Spider-Man (1967-1970) |
This was the first Spider-Man cartoon which I wasn't alive for the first time it came around but I remember catching it early in the morning and, for the first time, being drawn in by the storytelling instead of the slapstick and laughter. This is the show that gave us the classic "Spider-Man" theme song too! Growing up, the only time I saw this show was if I was able to wake up early enough on a Saturday morning. In Baltimore, Channel 2 ran reruns of Spidey at 6:30am, an hour and a half before the network cartoons started. It was always a treat if I could sneak out into the living room and watch Spider-Man sling his webs through New York with the TV sound turned down real low so I didn't wake my parents up.
Spidey Super Stories (1974-1977) |
Spider-Man would also pop up on segments in The Electric Company, a show designed for graduates of Sesame Street. This show was awesome because it was presented like a comic book with the different scenes taking place inside panels of a comic book. The real-life comic book motif was played out more by having Spider-Man only speaking in word bubbles above his head. This Spidey was a web-slinger of very few words but the other people in the stories could read the bubbles above Spider-Man's head. In these stories, Spidey didn't fight Doc Oc or the Green Goblin, but instead dastardly villains like the Spider who sat down beside Ms. Muffet. There was also a print version of these stories in The Electric Company Magazine which I'm sure I read every issue at least 100 times!
Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends (1981-1983) |
I LOVED this show and never missed it on Saturday Mornings. Spider-Man joins forces with Firestar and Iceman to stop various Marvel Super Villains. Spider-Man would do his thing while cracking jokes and tossing off one-lines, while Firestar shot fire everywhere and Iceman would surf around on a path of ice he shot out of his hands. Apparently, Iceman is also a member of the X-Men, which I didn't even know the X-Men was a thing until those movies started coming out in 2000. I don't know if Iceman makes an appearance in any of the X-Men movies past or future...but if he does I would watch the crap out of that movie! I loves me some Iceman!
Superman: The Movie (1978) Superman II (1980) |
Back before HBO or VHS, if a Superman movie was on TV - you dropped what you were doing and watched it. You just did because it was Superman and we showed respect to our elders that way back then. I think these are still really the gold standard in Super Hero movies, funny and exciting and easily accessible to children. Later, when we had HBO, I easily caught these two movies a million times each. They are still great films and fun to watch. (I've still never seen Superman IV: The Quest for Peace, and I hear I'm not missing much.)
Fantastic Four (1967/1978) |
I don't remember much about this show except that I loved it and thought the drawings were really cool. There were actually two versions of this show; a 1967 series from Hanna-Barbera and a 1978 version from DePatie-Freleng. I'm not sure which ones I saw, possibly both, but whenever I could catch it I was on board! This show is so ingrained into my memory that I was excited when the recent movies came out.
Batman (1966-1968) |
As with most people my age, this version of Batman was THE version of Batman and so much so that when the Michael Keaton movie came out in 1989 I was just like, "What is this crap? That wasn't funny at all!" Besides the cool costumes, crazy villains and bright colors...I loved how they put the action words on the screen during a fight scene. That was the best!
SuperFriends (1973-1986) |
My #1 TV nerd memory of this show was that it was the first time a cartoon that I knew from Saturday mornings came to strip syndication after school. So, it was a nice change of pace from all the old Popeye and Casper cartoons we had for our viewing pleasure in the afternoons. Not pictured above, but the Wonder Twins would make the best Super Hero movie out of them all!
Wonder Woman (1975-1979) |
Simply put: Wonder Woman's invisible jet remains the single most coolest prop ever built in the history of television.
Hostess Comic Book Ads (1977-1982) |
My only exposure to (then) second-string Superheroes like Captain America, Flash, Green Lantern and Iron Man were in one page ads that ran in all the comic books...including the talking animal comics that I read. In each of these comics, a noted Superhero would use tasty Hostess Apple Pies, Twinkies or Cupcakes to overpower a super villain. Who needs all the gold in the world when you can have a bit of golden & delicious Hostess Cupcake? Even an 8 year old me knew this was a ridiculous concept...and I ate up every page of it!
Spider-Man for Atari 2600 (1982) |
As with any Atari game that I owned, I played it one hundred million times in my youth. As it turns out, this one was the very first video game based on a Marvel Comics property. In it, you would sling webs and try to get your three pixels that represented Spider-Man up to the top of a skyscraper to defeat Green Goblin. Did I say I played it a hundred million times, now that I'm looking at the picture I'm sure it was closer to 30 zillion billion times. What a great game!
Now's the part where I ask you to share some of your Super Hero memories in the comments section......
3 comments:
Did you know that Iceman is in at least one of the X-Men movies?
You should try those babies out! You will like it.
Also, Superfriends and Spidey & Friends are my favs.
Is Strawberry Shortcake a super hero?
I did watch the first X-Men the other night, and enjoyed it. I just got the second one...I will be watching it soon. Full disclosure: I only got into those films so I can lead up to seeing Jennifer Lawrence as the naked blue chick in the new ones! Agee!!
Strawberry Shortcake is not a super hero...but she is a hero to us all. Now, If I did a list of great villians, The Peculiar Purple Pie Man of Porcupine Peak would certainly make the list.
You can tell the 1960's Hanna-Barbera Fantastic Four cartoon from the 1978 DePatie-Freling version. The former included all of the original comic book characters, including Johnny Storm/Human Torch. The latter replaced Johnny with H.E.R.B.I.E. the robot. There was a rumor that NBC-TV would not allow the Torch, fearing that kids might set themselves on fire trying to imitate the character. But it may be that D-F could not use the Torch, because another TV producer had bought the rights to the character for a solo series (which, afaik, was never made).
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