, Green And On The Screen
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Apr. 02, 1990 Nixon Memoirs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SHOW BUSINESS, Page 59
Lean, Green and on the Screen
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles go Hollywood
</p>
<p>By Janice C. Simpson
</p>
<p> Step aside, Superman. Get back, Batman. Make way for the
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, the latest superheroes to make
the big leap from comic books to the silver screen. The who?,
you say. Then you haven't been paying attention. The Turtles--four wisecracking, pizza-guzzling reptile masters of the
martial arts--are already the biggest animated adventure act
to hit television since Ghostbusters cartoons. Kids adore their
hip and slightly naughty sense of humor ("Let's haul shell out
of here"). "I like Michaelangelo because he's a smooth dude,
a party animal," says Michael Serio, a 7-year-old fan from East
Haven, Conn., describing his favorite of the four.
</p>
<p> This week, just in time for school break, the tough-shelled
quartet makes its feature-film debut in a $12 million movie
named, you guessed it, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, complete
with a rap-music sound track. Turtlemaniacs may be surprised
to find their cartoon heroes are portrayed by actors in
high-tech turtle costumes (their computerized masks, with
facial expressions that change by remote control, were designed
at Muppeteer Jim Henson's Creature Shop). But the rest is
familiar: the jokes are campy, the ninja feats daring if a
little silly, and the Turtles still squabble noisily over
practically everything.
</p>
<p> The producers are betting that the movie will be a hit with
the legions of fans who just can't seem to get enough of the
shellbacks and their escapades. Their syndicated cartoon
series, which debuted two years ago, appears daily on 130 TV
stations and is the No. 3 animated show for children.
Meanwhile, three videotapes based on the show rank among the
Top Ten videos for children. Kids are, literally, so eager to
get their hands on the Turtles that Playmates Toys Inc.'s action
figures of the heroes were the third biggest-selling toy last
Christmas (after Barbie and Nintendo). All told, some 300
Turtle merchandising spin-offs ranging from breakfast cereals
to skateboards snapped up more than $100 million in sales last
year. "They have just taken over the toy and entertainment
industry," says Lynn Hejtmanek, director of marketing for Ultra
Software Corp., which has sold more than 1.4 million copies of
a Ninja Turtle game for Nintendo.
</p>
<p> The unlikely heroes made their debut seven years ago in a
black-and-white comic book drawn by Peter Laird, now 36, and
Kevin Eastman, 27. Laird had been "scraping out a living"
drawing eggplants and such for the gardening page of a
newspaper in Northampton, Mass., when the editor of a local
comic magazine suggested that he collaborate with Eastman, an
amateur cartoonist who was working as a short-order cook. One
night in 1983--and neither can remember why--inspiration
struck. Eastman drew a humanized turtle wearing a ninja mask
and carrying a katana blade. The idea of a slowpokey turtle as
a swift and wily ninja cracked them up. By the end of the
evening the artists had created four tortoises. Eastman quickly
christened them the Ninja Turtles, but then, in an absurdist
wink at two of the most popular themes in comic books at the
time, Laird lengthened the name to Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles. That night's work was to make them millionaires.
</p>
<p> The cartoonists, who still publish Ninja Turtle comics,
developed the story line that became the basis for the TV show
and movie: four ordinary turtles were accidentally dropped into
a sewer manhole, where they fell into a radioactive goo that
caused them to grow to human size and gain the power to speak.
The mutated turtles were then adopted by Splinter, a similarly
mutated rat who had once been the pet of a ninja warrior and
who continues to tangle with his master's human nemesis, the
Shredder. Splinter drills his wards in ninja-fighting
techniques and names them after his favorite Renaissance
artists: Leonardo (the group's leader), Raphael (the rebel),
Michaelangelo (the jokester) and Donatello (the technical
whiz). "The characters should have Japanese names, but we knew
we couldn't come up with convincing ones, so we decided to go
way in the other direction," explains Eastman.
</p>
<p> Though the comics were an instant hit, Turtlemania did not
reach the big time until New York licensing agent Mark Freedman
offered to market the heroes. "It just hit me in the gut. The
name was great. It was going to be the funniest thing I'd ever
done or the worst thing." Freedman cut the deal with Playmates
Toys, who, in turn, sponsored the first TV episodes. The
Turtles have been modified somewhat in the process of being
turned into media stars. Their passion for pizza, for instance,
and their "Hey, Dude" lingo were added for TV. So was an
unfortunate--and publicly criticized--tendency for punks
and villains on the show to fall into racial stereotypes. As
far as the movie is concerned, box-office expectations are
high. "Everything that has to do with the Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles has been successful," says producer David Chan. Who
knows, maybe he'll shell out for a sequel.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>