The Tofus
The Tofus is an animated sitcom produced by SIP Animation and CinéGroupe. It is a satirical parody of the environmentalist lifestyle epitomized by its title family, which consists of Mom, Pop, Chichi, Lola, and Buba. The show is set in the fictional town of Beauvillage, and lampoons many aspects of the environmental movement, including environmental organizations, animal rights, and pacifism.
Since its debut on September 6, 2004 on Teletoon in Canada, the program has aired twenty-six episodes consisting of fifty-two segments over two seasons.
Premise
Environmental activists Mom and Pop Tofu, concerned that their family is suffocating from urban routine, decide to move to a farmhouse in the town of Beauvillage and embrace a more natural way of life, much to the horror of their pre-teen children, Chichi and Lola. They would rather watch TV and go shopping than amuse themselves with Grandma Buba's animals: Cracker the Rooster, Curly the Sheep, and Suzie the Goat. The siblings must cope with their parents' ecology-friendly world vision and the humiliation that results from their efforts to encourage others to protect the environment.The neighbourhood that the family settles in is filled with electronically able individuals, contrasting the Tofus' all-organic lifestyle. Unlike her mechanical-genius brother Chichi–who believes in peace within the family–Lola is more cynical and averse to being deemed oddballs in their new home. She occupies herself with her attraction to Billy Hubbub, the boy next door, despite his parents objections.
Characters
ChichiLola
Mom
Pop
Buba
April
William "Billy" Hubbub
Titus Hubbub
Elizabeth "Beth" Hubbub
Phillip "Phil"
Lillian "Lily"
Cherie
Nicolas "Nick"
Susan "Suzie", Cottontail "Curly", Cracker
Beatrice
'''Kris'''
Production
The Tofus was co-produced by SIP Animation and CinéGroupe. It was directed by Bruno Bianchi, and produced by Bianchi and Danielle Marleau with the assistance of several other executive producers out of Maple Pictures Corp., and scripted by twenty-six writers, including series creators Fabrice de Costil and Bertrand Victor. All the scripts were story edited by Florence Sandis in charge of the script directing. Original music was composed by Alain Garcia and Noam Kaniel.Each episode of The Tofus was budgeted at US$230,000, and each thirty-minute time block was divided into two fifteen minute-long episodes.
The first episode of France 3's French-language version of The Tofus premiered on January 3, 2005. As Fox Kids Europe was renamed Jetix Europe in July 2004, the program was broadcast under the new brand Jetix when it arrived in other European countries in 2006.
There were five main cast members who voiced The Tofus. Aaron Grunfeld performed the voice of Chichi, while Brigid Tierney performed the voice of Lola. Maria Bircher played Mum, Marcel Jeannin voiced Pop, and Sonja Ball took the role of Buba. Voice direction was overseen by Terrence Scammell.
Development
The show's development was first revealed in April 2002 under the name of Tofu Family, when Saban International Paris announced that they had pre-sold the series to ITV in the United Kingdom to air on their CITV programming strand, while France 3 was attached as well. The show was originally put into production solely at SIP.By March 2003, the production for the series was started, and it was confirmed that Teletoon and Fox Kids Europe had joined in the production for the series as well. By June 2003, SIP announced that CinéGroupe in Canada would co-produce the series and that Fox Kids Europe's broadcast deal also included merchandise rights and a first broadcast window on their Fox Kids channels worldwide except in the UK and France, due to the existing deals with ITV and France 3 respectively.
The rights to the series were shared between CinéGroupe, SIP and FKE. CinéGroupe handled Canada, SIP Animation handled France and other French-speaking territories, while Fox Kids Europe handled the rest of the world. Distribution services were handled by Buena [Vista International Television] except for Canada.
Reception
The Tofus was generally well-received by viewers. It has been called "a modern gloss on the classic family sitcom aptly skewers the granola-munching righteousness of the eco-hippie archetype," and has been commended for its use of ecology as a unique background theme. The Tofus also received top audience ratings among the France 3 Youth Programs in 2005.Alex Kucharski of the Toronto Star gave the film a negative review, writing, "From the theme song to the plot to the graphics to the end credits this show is just ghastly! Even though the plot is very original, this show is definitely not funny." The Gazettes Kathryn Freenaway said the series has "negative storylines".