C.H.O.M.P.S | |
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Theatrical poster to C.H.O.M.P.S
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Directed by | Don Chaffey |
Produced by |
Burt Topper Joseph Barbera |
Screenplay by | Joseph Barbera Duane Poole Dick Robbins |
Story by | Joseph Barbera |
Starring |
Wesley Eure Valerie Bertinelli Conrad Bain |
Music by | Hoyt Curtin |
Cinematography | Charles F. Wheeler |
Edited by | Dick Darling Warner E. Leighton |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | American International Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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89 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
C.H.O.M.P.S. is a 1979 American comic science fiction family film produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and directed by Don Chaffey, his final feature film.
Brian Foster (Wesley Eure), a young inventor, creates a robotic dog for use as part of a home protection system. C.H.O.M.P.S. is an acronym for "Canine HOMe Protection System." Ralph Norton (Conrad Bain) is his boss who he constantly argues with. Norton's daughter Casey (Valerie Bertinelli) and Foster develop a relationship. A rival company wants the dog and sends a few petty criminals to dognap "C.H.O.M.P.S."
Joseph Barbera approached his friend Samuel Z. Arkoff of American International Pictures about his company collaborating with Hanna-Barbera on live-action films. Though William Hanna and other members of Hanna-Barbera were not eager to venture beyond the animation field, according to Barbera, Arkoff was enthusiastic about the ideas that Barbera presented, and agreed to do nine films together. Barbera's first idea was for a film about a super-canine, robotic Doberman pinscher guard dog which would capitalize on several ideas popular at the time.
Barbera recalled that Arkoff's son Louis suggested that rather than a Doberman, the dog would have to be a non-threatening dog in the Benji mold. Barbera attributes this change in focus in the story to the film's lackluster performance at the box-office. In his autobiography, Barbera wrote that the film "did okay... but it never made the splash it should have". Because of this, the future film deals between Hanna-Barbera and AIP were canceled.
Burt Topper worked on the movie as producer with Barbera.
On the film's release, Variety wrote, "although it features a cute canine hero, a pair of do-gooding young people and a bevy of silly-minded adults, pic has little of the action or charm that lure audiences." The review noted that director Don Chaffey "has done what he can to keep the pic moving given what he has to work with." Of the performers, Variety judged, "Actors are uniformly okay but there's really only one star in this picture, 'Chomps.' Benji he's not."