Sabrina the Teenage Witch (TV Series 1971–1974) Poster

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7/10
A better version of the character than Melissa Joan Hart
decalderonne24 April 2023
Jane Webb does a beautiful job as the voice of the protagonist Sabrina here, who is written ALMOST PERFECTLY, which is quite surprising for a Saturday morning cartoon. They pulled off the feat of making her magical/otherworldly but also very relatable and down-to-earth at the same time. The Melissa Joan Hart version of the character became utterly insufferable from the 4th season of the live-action sitcom onwards, and THIS SATURDAY MORNING CARTOON version of the character could have taught her a number of things about REAL MORAL FIBRE and maturity (because yes, the Melissa Joan Hart version become increasingly immature and immoral as time went on).

Jane Webb also BRILLIANTLY VOICES almost EVERY SINGLE FEMALE character on this show - a feat which is practically unequalled. The lady was an absolute genius, and I can't believe she is practically forgotten today. The rest of the voice cast is also brilliant - with a special shout-out to John Erwin, who would go on to become famous as He-Man/Prince Adam. Here he is Reggie Mantle, portrayed as an utterly three-dimensional human character, despite all the ludicrous and zany antics he gets entangled in, because John Erwin is so amazing. Despite the arrogance and condescension that characterize Reggie, you can't help but love him here!

I think it was a stroke of genius not to have a recurring, standard villain/rival for Sabrina in the form of a "mean cheerleader" or some other female nemesis - but rather, Reggie was depicted in the DEEPLY COMPLEX manner of a FRENEMY. This is something a lot of children would have done well to learn from.......how someone could be a friend on the one hand, or at least be a part of your friends group/social circle, while still sometimes being out to "expose" you if they believe you have a secret. It wasn't BLACK OR WHITE on this show, and that was brilliant.

Another reviewer said the series was witless and lacked imagination, but I must disagree. The moral ambiguities and endless grey shades of magic/witchcraft are openly displayed here - with some characters like Aunt Hilda and Miss Della the Head Witch going out of their way to HURT people with magic sometimes, and yet those characters are not presented as EVIL or as VILLAINS........rather, the motif of witchcraft and all its implications are used here to teach children that some people, even some adults who are in positions of familial responsibility and great authority (people that you're expected to look up to) can use their powers for less-than-noble aims. Again, there are almost never any clear-cut villains on the show, and so children are presented with a much more TRUE-TO-LIFE (ironically, despite all the magic and wackiness) depiction of moral complexities than the straightforward, simplistic and much more ubiquitous "good vs evil" formula that Disney cartoons had long since established.

Not all the episodes and stories are created equal of course, and some are quite hard to watch because some of them are more overtly infantile (like a number of the Groovy Ghoulies episodes), while the "high school" episodes can also be hit or miss depending on the degree of juvenility the writers decide to employ, but taken as a whole, this is a UNIQUE and VERY MEMORABLE series. They do a terrific job of setting up a very specific world - a mood - a MISE-EN-SCENE if you will - which honestly transcends the standard Saturday morning cartoon formula. This is all the more impressive considering the Sabrina show was an off-shoot of the already existing Archies series.

Sometimes you feel like you are watching a cartoon version of the 1963 BYE BYE BIRDIE film musical with Ann-Margaret - and I mean that in a VERY POSITIVE WAY - while on some occasions, they manage to evoke the entertainingly creepy/spooky ambience of the B-list horror and thriller films from the 1960s and early 1970s that have become cult classics. And there are PLENTY of legitimately witty, laugh-out-loud funny moments that transcend age.

You cannot watch this with any degree of cynicism, and like I said some of the episodes are real doozies, but I am very very glad I own the collection on DVD to pop into my player and watch whenever I need to get a nostalgic cartoon kick (nostalgic in the sense that it evokes a distinct bygone time period SO PERFECTLY that I feel like I own a little time capsule). It ISN'T just a generic Saturday morning cartoon, although some of the Groovy Ghoulies episodes do weigh it down in that direction, and if you don't want to get the DVD you can watch this for free on YouTube as well. I just like having the DVD set because I like owning a tangible, hard copy that is its own collector's item. :)
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Sabrina The Teenage Witch-The Animated Series From the 1970's
raysond16 June 2006
Premiering on the day before "The Archies" on September 13,1969,the spin-off to one of the most successful animated Saturday Morning shows ever produced,"Sabrina,The Teenage Witch",cast a potent spell for CBS,not only her intended juvenile audience,but over the rival networks as well. Utilizing the prime-time practice of integrating,promoting, and spinning off new characters from a hit show,the head of daytime programming over at CBS,Fred Silverman carefully planned the debut of the sixteen-year-old sorceress on "The Archies". Introduced in 1969-1970 on "The Archie Comedy Hour",Sabrina was an apprentice wonder-worker who struggled to concealed her magical powers in order just to be a member of the Riverdale High School gang. The perky teenager was patterned after the winsome witch from the hit Emmy winning ABC-TV Comedy Series,"Bewitched",played by Elizabeth Montgomery,and was targeted to headline her own Saturday Morning cartoon show during the hiatus of the show. To be more informative,"Sabrina,The Teenage Witch" will be the only character out of "The Archies" to make the jump from animation to live-action with a series based on the characters which starred Melissa Joan Hart,a show that ran on ABC and The WB for several seasons by the way.

Getting back to the animated cartoon series which was executive produced by Lou Scheimer and Norm Prescott under the company Filmation Productions and directed by Hal Sutherland and Rudy Larriva and Bill Reed. Only 49 episodes were made of the series and it ran on CBS from September 11,1971 until August 31,1974. Then the series made the transition over to NBC where it ran from September 10,1977 until the last episode of the series(it repeats)on January 28,1978. In the hour long comedy-variety format,Sabrina appeared with the Riverdale regulars, Archie,Reggie,Jughead,Betty,Veronica,Moose,their shaggy companion,Hot Dog,a Latino character and a African-American character,in two of the four eleven-minute cartoons. In some of her comedies,the young sorceress was supported by a pair of spell-casting aunts,Hilda and Zelda,a warlock cousin,Ambrose,and a cat named Salem(voice by Mel Blanc) that could also summon up an uncanny trick or two. Several of the cartoons were very psychedelic but little on the fun side. Sabrina also appeared as a member of the bubblegum rock group,The Archies,which presented a big-beat dance tune and dance-of-the-week between segments.

In 1970-1971,two episodes were coupled with "The Groovie Ghoulies", a new series featured a group of merry monsters which consisted of a hippie looking Wolfman character,a Frankenstein character,and a psychedelic Dracula character who were also musicians with a bubblegum type sound as well. These were tied together with vignettes in a new format titled "Sabrina And The Groovie Ghoulies". In new comedies made for the 1971-1972 season,the teenage sorceress starred in her own half-hour show for more than three years,one of the most successful Saturday Morning series ever,which was under "The Archies" title. Under the title of "The Archies" this was the highest-rated children's programming in its premiere season,receiving a 54 percent audience share. The 1973-1974 season would be fatal. Sabrina spelled a death knell for its highly touted educational competition as well and other shows,which clobbered it in the ratings. The 1973-1974 season,Sabrina had competition against "The Curiosity Shop",which was on ABC,and NBC's "Take A Giant Step"....also to boot other programs as well would send it downhill too...The animated series "Star Trek" on NBC and the animated series "The Jackson Five",which was on ABC would prove fatal for Sabrina as well. It ended its association with CBS in August of 1974.

When the series moved to NBC,it tried to bolster its sagging 1977-1978 ratings with thirteen repeated episodes,intitally titled "The New Archie Sabrina Hour",and two months later with the teenager renamed "Superwitch" but the spell was long broken and when the series ended it association with NBC on January 28,1978 it left the air without a whisper never to be heard from again.
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9/10
Sabrina the Teenage Witch was a good cartoon.
ladyofthemist-3968818 October 2016
I watched it growing up and there was nothing wrong with it then or now. Sabrina is a good witch living with her two Aunts Hilda and Zelda. She goes to Riverdale High and is friends with Archie and the gang. Sabrina uses her magick to help her friends. She tries to be an average teenager even though she is a witch. Kids need to watch to learn about friendship. As for the sounds and bright lights there are other things on TV far worse. Have you seen the cartoons now? So full of violence? Kids should watch this than being hooked on video games. They are sitting there mindlessly blowing stuff up. The music on those hurt my eyes and the loud noises. Ever been to a video arcade? Wow! Enough to send you into a migraine.
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sweet series about an ethical girl from a less cynical time
CineMage1 September 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I had loved the series Sabrina the Teenage Witch as a child, and as an adult, I find it is still one of the better of the limited animation cartoon series from that time.

Unlike other magical cartoon characters since then, Sabrina was neither an idiot nor a self-absorbed greed-head (such as the hero of Fairly Oddparents). Her powers were limited only by her self-restraint, her sweet nature, and her strong personal ethics.

The episodes were more sophisticated than average for the time (a time when most cartoons tended to oversimplify the tastes and interests of children), with Sabrina having genuine moments of pettiness, annoyance, and confusion amidst the mandatory Saturday morning cartoon cheeriness.

The character also appealed to children on two levels often overlooked at the time: their identification with the Gifted Outsider, and their interest in power and wish magic. These days, we have seen the Gifted Outsider so frequently that it seems a lackluster cliché', but at the time, children's cartoons tended to encourage conformity. Sabrina hid her powers, but she used them freely albeit covertly and never expressed shame or regret over who and what she was.

I was never able to enjoy the live action Sabrina specifically because it abandoned the sweetness of the series for a hackneyed cynicism and faux edginess. The cartoon Sabrina and her aunts occasionally became angry and even fought, but the live action Sabrina and family are sometimes downright cruel, such as the time one of the live action aunts simply killed off by zapping a rival musician so she could take over her seat in the local orchestra or when for laughs a live action character ran over Mr. Kraft and apparently killing him off (since he's never seen again in the series).
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Not the worst, but it's a contender
Brett_Buck15 September 2002
The cartoon Sabrina was a not much of a cartoon even when it first came out. This was clearly another "Archie" product, in fact Sabrina started appearing in the "Archie" cartoons for a few weeks before Sabrina came out on her own. The standards in 1970-71 weren't real high, but we (my brother and I, Saturday Morning Cartoon aficionados of the highest order at 8 and 10 years old) always recognized the "Archie" cartoons as clearly second or third rate. It was clearly recognized as such, because after a short run on late Saturday mornings, it switched to the Sunday morning "filler" slot. Sabrina herself was OK, but the associated characters were pretty annoying. I can tell you that Aunt Zelda looks A LOT better in real life (AKA live action Sabrina) than on this cartoon!

The stories were typically witless, with no imagination and painfully loud and blatantly fake laugh track thoughtfully telling you which were the funny parts. There was no other way to tell! Quickly spun off were the "Groovy Ghoulies", an assortment of Munsters rejects related (in some undefined way) to Sabrina. This actually lasted longer than the Sabrina show itself. I guess they never bothered to look up the meaning of the word "ghoul".

Not the worst of it's era, but "Hot Wheels" was more entertaining, and "Scooby-Doo" looks like "Masterpiece Theater" in comparison.
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Hazardous to your children's health!!
$TEVE McD25 March 2000
Watching this cartoon as a child almost made me delirious!Its over use of extremely bright colors,especially pink,loud cartoonish noises,and characters with annoying and repetitive sounding voices was enough to give me headaches.I DO NOT recommend parents to show this to their children,unless you want to make them sick!I can't believe this became a popular prime time TV show,based on stuff like this!
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