The Peanuts gang celebrates Halloween while Linus waits for the Great Pumpkin.The Peanuts gang celebrates Halloween while Linus waits for the Great Pumpkin.The Peanuts gang celebrates Halloween while Linus waits for the Great Pumpkin.
- Nominated for 3 Primetime Emmys
- 4 nominations total
Peter Robbins
- Charlie Brown
- (voice)
Christopher Shea
- Linus Van Pelt
- (voice)
- (as Chris Shea)
Sally Dryer
- Lucy Van Pelt
- (voice)
Cathy Steinberg
- Sally Brown
- (voice)
Ann Altieri
- Frieda
- (voice)
- …
Lisa DeFaria
- Patty
- (voice)
Bill Melendez
- Snoopy
- (voice)
Glenn Mendelson
- Schroeder
- (voice)
- …
Gabrielle DeFaria Ritter
- Pigpen
- (voice)
- (as Gail DeFaria)
Featured reviews
After A Charlie Brown Christmas, this one came along the next fall. While it is not quite the first one, it has some good moments. Of course when this was made, Halloween was more of a trick or treat holiday as this one was originally sponsored by Dolly Madison, the maker of cup cakes. This high point of this one is Lucy talking about wearing a costume to match your personality.
Snoopy has his first major World War 1 Flying Ace segment here and it is effectively woven into the story. As a Halloween Special, Linus is always waiting for the Great Pumpkin & it is consistent with Linus that he makes a negative remarks about Santa believers. After all, in the previous Christmas Special, Santa is not mentioned in his speech of what Christmas is all about.
The Halloween party, which is a bigger staple today than ever is here though if this were to be updated, Snoopy could decorate his dog house with Halloween Lights, like he did with Christmas lights in the other special. While it is not Christmas, it did help build Charles Schultz resume so that he would do lots more television & movies with the Peanuts gang.
Snoopy has his first major World War 1 Flying Ace segment here and it is effectively woven into the story. As a Halloween Special, Linus is always waiting for the Great Pumpkin & it is consistent with Linus that he makes a negative remarks about Santa believers. After all, in the previous Christmas Special, Santa is not mentioned in his speech of what Christmas is all about.
The Halloween party, which is a bigger staple today than ever is here though if this were to be updated, Snoopy could decorate his dog house with Halloween Lights, like he did with Christmas lights in the other special. While it is not Christmas, it did help build Charles Schultz resume so that he would do lots more television & movies with the Peanuts gang.
Another beloved family Classic, even if it's about as slow paced as one could imagine. Nice, light comedy with Linus's mixing of holiday traditions; although the gang (and especially Sally) can be quite cruel, ultimately the focus on the misfits is uplifting, even if lightly satyrical. Snoopy's waking dream of fighting the read barron, which ultimately leads to an encounter with Linus's vision of the Great Pumpkin in the patch, is brilliant. Just two questions: how old are these kids? And why is Charlie Brown basically bald?
Reviewed this after watching in 2020, not long after getting our Charlie Brown Halloween figures from the Bradford Exchange.
Reviewed this after watching in 2020, not long after getting our Charlie Brown Halloween figures from the Bradford Exchange.
Now what would Halloween, my favorite holiday, be without Charlie
Brown and the Great Pumpkin? Not to date myself, but I remember the very first time it aired on
CBS at the ripe old age of 7! I've never missed it since! Nothing encapsulates childhood, camaraderie and the spirit of
Halloween more than this Charles M. Schultz classic. Charlie
Brown and his bag of rocks, Snoopy and the Red Baron, Linus'
ingenious use of his security blanket for a ghost costume, Vince
Guaraldi's great score, and of course, bossy Lucy and her
sarcastic voice of reason - I think we all know a 'Lucy' growing up! All the feelings of anticipation, excitement and fear so commonly
associated with this spooky holiday is captured here - even the
feeling of great disappointment when awakening the day after and
knowing one must wait another FULL year for this greatest of
holidays to come again - another year to plan and live out your
fantasy. Well, at least there's Charlie Brown Xmas to get us over
the hump! Good Grief!!
Brown and the Great Pumpkin? Not to date myself, but I remember the very first time it aired on
CBS at the ripe old age of 7! I've never missed it since! Nothing encapsulates childhood, camaraderie and the spirit of
Halloween more than this Charles M. Schultz classic. Charlie
Brown and his bag of rocks, Snoopy and the Red Baron, Linus'
ingenious use of his security blanket for a ghost costume, Vince
Guaraldi's great score, and of course, bossy Lucy and her
sarcastic voice of reason - I think we all know a 'Lucy' growing up! All the feelings of anticipation, excitement and fear so commonly
associated with this spooky holiday is captured here - even the
feeling of great disappointment when awakening the day after and
knowing one must wait another FULL year for this greatest of
holidays to come again - another year to plan and live out your
fantasy. Well, at least there's Charlie Brown Xmas to get us over
the hump! Good Grief!!
This special is great. I love the background music, especially the upbeat tempo played while Charlie Brown dances because he has finally been invited to a Halloween party...by mistake. The scene with Snoopy and the Red Baron is an abrupt switch from the storyline, but it is very well done; 5 minutes or so without any talking.
Did anyone notice how big the moon is in the pumpkin patch? It is huge!
Did anyone notice how big the moon is in the pumpkin patch? It is huge!
I was born in 1966. Since I can remember, I've been a Peanuts fan. It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown was a must watch show for me every Halloween since about the age of 4. Eating a TV dinner and watching it in the den was the highlight of Halloween. It got me primed to go trick or treating.
As an adult with children in their 20's, I still stop what I'm doing to watch Linus sit in the pumpkin patch with Sally. I know that its silly but at the end of the show, I always feel let down just like Linus. My kids shake their heads when I start going off that by now he should know better.
I will be an old woman and still watching It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown. It reminds of a simpler time when kids could off in groups to trick or treat. You could get popcorn balls and candy apples along with other goodies. If Halloween fell on a school day, teachers kept you busy working a cool project in hopes of keeping you calm.
As an adult with children in their 20's, I still stop what I'm doing to watch Linus sit in the pumpkin patch with Sally. I know that its silly but at the end of the show, I always feel let down just like Linus. My kids shake their heads when I start going off that by now he should know better.
I will be an old woman and still watching It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown. It reminds of a simpler time when kids could off in groups to trick or treat. You could get popcorn balls and candy apples along with other goodies. If Halloween fell on a school day, teachers kept you busy working a cool project in hopes of keeping you calm.
Did you know
- TriviaAfter this special originally aired children all over the country sent candy to Charlie Brown out of sympathy.
- GoofsIn the opening scene in which Lucy and Linus go out to the pumpkin patch, we see the setting sun in the background, which the children pass as they walk. However, the sun (just like the moon when we drive a car) would not be "passed" as though it were a stationary object; rather it would "move" along with the person moving. A second setting sun appears at the end of the same shot, after the children turn a corner and walk in another direction.
- Quotes
[repeated line]
Charlie Brown: I got a rock.
- Crazy creditsLinus and Charlie Brown are at the wall and Charlie tells Linus that he's done stupid things in his life, too. Then Linus keeps on shouting during the credits about how sitting and waiting in a pumpkin patch wasn't stupid.
- Alternate versionsThe version of the show broadcast on CBS from the late 1970s until it went to ABC was edited, cutting out most of the trick-or-treat/I got a rock sequence. This version was also time-compressed. Some older video releases also edit this sequence and also the scene where Snoopy dances along to Schroeder's World War I-era piano music. Later airings on CBS in the late 1990s would also cut the scene where Lucy pulls the football away when Charlie Brown attempts to kick it. The Paramount video release is unedited.
- ConnectionsEdited into Blue Peanuts (1987)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Charlie Brown's Halloween Adventure
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 25m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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