Spicy City
Spicy City is an American adult animated erotic cyberpunk television series which was created by Ralph Bakshi for HBO. The first of two adult animated series to air on HBO in the same year, the show serves as an anthology series in a similar format as television programs such as The [Twilight Zone (1959 TV series)|The Twilight Zone] and Tales from the Crypt. The series premiered on July 11, 1997, and ended on August 22, with a total of 6 episodes over the course of 1 season.
Premise
The plot was described as a science fiction anthology series set in a futuristic city with a steamy side. Each episode is introduced by Raven, a nightclub hostess who also makes brief appearances in the tales.Cast
- Michelle Phillips as Raven
- James Kean as Lem
- Barry Stigler as Boxer
- Mary Mara as Alice Kerchief / Geisha
- John Hostetter as Jake
- Vince Melocchi as Shark
- Alex Fernandez as Armando "Mano" Mantio
- Cecilia Noël as Red Beans
- James Hanes as Big Vinnie
- Ralph Bakshi as Stevie / Connelly / Goldblum
- Pamala Tyson as Bruja / Ebony / Venus Sartori
- Tuesday Knight as Prostitute / Virus
- James Keane as Flaxson
- Darrell Kunitomi as Loh
- Grace Zandarski as Driver
- James Asher as Harry
- Tasia Valenza as Margo
- Tony Amendola as Skankmeyer
- Julia DeMita as Frenchy
- Rick Najera as Vic Guapo
- Lewis Arquette as Farfelson / Corbin
- Jennifer Darling as Elvira
- E. G. Daily as Nisa Lolita
- Joey Camen as Max
- Michael Yama as Otaku
- Brock Peters as Bird
- Charlie Adler as Additional voices
- Dan Castellaneta as Additional voices
- Tress MacNeille as Additional voices
- Matt K. Miller as Additional voices
- Andy Philpot as Additional Voices
- Marnie Mosiman as Additional voices
- Brendan O'Brien as Additional voices
- David Fennoy as Additional voices
- Danny Mann as Additional voices
Production
Episodes
Reception
The series premiered on 11 July 1997 at midnight, beating South Park to television by over a month and becoming the first "adults-only" cartoon series.Although critical reaction was mixed and largely unfavorable, Spicy City received acceptable ratings. The Los Angeles Times called the series "Adolescent Humor for Adults". The Dallas Morning News said the series "exploits the female form while also condemning the practice."
A second season was approved, but the network wanted to fire Bakshi's writing team and hire professional Los Angeles screenwriters. When Bakshi refused to cooperate with the network, the series was cancelled.