@Kooshmeister
Bill Hiers

Breakfast Time!
Breakfast Time! by @Kooshmeister (Bill Hiers)

In episode two of SWAT Kats, The Giant Bacteria, before heading into Megakat City, Dr. Viper and his bacteria monster stop off at a farm where the monster gobbles up a cow. Her owner comes outside and reacts to the sight of the creature. Then... a sudden awkward cut to Viper saying, "Now that you've had your breakfassst!" The farmer literally just disappeared.

For years, people wondered what the heck happened to the farmer. Did he get eaten? Did he run away? Was something cut or did the animators just honestly forget the guy was supposed to be in the scene? I took the second theory (sort of) in my fan rewrite of the episode.

Well, the recent Warner Archive DVD-R release of the series restores two shots totaling ten seconds, explaining the farmer's fate. It was the first theory, with a twist! He doesn't just get eaten; Viper grabs him with his tail and feeds him to the monster. Yikes.

However since, like with his cow, the farmer getting eaten was shown only in shadow, sick bastard that I am I had to draw what happened offscreen. I'm sure Mark Lungo disapproves!

Category:
Rating:
Teen (VO)
Class:
Finished Work
Submitted:
13y91d ago
Tags:
None
Other Work By @Kooshmeister

Comments & Critiques (0)

Preferred comment/critique type for this content: Any Kind

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in and have an Active account to leave a comment.
Please, login or sign up for an account.

What kind of comments is Kooshmeister seeking for this piece?

  • Any Kind - Self-explanatory.
  • Casual Comments - Comments of a more social nature.
  • Light Critique - Comments containing constructive suggestions about this work.
  • Heavy Critique - A serious analysis of this work, with emphasis on identifying potential problem areas, good use of technique and skill, and suggestions for potentially improving the work.
Please keep in mind, critiques may highlight both positive and negative aspects of this work, but the main goal is to constructively help the artist to improve in their skills and execution. Be kind, considerate, and polite.