About: Tak and the Power of Juju   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/V_hiHXLW2AYN0J2QOY-_yQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The game spawned four sequels: Tak 2: The Staff of Dreams, Tak: The Great Juju Challenge, Tak and the Guardians of Gross, and Tak: Mojo Mistake.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Tak and the Power of Juju
rdfs:comment
  • The game spawned four sequels: Tak 2: The Staff of Dreams, Tak: The Great Juju Challenge, Tak and the Guardians of Gross, and Tak: Mojo Mistake.
  • Tak and the Power of Juju is an American CGI-based animated series that premiered on Nickelodeon on August 31, 2007. Based on the video game of the same name, the show consists of two eleven minute stories per half hour episode. It is Nickelodeon's first all-CGI series (produced in house) and the 30th Nicktoon. The series was produced by Nick Jennings and directed, among others, by Mark Risley, Jim Schumann, and Heiko Drengenberg. The show struggled to gain an audience, ended up being cancelled on January 24, 2009, after only 26 episodes. This show has a wiki of its own: Tak Wiki.
  • No, this is not related to Jujubes candy, nor to the Tak from another Nicktoon. Tak And The Power Of Juju is a series of Platformers that was later adapted into an All CGI Cartoon TV series made in 2007 by the Nickelodeon network. In the game, Tak is a boy who is the apprentice of a jungle-dwelling tribe's Shaman. When the tribe's patron Juju (god), The Moon Juju, is captured by the evil shaman Tlaloc, she is supposed to be rescued by a prophesied hero. But the tribe's greatest warrior, Lok, was also turned into a sheep by Tlaloc. So Tak gets sent in a series of quests to find the means to restore him to normal. It eventually turns out that it was Tak himself who was the hero all along. The game has had four sequels so far.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:all-the-tro...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetrope...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:nickelodeon...iPageUsesTemplate
Starring
Runtime
  • 21(xsd:integer)
Country
  • United States
Genre
  • Adventure, Comedy
dbkwik:television/...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:tak/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Production
  • THQ
First Aired
  • 2007-08-31(xsd:date)
no episodes
  • 26(xsd:integer)
Last Aired
  • 2009-01-24(xsd:date)
Network
  • Nickelodeon
wikipage disambiguates
abstract
  • The game spawned four sequels: Tak 2: The Staff of Dreams, Tak: The Great Juju Challenge, Tak and the Guardians of Gross, and Tak: Mojo Mistake.
  • Tak and the Power of Juju is an American CGI-based animated series that premiered on Nickelodeon on August 31, 2007. Based on the video game of the same name, the show consists of two eleven minute stories per half hour episode. It is Nickelodeon's first all-CGI series (produced in house) and the 30th Nicktoon. The series was produced by Nick Jennings and directed, among others, by Mark Risley, Jim Schumann, and Heiko Drengenberg. The show struggled to gain an audience, ended up being cancelled on January 24, 2009, after only 26 episodes. This show has a wiki of its own: Tak Wiki.
  • No, this is not related to Jujubes candy, nor to the Tak from another Nicktoon. Tak And The Power Of Juju is a series of Platformers that was later adapted into an All CGI Cartoon TV series made in 2007 by the Nickelodeon network. In the game, Tak is a boy who is the apprentice of a jungle-dwelling tribe's Shaman. When the tribe's patron Juju (god), The Moon Juju, is captured by the evil shaman Tlaloc, she is supposed to be rescued by a prophesied hero. But the tribe's greatest warrior, Lok, was also turned into a sheep by Tlaloc. So Tak gets sent in a series of quests to find the means to restore him to normal. It eventually turns out that it was Tak himself who was the hero all along. The game has had four sequels so far. The cartoon drops most of the adventure elements from the game and instead focuses on the comedic ones. Everyone in the show is an idiot, though some are dumber than others. The gags come fast one after another, with common sense and even reality taking a backseat. In most episodes (each of which contains two stories) Tak himself is to blame for the problem going on, by causing them or making them worse. Tak is often helped by Jeera, the Tomboy daughter of the tribe's chief. The utterly bizarre Jujus are also usually involved. Lok is also in the series, still admired as a hero when he's really just a boastful coward (not that Tak is much better.) Some of the jokes cross the line of good taste occasionally.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software