The New Adventures of Superman: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Murderous Mannequin]]: "The Mysterious Mr. Mist". A disembodied spirit possesses a mannequin and tries to drag Lois Lane back to his kingdom [[Beneath the Earth]].
* [[Murderous Mannequin]]: "The Mysterious Mr. Mist". A disembodied spirit possesses a mannequin and tries to drag Lois Lane back to his kingdom [[Beneath the Earth]].
* [[Not My Driver]]: Lex Luthor does it to Jimmy Olsen in "Luthor Strikes Again".
* [[Not My Driver]]: Lex Luthor does it to Jimmy Olsen in "Luthor Strikes Again".
* [[Officer O Hara]]: One appears in the episode "The Cage of Glass".
* [[Officer O'Hara]]: One appears in the episode "The Cage of Glass".
* [[Opening Narration]]
* [[Opening Narration]]
* [[People Zoo]]: In "The Robot of Riga" the Rigans kidnap Jimmy Olsen and Lois Lane to put them in one.
* [[People Zoo]]: In "The Robot of Riga" the Rigans kidnap Jimmy Olsen and Lois Lane to put them in one.
* [[Phlebotinum Overload]]: Superman deals with the Parasite by letting him absorb his nigh-infinite powers until he simply explodes, fatally.
* [[Phlebotinum Overload]]: Superman deals with the Parasite by letting him absorb his nigh-infinite powers until he simply explodes, fatally.
* [[Put Their Heads Together]]: Superman uses this on thugs in "The Deadly Super-Doll" and "The Deadly Icebergs".
* [[Put Their Heads Together]]: Superman uses this on thugs in "The Deadly Super-Doll" and "The Deadly Icebergs".
* [[Red Eyes Take Warning]]: In the episodes "The Team of Terror" and "The Japanese Sandman".
* [[Red Eyes, Take Warning]]: In the episodes "The Team of Terror" and "The Japanese Sandman".
* [[Reverse Polarity]]: Reversing the polarity of an electric charge transfers the powers of the episode's villain (and some other guy) back to Superman... after they got them from him through an electric shock.
* [[Reverse Polarity]]: Reversing the polarity of an electric charge transfers the powers of the episode's villain (and some other guy) back to Superman... after they got them from him through an electric shock.
* [[Sdrawkcab Name]]: Lex Luthor in "Luthor Strikes Again".
* [[Sdrawkcab Name]]: Lex Luthor in "Luthor Strikes Again".
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* [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying]]: The title creatures in "Prehistoric Pterodactyls". Where to begin...
* [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying]]: The title creatures in "Prehistoric Pterodactyls". Where to begin...
* [[Stock Phrases]]
* [[Stock Phrases]]
** [[Follow That Car]]
** [[Follow That Car!]]
** [[That's an Order]]
** [[That's an Order]]
* [[Time Bomb]]: Lex Luthor uses one in "APE Strikes Again".
* [[Time Bomb]]: Lex Luthor uses one in "APE Strikes Again".

Revision as of 02:16, 26 January 2014

The New Adventures of Superman was a series of six-minute animated Superman adventures produced by Filmation between 1966 and 1970. The 68 segments appeared as part of three different programs during that time.

The first TV series produced by Filmation Associates, The New Adventures of Superman was extremely popular in its Saturday morning time slot and, despite having obviously been developed for young children, employed the services of several DC comic book writers including George Kashdan. Many of the character designs (later based upon the artwork of Superman artist Curt Swan in the show's third season) stayed true to their comic book counterparts; iconic shirt-rip shots and related transformations from Clark Kent into Superman were incorporated into almost every episode, and such lines as "Up, up, and away!" and "This is a job for Superman!" were also borrowed from comics and the original Superman radio show. Due to a limited production budget, stock animation was often re-used for certain shots of Superman flying (or switching identities from Clark Kent into the Man of Steel), while character movement was often kept at a minimum.

Producer Lou Scheimer also recruited Bud Collyer and Joan Alexander, veterans from the Superman radio show and, at least in Collyer's case, the Max Fleischer Superman cartoons, for the voices of Clark Kent/Superman and Lois Lane respectively. Jackson Beck, who had been the narrator and the voice of Perry White on the radio show, reprised those same roles for the cartoon version, while Jack Grimes, who had played Jimmy Olsen in its later years, took that part here as well. For this series, Collyer returned to the same vocal technique he'd perfected on the radio show to play the Man of Steel. While in the identity of Clark Kent, Collyer would keep his voice lighter while projecting a sense of weakness. But when the mild-mannered reporter would change into his true identity of Superman, Collyer's voice would deepen dramatically into a heroic baritone. Alexander departed after the first season and was replaced by Julie Bennett in later seasons.

The New Adventures of Superman contains examples of: