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  • The short-lived Hanna Barbera produced animated series "Clue Club" was the show that replaced the long-running "Scooby Doo" during the mid-1970's(when America's favorite canine made the switch from CBS over to ABC)on CBS' Saturday Morning schedule. As for the reviews to this show are slightly mixed,be as it may if you want to size up the onslaught of "Scooby" clones and rip-offs during that period. But "Clue Club" at least isn't as slow as dead molasses("Speed Buggy","The Flintstone Mysteries","Chan and the Amazing Chan-Clan"),doesn't have sloppy animation("The Scooby Doo Movies","The Funky Phantom","Goober and the Ghost Chasers","Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kids", "Inch High:Private Eye"),and it was FAR better from being a crappy moronic no-brainer with incompetent characters(being the worst of the "Scooby" clones..."Jabberjaw","Fangface","The New Shmoo","Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels", "The Buford Files","The Thirteen Ghosts of Scooby Doo").

    It might be somewhat predictable,but at least it was far from being shallow. Out of the 16 episodes that this series produced,"Clue Club" lasted four months on the air from August 31,1976 until November 27, 1976. In perspective,"Clue Club" was at least compelling and it was one of the better "Scooby" clones" that was very well-written,and very well-produced especially coming the team of Saturday Morning animation:Hanna-Barbera Productions. Not only that,"Clue Club" really captured the mood and the spirit of the mid-1970's. CBS reaired these 16 episodes from 1976 until 1979,when the two of the characters from the show(Woofer and Whimper)when on to have a spin-off titled "Woofer and Whimper:Dog Detectives" for the short-lived Hanna Barbera produced series "Skatebirds", that also lasted no more than three months on the air as part of CBS' Saturday Morning schedule. After that,the show was moved to Sunday Mornings(in repeats)until 1979. The show that replaced "Clue Club" and the rest of the repeated cartoons and kids shows from their Sunday Morning slot? CBS News correspondent Charles Kurault whose "Sunday Morning" news and information telecast eventually replaced everything on the Sunday Morning timeslot in September of 1979.
  • Clue Club is another show in the long line of Scooby-Doo clones made by Hanna-Barbera in an attempt to capitalize on the success they had with the great dane by making shows using the formula of teenage sleuths and an animal sidekick solving mysteries involving criminals disguised as monsters or ghosts.

    The show revolves around the Clue Club, Larry, Pepper, D. D., and Dottie, as they solve mysteries. As this is a Scooby-Doo clone, the four teens (Dottie is left to hold the fort due to her being 13 years old) are joined by two dogs by the name of Woofer and Wimper, who while they are talking dogs, they do not talk directly to the other Clue Club members, instead communicating in barks and other dog noises.

    Now this is a neat Scooby clone. As the characters can be compared to Mysyery Inc. (Larry is Fred since he is the leader, Dottie, despite being in base on communications, is Velma, Pepper is basically Daphne, and D. D. is Shaggy while Woofer and Wimper are both Scooby), it is still a good cartoon, as the voice acting is neat, the storytelling is on par with Scooby, and Woofer and Wimper are actually good comic relief.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Or however the silly lyrics went.

    I recorded over a dozen episodes off Cartoon Network and am converting them to DVD.

    Watching them as I go.

    I suspected that the four kids were brothers and sisters, unlike the Scooby Doo gang.

    Turns out I'm wrong.

    In 'Green Thumb Caper', Dotty says to Larry "your mother wants you to make sure you aren't late for supper tonight. YOUR Uncle Ed's coming over" so Dotty and Larry aren't siblings.

    In 'Circus Caper' Dotty does some double-talk to Larry. DD says to Pepper "I'll trade you two brothers and a parakeet for her." Pepper replies "deal." Now this concludes then that if DD is wanting Dotty, he is getting rid of two brothers he may have (and the parakeet), or that he is willing to exchange the precocious Dotty for Pepper's two brothers.

    Could Larry be one of these brothers? In "Walking House Caper", Larry, DD and Pepper are locked in a cabin and Larry says he is going to radio Dotty.

    Pepper says "for once, I wish my sister were here!" SO! Pepper and Dotty are sisters, and we now know DD has at least two brothers, and in all liklihood, one of these brothers is Larry.

    While Larry would always want Dotty to stay away from the mystery, there is a bit more chastising coming from Pepper. Like an older sister would do. In 'Lighthouse Museum Caper', An eccentric character called Salty Boggs is called 'uncle' by Pepper and Dotty, but Larry calls him Mr. boggs, so that further confirms how they are unrelated.

    In 'Gone Gondola' Dotty calls Pepper 'sis'.

    In 'Disappearing Airport Caper', Larry is looking for Woofer and Wimper.

    "Where are MY dogs?" he says, but then none of the other kids are around, so he would claim ownership to the canines.

    With Dotty back at the HQ, when DD, Pepper and Larry would 'split up', DD and Pepper would be chased by a costumed bad guy, leaving Larry . . . with the dogs.

    So perhaps he was the dogs' owner, anyway. Yet in Dissolving Statue Caper, Dotty says the dogs are hers, telling a monkey not to spray MY dogs.

    Unlike Scooby Doo titles that involved puns, most of the Clue Club adventures are "Something Caper" tho not all of them have this distinction.

    "Clue Club" seemed to want to be more of a detective situation, unlike Scooby's ghosts to scare people away or Josie and the Pussycats' mad scientists.

    On "Clue Club", everything from statues to trains to pigs to airports to elderly women in wheelchairs would vanish without a clue.

    Scooby Doo clone? Absolutely. But listen for endless Paul Winchell voicework, as well as Bob Hastings not only as DD, but an occasional fellow here and there as well, like Casey Kasem would do all those sheriffs on Scooby Doo.
  • While I am a huge fan of Scooby-Doo, in the early days of the said series, its mysteries were easy to know who-done-it since there were almost no other suspects to pick. Instead, in Clue Club, you find several suspects and even the cases were more ambitious in the sense of the trick by the criminal to make the robbery.
  • As a kid growing up in the mid-1970's,I can remember watching this show since it came on Saturday Mornings,and Sunday Mornings during its run (It came to a halt on Sunday Mornings when CBS executives yanked it off the air and replaced it with educational and informative programming) for most of the decade. The show featured a group of teenagers who solve crimes with the help of two bloodhounds(Woofer and Whimper),but here is the catchy part,it had a nice premise to it,but it was a total rip-off of Scooby Doo since in this one had a Velma like character that had a computer center in the family garage. There were a lot like that in the 1970's that copy cat the Scooby formula,and this was one of them. See some of the episodes and you'll know what I mean.
  • This short-lived cartoon by Hanna-Barbera seem like it was derived from Walt-Disney or some underground comic book. What I enjoyed the most about this cartoon is the bigger dog (Whoofer) always trying to show the little dog (Whimper) how to become a good bloodhound. But at the end it always backfires. This cartoon is another Scooby Doo rip-off but each episode makes you think.
  • I got up early this morning and saw "Clue Club" as part of Cartoon Network's "Boomerang" program. I remember this show from when I was a kid. I liked it then. I can't see what I ever saw in it.

    The program is sloppily edited, it looks like bits were cut out of it, which may contribute to the overall badness. The lead teen, Larry is a personalityless dork, not that any of the other kids have a personality to speak off. The dogs are kinda funny, but not as funny as Scooby, and where did they get a deerstalker hat in dog size anyway?

    The episode I saw revolved around a character named "Uncle Salty" being framed for a diamond theft. The sheriff literally runs him in based on the fact that he was...walking around at the time. I won't go into the mystery here, it's the standard crap, I solved it halfway through. There was also something about a sea monster, though, again, with all the cuts, it didn't even impact the plot much.

    Don't waste your time. Go with the best, the original, Scooby.
  • Could it be that Hanna Barbara Got the idea for these 2 dogs from the Walt Disney Cartoon movie the Aristocats ? Because I am watching the show for the first time in my life right now on boomerang . I have seen most of Hanna Barbaras shows on t.v most of them I seen as a kid in the 80's after school. Like Scooby Doo,Flintstones, Speed Buggy, Etc. It could very well be possible that Hanna Barbara got into a kind of creative mood and decided to combine the 2 dogs from aristocats and put them into a Scooby Doo setting. Just watch the 2 dogs from this cartoon and then watch the 2 dogs from Aristocats and let me know if you too can see the resemblance.Personally if I was Disney I would of been a bit upset.