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  1. Pottsylvanian. Boris Badenov is an antagonist character in the 1959–1964 animated series Rocky and His Friends and The Bullwinkle Show, so often appearing with his devious accomplice, Natasha Fatale, that the two are usually grouped together, as Boris and Natasha, a reference to Boris Drubetskoy and Natasha Rostova in Tolstoy ’s War and Peace.

    • History
    • Appearance
    • Personality
    • Relationships
    • Abilities
    • Catchphrases
    • In Other Media
    • Disguises
    • Trivia

    Boris is nearly always accompanied by his fellow spy, Natasha Fatale. The first time he appeared without her was in the story arc, "Buried Treasure." The first story arc where neither appeared was "The Three Moosketeers." Usually, Boris' misdeeds are thwarted by Rocky and Bullwinkle. Boris' attempts at killing "Moose and Squirrel" (as he refers to ...

    Early in the series, Boris was taller and had red eyes. After the first episodes, he changed to his normal height, but still retained the red eyes until a few episodes afterwards. Humorously, they changed from red to white after he had woken up from a long slumber, as if the redness was caused by sleep deprivation. Boris is one of the shortest huma...

    Boris takes delight in all manner of nasty crimes and foul deeds, and considers insults such as "no good" and "dirty" to be flattering. Boris enjoys light reading; his favorite book is an anthology of fiendish plans called the Fireside Crook Book.

    Rocky and Bullwinkle:Boris hates Rocky and Bullwinkle with a burning passion, due to them constantly getting in his way. Unless ordered otherwise, he will try to kill them at every opportunity. Natasha: Natashais Boris' partner, and he thinks fondly of her. However, he tends to give her the hard work whenever possible. In some adaptions, they are i...

    Boris is an expert safe-cracker and a master of disguise, able to come up with hundreds of different aliases and names for a large variety of different situations.

    Boris' main catchphrase (spoken when frustrated) is "Raskolnikov!" (a reference to the novel Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky), spoken in a eastern European accent (a mock-Russian accent). Boris would also say, "Sharrup your mouth!" to Natasha when his schemes failed. However, in the final segment of "Greenpernt Oogle", when he and Natasha were s...

    In the 1992 Showtimes Network television film Boris and Natasha: The Movie , the live-action version of Boris was played by Dave Thomas.
    In the 2000 theatrical film The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, the live-action Boris was played by Jason Alexander.

    Boris usually assumes a cover identity with a gag name. Rocky and Bullwinkle never see through Boris' thin disguises, though Rocky often remarks that his face or voice seems somehow familiar. 1. Swami Ben Boris (Jet Fuel Formula) 2. Sir Thomas Lippen-Boris (Jet Fuel Formula) 3. Sir Hilary Pushemoff (Jet Fuel Formula) 4. Hemlock Soames (Box Top Robb...

    Badenov's name is a play on that of the 16th-century Russian Tsar Boris Godunov ("bad enough" vs. "good enough").
    His accent and explosive temper are an homage to Hollywood actor Akim Tamiroff, especially Tamiroff's role in The Great McGinty, a 1940 movie directed by Preston Sturges.
    The late Paul Frees (Boris' original voice actor) once voiced another animated villain in the 1962 film, Gay Purr-e. it was French tuxedo cat called Meowrice, who had a similar tone of voice as Bor...
    According to the Rialto Theater's "Moosebill" for "Downhill: The Musical" (a special table of contents insert created for the DVD box set Rocky and Bullwinkle & Friends, The Third Season), Boris wa...
  2. Boris Badenov plays a variety of roles as Bullwinkle's antagonist in most of the segments. [37] "The Bullwinkle and Rocky Fan Club", a series of abortive attempts by Rocky and Bullwinkle to conduct club business. The fan club consists only of Rocky, Bullwinkle, Boris, Natasha, and Captain Peter "Wrongway" Peachfuzz.

  3. The series sees Rocky and Bullwinkle "thrust into harrowing situations but end up saving the day time and again". As Rocky and Bullwinkle's innocent and silly ambitions to become rock stars or find lost treasure end up dovetailing with Fearless Leader's sinister plans to take over the world, our heroes are set on a collision course with his notorious superspies Boris Badenov and Natasha Fatale.

    • The show was created by producer Jay Ward and cartoonist Alex Anderson, who had worked together on the Crusader Rabbit series. Their initial vision was a show called The Frostbite Falls Revue about a group of animals running a TV station, but the project never got beyond the proposal stage.
    • Instead of hiring animators when production of Rocky and His Friends got rolling, Ward convinced some friends at Dancer, Fitzgerald, & Sample, an advertising agency that had General Mills as a client, to buy the Mexican animation studio Gamma Productions so he could outsource the animation.
    • Bullwinkle is named after Jay Ward's friend Clarence Bullwinkel, a Berkeley landlord and owner of an Oakland Chevrolet dealership.
    • The name of the time machine featured in "Peabody's Improbable History" is sometimes incorrectly written out as the "Way Back Machine," but the correct name is the WABAC machine, a play on early computers like UNIVAC,
  4. Sep 7, 2017 · In the visitors’ gallery, Russian agents Boris Badenov and Natasha Fatale are deciding whether to use their secret “Goof Gas” gun to turn the Congress stupid, as they did to all the rocket ...

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  6. Boris Badenov is one of the two secondary antagonists in the DreamWorks Rocky and Bullwinkle franchise. He is a fictional character in the 1960s animated cartoons Rocky and His Friends and The Bullwinkle Show, collectively referred to as Rocky and Bullwinkle for short.

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