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DVD : The New Adventures of Superman - (DC Comics Classic Collection)

In association with Amazon.com

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Superman Circa '66 -- Up, Up, and Almost Away
The New Adventures of Superman
(Released June 26, 2007 by Warner Home Video) DVD Review by Joe Torcivia

This, of course, is Filmation's trend setting series from 1966.

Up front, I must express an almost lifelong affection for the DC Comics Super Heroes, and a 15 year long love affair with the DC Animated Series BATMAN, SUPERMAN, BATMAN BEYOND, JUSTICE LEAGUE and JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED, produced by Bruce Timm for Warner Bros. I also enjoyed the 1960s DC cartoons from Filmation Studios.

This DVD set should have been a "lock" for me but, instead, it is a very mixed bag. Oh, there's plenty of great stuff -- especially when viewed through nostalgia-colored glasses, where Filmation's legendary shortcomings are minimized by the good feelings these shows originally created.

We know and accept Filmation's faults for what they were - and are! The source of my uncharacteristic displeasure is the dispensing with the usually high standards practiced by Warner Home Video, in the assembling of this package.

There are far too many "CONS" to allow me to enjoy this DVD collection to the extent that I had hoped. Yet, the "PROS", in many ways, still manage to make the package a worthwhile entertainment experience.


The CONS:

The series is NOT COMPLETE! I'm very disappointed in that! The Superboy segments (originally part of each half-hour episode) are omitted. Somehow, I can understand that, as SB remains in some sort of legal limbo between DC/WB and the heirs of Jerry Siegel. BUT, all the Superman episodes are not there either.

The box claims 36 episodes. What they don't tell you is that there were TWO Superman cartoons per show -- plus one Superboy -- and that those are counted as SEPARATE episodes... even though each "pair" of Superman shorts are framed by the show's original opening and closing credits -- indicating it to be ONE SHOW. So, in actuality you get 18 original shows - really TWO THIRDS of 18 shows - despite the box's claim of 36 "episodes". Not exactly trickery, but the feeling of it is there, nonetheless.

Later, there were a handful of TWO-PART SUPERMAN EPISODES that are also not in this set. Granted, these were made for the BATMAN/SUPERMAN HOUR show of 1968 -- but they were also shown as part of the SUPERMAN show after Batman split off into his own show. Perhaps they will be part of a possible BATMAN/SUPERMAN HOUR release -- though there were not nearly enough of them to give Supes a fair representation on such a set, as many of the earlier Superman shorts were mixed into that show as "extender".

Either way, I expected to see the two-parters here. Further research reveals that there are about 16 short Superman cartoons also absent from this set and, hopefully, all this missing material is being hoarded for a second volume. After all, this was never billed as "The Complete Series", so maybe I was expecting too much, having been accustomed to the general quality of other WHV releases... the also-incomplete NEW SCOOBY-DOO MOVIES set, notwithstanding.

The transfers to DVD have got to be the worst I've ever seen from a major studio - with the possible exception of certain elements of WHV's "THE MAGILLA GORILLA SHOW" set! Yes, I know it's Filmation, and it's SUPPOSED TO look bad. But, it appears that little effort was made to clean these cartoons up. The Mr. Mxyzptlk episode, "The Imp-Practical Joker" (Which I remembered sort of fondly and especially wanted to see and contrast with Bruce Timm and Paul Dini's 1997 masterpiece "Mxyzpixilated" from SUPERMAN THE ANIMATED SERIES), is unbelievably bad with lines, streaking, and visual debris across the image! SHAME ON YOU WARNER HOME VIDEO!

In six minutes, the stories are often too brief and many of them are hokey, even by Silver Age comic book standards, but others are good. Besides, some very good Superman stories were done in eight pages or so, in the Silver Age comic books of legendary editor Mort Weisinger.

In addition to being incomplete, badly transferred, and sometimes hokey (though I can't really blame the "hokey" on WHV, can I?), there is NO PROPER ORDER to the presentation! We DVD enthusiasts like things organized, complete, uncut, and IN ORDER! None of that here!

"Superman Meets Brainiac" is on DISC TWO, while "The Return of Brainiac" is on DISC ONE! Um... all you have to do is READ THE TITLES to know this is the wrong thing to do, folks!

The PACKAGING is that slimmer, cheaper packaging that Warner Home Video has used since the latter part of 2005, where one disc rests upon another. You cannot handle or remove DISC TWO without first removing or handling DISC ONE. There is always potential, however slight, for damage with packaging of this sort.

The PROS:

It's Superman!

It's Superman is as close to an accurate Mort Weisinger / Silver Age comic book interpretation as we could ever have hoped to get!

Bud Collyer and Joan Alexander, from the Max Fleschier theatrical days and radio series, are reunited as Superman/Clark, and Lois!

The character designs are as closely based on classic Silver Age Superman artist Curt Swan as was possible to do in such limited animation.

It is the first animated use of Jimmy Olsen. Though sans freckles, he looks just as he did in his own comic -- that is when he wasn't being transformed into a turtle, werewolf, or other monster.

DC Comics editor Mort Weisinger was a consultant to the series, and his name is in the end credits of every show.

Actual DC writers of the time did scripts: George Kashdan, William Woolfolk, Arnold Drake, Bill Finger (Considered by many to be the uncredited co-creator of Batman!), and someone who -- to my knowledge -- was never involved with DC, Oscar Bensol. As all the other writers were actual DC writers, I wonder if "Bensol" wasn't a pen name for someone else. (Jerry Siegel, perhaps?)

Bob Hastings (LT. Carpenter on sixties sit-com MC HALE'S NAVY) begins an over 30-year association with DC Comics characters by voicing Jimmy Olsen and the absent-due to-being-in court Superboy. Hastings essentially recreated Carpenter for a cameo in the Adam West Batman series (in a scene with Alan "Fred Flintstone" Reed, no less!), and became best known as the voice of Commissioner Gordon in the '90s BATMAN ANIMATED SERIES!

Gravely voiced Jackson Beck (...I can still hear him voicing commercials for Little Caesar's Pizza, and Thompson's Water Seal) is the Narrator and Perry White.

The first use (I believe), outside of comics, of Luthor, Brainiac, Mxyzptlk, Toyman, Prankster, Titano the Giant Ape, and a vastly different Parasite - who meets a bit of a shocking end for a mid-sixties Sat-AM cartoon. Ditto for the ending of the second Brainiac episode. No spoilers here!

And THIS justifies the price of admission... The extra feature: "Superman in '66"! Featured commentators include comic book writer Mark Waid, actor Mark Hamill, DC Publisher Paul Levitz, and Filmation's Lou Scheimer, among others. Waid is so vocal, he practically hosts the thing!

They discuss Superman, the times socially and politically, Curt Swan, Mort Weisinger, and many, many Silver Age Superman comic book panels and pages are shown throughout. Scheimer discusses the early days of Filmation, how they got the contract from DC to do Superman (...with more than a bit of bluffing and trickery -- that I'm surprised that he admits to here!), and how important Superman was to putting Filmation on the map, and its impact on Sat-AM TV for years to follow.

For any fan of TV animation, comic books, DC heroes, or the Silver Age in general, this is ONE GREAT FEATURE!

So, despite some serious flaws, I'd say buy The New Adventures of Superman DVD set... if you are a fan of any of the above categories. Sit back and enjoy the "title opening" to each classic cartoon, where Superman flies THROUGH a brick wall that (as drawn) he could just as easily have flown around!

...Sometimes it's great to just accept stuff like this for its own sake!







Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - The classic Superman: a man whose towering strength is totally invincible
I know the 1940s Fleischer Superman cartoons were classics, and I even own the DVD. But after seeing "The New Adventures of Superman," I've permanently changed my preference.

Some people were disappointed with the bare-bones packaging, and lack of features. But that didn't bother me at all. I was far more interested in the picture quality which I thought was very good.

And unlike The New Adventures of Batman, there are real fights with real action in this show. This series fills the screen with gunfire, explosions, and plenty of good old-fashioned fist-fighting.

I was especially impressed with the stories and the artwork.

I never was very fond of the 1980s rework that not only dumbed down Superman's powers but basically reduced him to another helpless player being thrown about by chaos. He hardly seems super at all anymore.

But in New Adventures, Superman was everything that I liked about him: an invincible superhuman who really believed there was a difference between good guys and bad guys.

Seeing Superman's tremendous physical strength in action was a real treat. Among my favorite moments:

"The Force Phantom" - Invading aliens frantically try to power up their artificial energy creature to withstand the power Superman's fists.

"The Deadly Icebergs" - Three giant icebergs loaded with explosives threaten to obliterate a cruise ship. But Superman puts his brute strength to good use to keep the ship safe and still catch the crooks.

"The Invisible Raiders" - When the Sorcerer threatens millions by creating a catastrophic earthquake, Superman dives deep into the earth and uses his bare hands to close the fissure

"The Toys of Doom" - The riveting final scene shows Superman standing up to the Toyman's army of toy soldiers. As the toy army fires round after round of bullets, Superman just stands there and lets the torrent of bullets bounce of his chest.

"The Deadly Super Doll" - The Sorcerer is simply no match against Superman's towering strength. In one scene, Jimmy Olsen is frozen with fright as the walls of a cave close in on him. Superman appears just in time to push the walls away.

The artwork is also really effective. While it's no surprise that artists make Superman massively built, this series seemed to do it in a way that brought out his titanic strength without all the steroid-induced overdefinition that is pretty much standard in modern-day comic books. Every time Clark Kent changed into his Superman outfit, it always struck me how gigantic Superman's arms were.

This was a great DVD set that has brought me a lot of pleasure.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - new adventures of superman
Enjoyed the product. Watched those cartoon swhen I was a kid. The narrator Jackson Beck was also for many years was the voice of Bluto in the Popeye cartoons.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent
While the featurette is a tad more lame than usual( I loathe listening to people apologizing for something from the past--obviously insecurity on their part), that is not why we are buying this, is it?? The animation is, of course, 60s limitted animation but..
1) The stories are generally very good and VERY faithful to the 50s-early 60s Superman era.
2)These have the first dramatizations of such classic Superman villain as the Toyman, the Prankster, Titano, the Parasite and Brainiac among others.
3)The series reproduced very closely the style of the classic radio Superman series from the 40s and used many of the cast members of the same thus introducing later generations to something that they might not otherwise have experienced.
4)The voice work is excellent featuring the likes of Bud Collyer, Jackson Beck and Ted Knight.
5)The music is fantastic and deserves to be released on its own on CD. And the sound effects are superb. In some cases, the above have never quite been matched.
6) And the series--which can be enjoyed by both kids and adults without any sneaky underhanded tricks of inappropriate material is just great fun.
Let me repeat that. Remember when superheros were inspiring, unlifting and fun? Remember that? It has been so long....
Recommended!!!



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Own for nostalgia
Having the VHS release of several episodes, I was suprised at the poor quality of this product. My DVD back-up of my VHS tape looks better than most of these. But I understand these are not guaranteed sellers (will they EVER release the rest of the Superboy live-action series?) so it's best not to put a lot of money into the production, even up to the case art and DVD menus looking NOTHING like the cartoon. But if having a bad copy is better than none, I appreciate this being released, and through Amazon relatively cheaply. The retrospective featurette was great, a funny tale of how Filmation bluffed their way through getting DC to sign on with them for the series. So low marks for the technical quality, but good marks for getting it out on DVD.


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