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Flintstones the Movie – Gameboy Game

Original price was: $41.00.Current price is: $28.97.

-29%
(43 customer reviews)

Available on backorder

only 7 left in stock

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  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
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Available on backorder

only 7 left in stock

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
Flintstones the Movie Game Boy Game Cartridge Cleaned, Tested, and Guaranteed to Work!

PRODUCT DETAILS
Condition:Used
Genre:Action & Adventure
Platform:Game Boy
Region:Region Free
ESRB:Everyone
SKU:GB_FLINTSTONES_THE_MOVIE

———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.

Additional information

Weight 8 lbs
Product Type

Platform

Gameboy

ESRB Rating

Everyone

Genre

Action & Adventure

Players

1

Condition

Used

43 reviews for Flintstones the Movie – Gameboy Game

  1. Tweeters

    What can be said! It the Flintstones! So excited to have the collection available. A classic childhood memory my grandchildren enjoy today. Good picture and sound quality. Will definitely be collecting all available seasons!

  2. Emile Rodz

    This is the best cartoon ever! Never gets old!

  3. Rex's Grandma

    GREAT TRANSACTION AND PRODUCT

  4. Courtney Hensel

    This was a Christmas gift for my Husband’s mom from all of us kids. Actually came in a wrapped 2 box set with the 20 discs. Looked nice.

  5. Tamra J. Gibson

    Needless to say I was truly thrilled when Warner Bros. announced the release of this animated classic!!! I had purchased a few vhs versions of The Flintstones from Columbia House, which was a total rip off, considering they were charging over $20.00 for only 4 episodes per tape! You really get more for your money when tv-shows are released on dvd season sets!The first season of the Flinstones is pure perfection with classic episodes like, Fred suspecting Wilma of being in love with another man, the Cary Grant type detective with the funny walk is priceless, Fred becoming a Elvis like teen idol “Listen to the Marking Bird!,& Fred singing in the band with Hot Lips Hannigan!!! I can’t wait to own the entire six seasons!!!

  6. Joe Cool

    The Flintstones were the first primetime cartoon airing at 8:30 on Tuesdays on ABC. The audiovisual on the DVD is excellent, but the extras are lacking. The better extras provide trivia and interesting facts about a particular TV show or movie. The extras here involved some commercial spots. It would have been more interesting if the extras profiled some of the other “actors” such as Daws Butler ( who was also Yogi Bear), John Stephenson ( who imitated Phil Silvers and Floyd the Barber), Hal Smith ( better known as Otis the drunk on the Andy Griffith Show) and Paul Frees ( Boris Badenov). It would also be interesting if the extras explained the pop culture and pop icons of the early sixties which is featured so prominently in the Flintstones.

  7. Jorge Reyes

    I’ve been waiting for this release since quite some years now, especially since I missed that frenzy about the “Laserdiscs” (and I understand there was a Flinstones compilation on laser). Before this DVD there were only a few VHS available on the market, which weren’t really satisfying at all..The reason I say this is because The Flintstones is something everybody should own.. They don’t make cartoons like these anymore. The Simpsons have yet a long way to go before they even get to this quality of storytelling.

  8. Joe Cool

    Warner Home Video did an excellent job in putting the Flintstones on DVD, the audio and visual are fantastic. However, the extras are lacking. The Flinstones are, for better or worse, a time capsule of the early sixties. The extras would have been better, and the entire series would make more sense to younger viewers, if Warner Home Video explained some of the pop culture that the Flinstones poked fun at. For example, Arthur Quarry’s Dance Club was inspired by Arthur Murray’s Dance Studio which was very popular in the sixties; Hi-Fye was a caricature of Buddy Holly and “that Georgia Boy” was Elvis; The Creature at from Tar Pits poked fun at the Creature from the Black Lagoon and the list goes on. Also there were other voices in the series that appeared in other cartoons or TV series: Paul Frees was Boris Badenov, Hal Smith was Otis the Drunk in the Andy Griffith Show, Daws Butler was Yogi Bear.There’s also some mistakes in the Flintstones for example in the Sweepstakes Ticket there’s mention of sneakers but the Flinstones don’t wear shoes! All of this part of the history of the Flintstones that every fan would find intersting.

  9. Cheryl H. Long

    I have been a big fan of the Flintstones since watching their episodes first-run in the early 60’s on ABC when I was a small child and have been an avid watcher since. Happily, this DVD set does not disappoint! Not only does it include all 28 episodes from the first season, but it also includes some vintage commercials that were run during that first season(ones that I vaguely remember), as well as the original, original pilot when it was still called “The Flagstones.” The other extras are worth seeing as well, including the history of “The Flintstones.”Taking “The Honeymooners” premise and putting it in a stone-age setting, “The Flintstones” pokes fun at suburban life in the early 1960’s. Even though one reviewer complained that they didn’t remember Fred’s behavior being so boorish, nor of him & Barney fighting so much or lying to their wives, just remember that this cartoon series was originally geared toward ADULTS (especially considering that three of their earliest sponsors were One-A-Day, Alka-Seltzer and Winston Cigarettes!). This also harkened back to an earlier time when life was simpler and people could laugh at themselves more easily. And, no, the “adult” plot lines did not affect me as a kid — I just enjoyed watching the goofy-looking characters, clever sight gags, stone-age contraptions and slapstick humor!Even though the drawings may look a bit cruder than those in the later seasons, the animation itself was more fluid and stylized, and less stilted than.

  10. M. Dog

    I knew I had great memories of this series for a reason.I can remember watching this series in prime time when I was a kid with my parents, and all of us laughing. I think it is difficult now, after the glorious onslaught of great prime time animation like the Simpsons and Family Guy, to appreciate what a revolutionary show the Flintstones was. These 28 episodes aired in 1959-60, and the concept of airing an animated situation comedy for adults was pure lunacy – not to mention that the show was set in the Stone Age. I can only imagine the blank stares or nervous sideways-glances cartoon geniuses William Hanna and Joe Barbera must have gotten in television’s executive boardrooms.Luckily, sometimes cream really does rise to the surface. All I can say is if you are a baby-boomer like me, watching the first season of this classic series is a pure pleasure. Not to wax nostalgic, but man – what a great rush. The writing on this series was always sharp with a hip edge (not quite as caustically brilliant as the Bullwinkle Show, but more warm and human). The vocal talent was unbelievable. I can remember feeling as a boy that the gentle yet sometimes sarcastic voice of Wilma (Jean Vander Pyl) and the sweet, bubbly voice of Betty (Bea Benaderet) were somehow the template for how adult women sounded and talked. And somehow whenever Barney spoke, it was funny, for which we can credit the acting prowess of Mel Blanc.Finally, as with all the currently released Hanna/Barbera DVD sets, thes.

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