Elisabeth Hadley Paul Merton Steve Box Arthur Smith Andrew Franks (series 1) Kevin Wrench (series 1) Colin Rote (series 2) Andy Jeffers (series 2)
Theme music composer
Stuart Gordon
Opening theme
"Rex the Runt" by Kevin Wrench Andrew Franks
Ending theme
"Rex the Runt" by Kevin Wrench Andrew Franks
Composers
Stuart Gordon Ben Jones
Country of origin
United Kingdom Denmark France (series 1)
Original language
English
No. of series
2
No. of episodes
26 3 (pilots)
Production
Executive producers
Michael Rose Peter Lord David Sproxton Colin Rose Paul Kofod Ulla Brockenhuus-Schack (series 1) Mikael Shields (series 1) Steve Walsh (series 1) Tom Van Waveren (series 2)
Frank Passingham Fred Reed Andy MacCormack Chris Maris
Editors
Ben Jones (dubbing) James Mather (dubbing) Jane Hicks Andrew Ward (series 1) Sheri Galloway (series 2) Tim Bolt (online) Nick Brooks (online, series 1)
Rex was first introduced as a minor character in Ident (1989), a short film directed by Richard Starzak for the Lip Synch series.[2] During the seven years of development of the characters, Starzak produced three pilots, subtitled How Dinosaurs Became Extinct (1991), Dreams (1991) and North by North Pole (1996).[2][3][4] The 1991 pilots were unknown to the Aardman crew at the time, as Starzak created them during his free time. Because of this, the series wasn't pitched until the discovery of these shorts a year later, as the team found potential to turn these shorts into a full-fledged series.[5]
The animation is unusual in that the models are almost two-dimensional and are animated to exaggerate this - they are flattened in appearance and animated on a sheet of glass with the backgrounds behind the sheet. This would be altered in the second series, as the models would become more three-dimensional.
Characters
Main
Rex, the protagonist — a timid, irritable runt. He is quick-witted and usually comes up with plans to get out of the scrapes the gang finds themselves in. However, he can also annoy the others by being a smart aleck. His favourite superhero is Rocket Raymond. He is the leader of the gang, even having his name, Rex, translating to "King" in Latin.
Bad Bob is a "big, fat slob", interested in food and TV. His friends, and occasionally even he himself, describe him as a "Big, fat, jelly-wobbly, fat bastard", usually getting cut off towards the end. He is distinguishable by his eye patch, which changes from eye to eye, and often carries around a revolver almost the size of himself. However grumpy he might be, he is intelligent and loyal. Bad Bob is also known to build unique gadgets and inventions out of knick-knacks and everyday household objects, such as using an empty can of beans as a form of time machine.
Wendy is the only female housemate, distinguishable by her eyelashes, pink colour, noticeably hemispheric breasts, and wears a red (or starting with series 2, pink) bow on her head. She is cynical, sarcastic, and fiercely independent. Wendy provides solutions to problems albeit in a distant or non-caring way. She speaks in a Mancunian accent.
Vince is the pet of the household, although all four are dogs. He is distinguished by his prominent buckteeth and mismatched eyes. He speaks in single words or short disjointed phrases, his favourites being "Spaghetti", "Tuesday", "Jam", and "Trousers". Vince suffers from "Random Pavarotti Disease", causing him to randomly blurt out snatches of opera. While he appears to be unintelligent, he occasionally shows great ingenuity, for example by building an elaborate Heath Robinson machine designed to kill a mouse. The other members of the gang often respond to Vince's random outbursts by irritably telling him to "shut it". Vince often has a habit of copying what others have said, sometimes even if they have just said it in their minds, which Bad Bob finds really annoying.
Others
Many one-off and recurring characters in Rex The Runt are voiced by various well-known UK celebrities. These include:
Doctor Dogg is a medical doctor. Moustachioed, complacent and greedy, he's an opportunistic money-grabber, whose habitual charge for any treatment is "ten quid" - regardless of whether the cure works or does more harm than good. He isn't above using the main characters in medical research. Voiced by Paul Merton.
Arthur Dustcart, another semi-regular character, who first makes an appearance in the last episode of the first series, but appears quite frequently in the second. He is an ugly but experienced dustman, sporting sleepy mismatched eyes, a neckerchief, a pair of dirty underpants and a large nose with prominent nasal hair. Despite his grotesque appearance and smell, he and Wendy get on rather well, much to the annoyance of Rex. He becomes a friend of the household when he helps find Rex after he was turned into spaghetti. Voiced by Arthur Smith.
Mrs. Bloomers, head of Kumfy Kennels. Treats dogs with care, until she put Vince in the kennel and he ate a chihuahua. Voiced by Morwenna Banks.
Judith Poodle, hostess of a holiday program. Usually ends her sentences with "Ruff!". Voiced by Judith Chalmers.
Mr. Formal, the Runts' bank manager, until Bad Bob brought his gun and made him think they were bank robbers. Voiced by Bob Holness.
Melting Blob Man, a three-year-old, but very smart slime creature who warned the Runts about the black hole.
Constable Funnyname, a police dog who arrests Wendy in "The Trials of Wendy". Voiced by Simon Day.
Judge Pikelet, elderly judge in "The Trials of Wendy". Voiced by June Whitfield
Kylie Mandlebrotska, Rex's old math teacher, until she fell into the black hole. Voiced by Kathy Burke.
Easter Island Aliens, three space aliens from the planet Thribb, where the people look like the Moai statues from Easter Island. Voiced by Eddie Izzard.
Morris the One-Gloved Mouse, invaded Rex's kitchen in "Mouse In Me Kitchen". Voiced by Phil Jupitus.
Osvaldo Halitosis, a moustached Morph in "Patio", voiced by Graham Norton.
Mr Chittock, angry neighbour to Rex, after the gang went into his house and drank his beer. Voiced by veteran alternative comedian Stephen Frost.
Johnny Saveloy, a teenage sausage who was really very old but was kept in a state of artificial youth due to the Church of Chemicology. Voiced by Bob Monkhouse.
Stinky Basil, a smarmy French talent-spotter. Voiced by Antoine De Caunes, known best in the UK for presenting the Channel 4 late-night adult entertainment show Eurotrash.
Tiddles The Destroyer. A mean fighting cat, long known to the gang, who despises Bad Bob. Voiced by Tommy Cannon.
The Happy Rabbits, a band who may sing beautifully but are really cranky and will not let anybody stand in their way.
Awards announcer in "Wendy's New Hair Do" and Handsome Rex in "Wendy's Hot Date", voiced by Jonathan Ross.
References to other Aardman productions
Several episodes of Rex the Runt contain inside references to other projects created by Aardman Animations:
In the episode "Adventures on Telly Part I", Wallace (from the Wallace and Gromit series) is washing the windows on Rex's house, until Bad Bob pushes his ladder over (in the film A Close Shave, Wallace operates a window washing business).
Pib and Pog, two of Aardman's lesser known creations, are present in the spectator gallery during the courtroom scene from "The Trials of Wendy" and are also present in the audience watching Rex's band in "Stinky's Search for a Star".
In the episode "Johnny Saveloy's Undoing", two of the jars containing the chemical essences of various stars are labelled "Wallace" and "Gromit". Another jar on the top shelf reads "Nick Park".
The exorcist called upon in "Patio" is actually Morph, a character from an Aardman children's show, wearing a trench coat, hat, and large moustache.
There are two references in the episode "Wayne the Zebra": A Chicken Run-style chicken (Edwina) is rejected during the auditions (with Bad Bob making a comment regarding the recent popularity of chickens, referring to the film's success), and Bad Bob consults the Aardman book Cracking Animation (ISBN0-500-28168-8, published in the US as Creating 3-D Animation).
The episode entitled "A Crap Day Out" may be a pun on the Wallace and Gromit short film A Grand Day Out.
Both Wallace from Wallace and Gromit and Rex live on streets that sound similar to their names: whereas Wallace and Gromit live on "West Wallaby Street", it can be seen from the various post that arrives for the household that Rex and company live at "7, Marsupial Way, Rexford"
In the 2000 animated film Chicken Run, Nick and Fetcher can be seen eating Chuffy dog food.
In the 2003 animated TV series Creature Comforts: in the episode Is Anyone Out There? a blue alien wears a T-shirt with Vince on it.
In the 2006 film Flushed Away: young rat named Maximillian "Shocky" Malone wears a green T-shirt with Rex on it.
In the 2015 film Shaun the Sheep Movie: Vince is one of the photographed animals marked as 'contained' by Trumper.
Series 1 was broadcast over the Christmas period of 1998, originally airing in the prime-time family slots, but after several outraged letters complaining about language and content in show, the last few episodes were burned off in later time slots. [8]Note:Episodes are ordered by their production number, not by their original air date.
# Production Number
# Broadcast Number
Title
Summary
Airdate
1
1
Holiday in Vince
The Runts try to cure Vince of his Random Pavarotti Disease (a Tourette syndrome-like singing of phrases of opera) by miniaturising a submarine to go on a journey through Vince's brain.
21 December 1998
2
6
Adventures on Telly, Part 1
After their television gets broken, the Telly Man wants them to cover for him while he is fixing the family's TV. First, they need to find money to start their adventure, which causes Bad Bob to Rob a bank.
23 December 1998
3
7
Adventures on Telly, Part 2
The Runts are short of money again, and lend themselves to Dr. Dogg's animal experiments. NOTE: This episode is an expanded version of the pilot "North by North Pole".
24 December 1998
4
8
Adventures on Telly, Part 3
After accidentally destroying the Earth, the Runts head towards a black hole.
25 December 1998
5
2
Bob's International Hiccup Centre
Bob loses his comic timing, so he turns to medicine.
21 December 1998
6
5
Easter Island
The Runts' helicopter crash lands on Easter Island, where they meet visiting aliens who resemble the local statues.
23 December 1998
7
3
Too Many Dogs
After Rex's house is stolen, the Runts go back in time to recover it, and meet parallel versions of themselves.
22 December 1998
8
11
The Trials of Wendy
Wendy is arrested after shooting Vince. After she is proven not guilty, she starts to make a name for herself, causing Rex the Runt to get cancelled by the Telly.
30 December 1998
9
4
Stinky's Search for a Star
The Runts enter a talent contest hoping to win enough money to pay the gas bill.
22 December 1998
10
12
Under the Duvet
The Runts visit the University of Love under their bed, while Vince falls in love with a vacuum cleaner.
31 December 1998
11
9
Johnny Saveloy's Undoing
Wendy joins Johnny Saveloy's following.
27 December 1998
12
10
The City Shrinkers
The Runts win Birmingham in the lottery. After shrinking it with their shrinking gun, Bad Bob and Wendy go on a city-shrinking craze.
29 December 1998
13
13
Carbonara
Rex is accidentally run through a sausage mincer, and must avoid the attentions of a hungry Vince.
1 January 1999
Series 2 (2001-2005)
Series 2 was aired between 23 September 2001 to 16 December 2001 on late nights. Each episode was then repeated the following Sunday, after CBBC on BBC Two.
#
Title
Summary
Airdate
1
Mouse in Me Kitchen
Upon returning home, Rex finds that his kitchen has been occupied by a mouse.
23 September 2001
2
Wendy's Hot Date
Wendy gets a date with a handsome dog, who is also called Rex.
30 September 2001
3
Patio
The garden ants object when the Runts lay down a patio.
With Rex on holiday, Bob is left in charge of a production involving "The Beast of Crannock Moore", but can his choice for the star character, Wayne the Zebra, fulfil expectations?
9 December 2001
13
The Art of Cooking
Bad Bob steals Rex's food creations and enters them in an art exhibition.
Morwenna Banks as Mrs. Bloomers & Voice ("A Holiday in Vince") ("Adventures on Telly Part 1")
Judith Chalmers as Judith Poodle ("A Holiday in Vince", "The Trials of Wendy")
Bob Holness as Mr. Formal ("Adventures on Telly, Part I")
Eddie Izzard as Melting Blob Man ("Adventures on Telly, Part III"), and Easter Island Head Aliens ("Easter Island")
Kathy Burke as Kylie Mandelbrotska ("Adventures on Telly, Part III", "Rocket Raymond", "Wendy's New Hair Do")
Antoine de Caunes as Stinky Basil ("Too Many Dogs", "Stinky's Search for a Star", "Bob's International Hiccup Centre"), and French Delegate ("Bob's International Hiccup Centre")
As previously mentioned, Rex the Runt consisted mainly of two short films that were entirely animated by Richard Starzak during his free time. The animation from these shorts were very crude and bizarre, and featured different designs for the gang. At the time, the team at Aardman had never known about these films, and didn't discover them until a year later, as they found potential to turn these shorts into a series.[5] Each episode of the series cost $166,000.[9]
The show was originally going to be on Saturday Zoo as comedy skits for the show, the main idea being that it was "like a cartoon strip". Soon after, the BBC got interested in the series. From here, the episodes slowly got longer, until the 10-minute episodes that it eventually used.[5]
With help from the crew, a third pilot (North by North Pole) was produced as a pitch for the BBC in 1996, this time with much smoother animation and a plotline that would later define how the series was going to be. Parts of this pilot were incorporated into the episode "The Adventures On Telly, Part 2" due to the footage being expensive to reshoot. Unfortunately, other than a screenshot of the title card, the full pilot has yet to be released to the public as it is lost media.
The production of Series 1 began between late 1997 and early 1998. It was produced at Wetherell Place, Aardman's smallest studio space. The production office was on-site. A storyboard artist continually sketched boards for episodes to be shot later in the schedule, and there was a model-shop attached to the studio (where the models and props would be made). The unusual animation technique was laying the characters on top of a sheet of glass with the backgrounds behind the sheet (with the backgrounds being below the sheet, to show depth) angled away from the animators at 45 degrees. At any point, two to three episodes could be in production at any time, with each episode taking around four to six weeks to make. Some scenes, such as most of "The Adventures On Telly, Part 3" were filmed in front of a blue-screen to show a different background, such as space. The animation of Series 1 took 10 months, then went into post-production, and finally aired in December 1998.
The models did not use armatures due to of the strange form of animation, making them much easier to move around.
On IMDb, Rex the Runt received a rating of 7.9/10 from 367 users.
Merchandise
Rex the Runt was eventually popular enough to have its own merchandise. Some known items of merchandise include:
Rex the Runt's Rainy Day Companion, a book written by Kevin Wrench and Andrew Franks
Five Rex the Runt plushies, the characters being Rex, Wendy, Bad Bob, Vince and also Vince wearing his chicken bib and holding cutlery (as he is seen in Carbonara)
Several DVDs released in different countries (with a few episodes from Season 2 being featured on "Aardman's Darkside", a DVD containing some of Aardman's "darker" material)
A bag in the shape of Vince
Limited edition Rex the Runt-themed "Starburst Juicy Gums"
A T-shirt with the logo and main cast on it
A video game named Rex the Runt: Lost Marbles, based on the episode "A Holiday in Vince", in which Rex, Wendy and Bad Bob must go inside Vince's body to collect marbles and cure his "Random Pavarotti Disease".
Several toys exclusive to Japan such as a figurine of Wendy and a keychain of Rex wearing a crown.
Cancelled content
There were many things that never happened, due to the series ending so quickly. The series’ creator, Richard Starzak, hoped to be able to do the following:[5]
A possible Series 3.
More backstory for the characters, including an implied history between Wendy and Bad Bob.
^This episode was supposed to air on BBC Two on December 2, 2001, but it didn't for unknown reasons. This episode was aired on BBC Four in 2005 though.