"Dino's Girl", "A Rocks-Pox on You", "In Tune with Terror", "Punk Rock", "Rockjaw Rides Again"
Top Rock (VC4020)
13 July 1987
Lionel Richie: "All Night Long", Ray Parker Jr.: "Ghostbusters", Bee Gees: "Stayin' Alive", The Police: "Every Breath You Take", Roman Holiday: "Don't Try to Stop It", Rockwell: "Somebody's Watching Me", Hall and Oates: "You Make My Dreams", Huey Lewis and the News: "You Crack Me Up", Stevie Wonder: "Whereabouts", Aretha Franklin: "Freeway of Love"
The Flintstones: The Big Bank Robbery & The Snorkasaurus Story (VC1114)
"The Flintstone Fake Ache", "Worldwar Flea", "I Was a Teenage Grown-Up", "Anything You Can Do I Can Do Betty", "Dressed Up Dino", "Day of the Villains", "Rocky's Rocky Road", "The Butcher Shoppe", "Grime and Punishment", "Better Buddy Blues", "Freddy's Mechanical Dog", "The Cream-Pier Strikes Back"
The Flintstones: Love Letters on the Rocks (WP0007)
Original broadcast or release dates and episode titles (where applicable) are listed in parentheses.
The Flintstone Comedy Show: 25th Anniversary Special (1980: "Mountain Frustration", "Potion Problem", "Camp-Out Mouse", "Clownfoot", "The Ghost Sitters", "Sands of the Saharastone"): Released October 1985
The Flintstone Comedy Show 2: Curtain Call (1980: "Gold Fever", "Night on the Town", "Monster Madness", "Arcade Antics", "Follow That Dogosaurus", "Be Patient, Fred"): Released January 1986
The Flintstones: The First Episodes (1960: "The Flintstone Flyer", "Hot Lips Hannigan", "The Swimming Pool", "No Help Wanted"): Released August 20, 1987
The Flintstone Comedy Show: Rocky's Raiders (1966): contains the episode "The Story of Rocky's Raiders": Released 1987
Hanna-Barbera Personal Favorites: The Flintstones (1960–65: "The Split Personality", "The Blessed Event", "Ann-Margrock Presents", "The Stone-Finger Caper"): Released October 20, 1988
The Flintstones: The First Episodes (1960: "The Flintstone Flyer", "Hot Lips Hannigan", "The Swimming Pool", "No Help Wanted"): Re-released January 26, 1989
The Flintstones: Dripper (1966): contains the episode "Dripper": Released July 17, 1989
Pebbles & Bamm-Bamm: Watch Us Grow (1996: "Kiss and Spell", "Beanstalk Blues"): Released June 10, 1997
Pebbles & Bamm-Bamm: At Play (1996: "Sand Castle Surprise", "Soap Bubble Dreams"): Released June 10, 1997
Pebbles & Bamm-Bamm: Make New Friends (1996: "China Challenge", "Of Mice and Moon"): Released June 10, 1997
The Flintstones: Stone-Age Adventures (1960–64: "The Flintstone Flyer", "The Split Personality", "The Twitch", "Dress Rehearsal", "Ladies Night at the Lodge", "Ann-Margrock Presents"): Released March 14, 2000
Hanna-Barbera Personal Favorites: The Flintstones (1960–65: "The Split Personality", "The Blessed Event", "Ann-Margrock Presents", "The Stone-Finger Caper"): Released 1989
The Flintstones: The First 30 Years, Volume 1 (1960–66: "10 Little Flintstones", "The Gravelberry Pie King", "The Flintstone Flyer", "Hop Happy"): Released May 21, 1992
The Flintstones Comedy Show, Volume 1 (1980: "Mountain Frustration", "Potion Problem", "Camp-Out Mouse", "Clownfoot", "The Ghost Sitters", "Sands of the Saharastone"): Released March 4, 1993
The Flintstones (1994 live-action film): Released November 8, 1994
The Flintstones: First Fourteen Episodes Complete & Uncut (1960): Cartoon Network (along with John Kricfalusi) released a 4-disc LaserDisc set compiling the first 14 episodes of the series as they originally aired. Released February 19, 1997
Audio: English, French & Spanish (Dolby Digital Mono)
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish (R1)
Audio commentary on "The Hit Songwriter", "The Beauty Contest", and "The Happy Household" by Jerry Eisenberg (Layout Artist), Earl Kress (Writer/ Animation Historian) and Scott Shaw (Cartoonist/ Hanna-Barbera Historian).
Carved in Stone: The Flintstones Phenomenon
Music Video: Songs of the Flintstones Album
Production Sketches: How to Draw Fred Flintstone
Flintstone Art: Explore rare original pencil drawings
TV Spot: And Now A Word from Our Sponsor featurette
Two original commercials and an interview bite with Joe Barbara and William Hanna about the creation of the Flintstones series, with introduction by a historian of animation, Earl Kress.
A Stone Age Parenting Guide: Humorous look at child rearing in the stone age.
Stone By Stone: Original production storyboards of a classic episode "The Gruesomes" running alongside the actual finished episode to learn how it all came together.
Audio: English, French & Spanish (Dolby Digital Mono)
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
Limited edition, collectors box features all 6 seasons with over 4.5 hrs of bonus features
This boxset was only released in the US, it is available in Canada as an import. You can also get it in Australia, through Atomic Movies [1] plus, seasons 4, 5 & 6 by import.
Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1980s (1986: "The Bad News Brontos", "Invasion of the Mommy Snatchers", "Dreamchip's Car Wash", "Princess Wilma"): Released May 4, 2010
The Flintstones: The Complete Series (1960–66): Released October 27, 2020 in identical sets in the US and France[1][2] Episode 17 on disc one, "The Big Bank Robbery", was missing music and sound effects, and Warner issued a corrected disc.[3]
The Flintstones comic strip began October 2, 1961.[4] Illustrated by Gene Hazelton and Roger Armstrong, and distributed by the McNaught Syndicate, it ran from 1961 to 1988. After McNaught went out of business, The Flintstones was picked up by Editors Press Service and drawn by Karen Machette until the late 1990s.[5]
Notes: 1 The 5 Dell issues are numbered 2–6, the Flintstones first Dell appearance was in Dell Giants # 48, 1961. The 54 Gold Key issues are numbered 7–60 2 Both issues are identical, and a reprint of Gold Key's earlier series 3The Flintstones featuring Pebbles is part comic and part paperback. It's the first appearance of Pebbles outside the TV series 4 The Flintstones Mini-Comic was a supplement to an issue of Huckleberry Hound Weekly 5 Marvel's Hanna Barbera's The Flintstones features the first non-underground comic-work of Scott Shaw![7] 6 The Flintstones 3-D were part of the Blackthorne 3-D series, issues 19, 22, 36 and 42 7 Issue 4 adapted the TV series episode that introduced Pebbles to comic books for the first time[8]
^"1961 Timeline, October 2: The Flintstones spins off into newspapers in a new comic strip illustrated by Gene Hazelton and Roger Armstrong." American Comic Book Chronicles: 1960–64 by John Wells, TwoMorrows Publishing, 2012, Page 43.