The overall life lesson is obvious and treacly, essentially boiling down to “friends come in all shapes and sizes.” And it’s doubtful any of the subsequent episodes will abandon the age-old kids’ show template in which twenty minutes of Hulk-smash! action is followed by two minutes of syrupy moralizing. And finally there’s Dozer ( Brian Drummond), the Triceratops-bulldozer who’s initially hostile toward Ty, but changes his mind after an impromptu rescue mission proves that dinotrux work better as mutual partners rather than antagonistic hunter-killers. Ton-Ton ( Matt Hill) is an Ankylosaurus dump truck who speaks like one of the bank-robbing surfers from Point Break and has a daredevil streak to boot. There’s Skya ( Ashleigh Bell), the sass-talking girl of the group who’s a combination brachiosaur and crane. There’s Revvit ( Richard Ian Cox), a miniature “ reptool” who helps fix Ty’s broken tread. But Ty is different because he sees the value in working together, and much of the initial installment is given over to him befriending others of his genus. The pilot (the only episode made available for review) makes clear that T-Truxes are normally viewed by other dinos as not-to-be-messed-with predators.
#Dinotrux revvit and xee series
Read more: Netflix Preps ‘ Dinotrux‘ Kids Series from DreamWorks Animation Ty is desperately in need of ore, the substance that sustains all dinotrux, and he happens upon a mother lode in a valley ruled over by D-Structs ( Paul Dobson), a ruthless T-Trux who doesn’t care to share the bounty. Our hero is Ty-Rux ( Andrew Francis), a friendly T-Trux (combination Tyrannosaurus Rex and megaton excavator) who is forced to leave his valley home after it’s destroyed by a volcanic eruption. As the name suggests, these dinosaurs are a mix of giant reptile and muscle vehicle.