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El debut animado de Batman y Robin da vida al Dúo Dinámico en esta versión sobre El caballero oscuro y El niño maravilla, que defiende a Gotham City de la galería de pícaros de El Cruzado En... Leer todoEl debut animado de Batman y Robin da vida al Dúo Dinámico en esta versión sobre El caballero oscuro y El niño maravilla, que defiende a Gotham City de la galería de pícaros de El Cruzado Encapuchado, un ladrón a la vez.El debut animado de Batman y Robin da vida al Dúo Dinámico en esta versión sobre El caballero oscuro y El niño maravilla, que defiende a Gotham City de la galería de pícaros de El Cruzado Encapuchado, un ladrón a la vez.
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The Batman/Superman Hour, and its various incarnations filled many a Saturday morning for children of the late 60's and early 70's. This was the second animated incarnation of Superman and the first for Batman. Superman was a pale shadow of the Fleischer cartoons, but a decent adventure show for Saturday mornings. It featured voice work from Bud Collyer and Joan Alexander, the voices from the Fleischer cartoons and Superman radio show. Batman featured Olan Soule and Kasey Kasem, who would voice the Dynamic Duo in the various versions of the Super Friends. Ted Knight provided the voice of the narrator and various Batman villains.
The studio producing the show was Filmation, who tended to be more low budget than rivals at Hanna-Barbera. As such, stock footage was reused across the series. However, the models were generally good and the plots were often inventive. The heroes were allowed to lay their hands on the villains and the series was quite violent, compared to shows from the 70's onward. This allowed for greater jeopardy and a closer connection to the comics.
I haven't see Superman in quite a while, but Batman was a fairly decent show, especially compared to the more lackluster New Adventures of Batman. These episodes were fast paced and made good use of the villains. Soule and Kasem weren't as good as West and Ward, but the show was more fun.
This series has two unique distinctions. One, Filmation also produced animated Superman and Batman segments for Sesame Street, in their earliest days. The second was the ire raised by the series with parental watchdog groups (who did more watchdogging than parenting). They placed pressure on the networks to reduce the level of violence in cartoons. As such, series made after this show were forced to tone down the violence and provide more educational material. this led to the rather bland Super Friends shows, and other watered down cartoons. it also caused both Filmation and Hanna-Barbera to focus more on comedy, rather than adventure. When they swung back to adventure shows, there were pale shadows of their earlier efforts and tended to be overwhelmed by comedic elements.
The Superman cartoons have been released on DVD (without the Superboy segments, due to ongoing legal issues with the estate of Jerry Siegel) but Batman has not. Warner Home Video has stated they are interested in releasing more DC related material, so here's hoping that Batman will soon see the light of day. Aside from the live action series (which has more hurdles in front of it than an Olympic race), this is the only Batman series not available on home video.
The studio producing the show was Filmation, who tended to be more low budget than rivals at Hanna-Barbera. As such, stock footage was reused across the series. However, the models were generally good and the plots were often inventive. The heroes were allowed to lay their hands on the villains and the series was quite violent, compared to shows from the 70's onward. This allowed for greater jeopardy and a closer connection to the comics.
I haven't see Superman in quite a while, but Batman was a fairly decent show, especially compared to the more lackluster New Adventures of Batman. These episodes were fast paced and made good use of the villains. Soule and Kasem weren't as good as West and Ward, but the show was more fun.
This series has two unique distinctions. One, Filmation also produced animated Superman and Batman segments for Sesame Street, in their earliest days. The second was the ire raised by the series with parental watchdog groups (who did more watchdogging than parenting). They placed pressure on the networks to reduce the level of violence in cartoons. As such, series made after this show were forced to tone down the violence and provide more educational material. this led to the rather bland Super Friends shows, and other watered down cartoons. it also caused both Filmation and Hanna-Barbera to focus more on comedy, rather than adventure. When they swung back to adventure shows, there were pale shadows of their earlier efforts and tended to be overwhelmed by comedic elements.
The Superman cartoons have been released on DVD (without the Superboy segments, due to ongoing legal issues with the estate of Jerry Siegel) but Batman has not. Warner Home Video has stated they are interested in releasing more DC related material, so here's hoping that Batman will soon see the light of day. Aside from the live action series (which has more hurdles in front of it than an Olympic race), this is the only Batman series not available on home video.
Of course, I'm a kid at heart. I remember the '60s. That's when cartoons had the power to convey action. Unlike today's watered down, politically correct wannabes. Batman and Superman teamed up. Not in the same cartoon, of course, they had their own cartoons and their own stories. Not everybody knows this, but Superman and Lex Luthor, Superman's nemesis here on Earth, were once friends. What happened? Well, when they were in high school, Superman, (a.k.a., Clark Kent), blew out a fire in Lex Luthor's hair, causing him to go bald and insane. As for Batman, he and Robin, fought the Joker and other villains in Gotham City.
I managed to miss this 1969 series as a child, but I recently watched 20+ episodes (some titled BATMAN, some BATMAN AND ROBIN)taped off of Cartoon Network a number of years ago. Like most Filmation product of the era, the animation is limited, but the pace is fast-moving and the supporting voice actors over-play the roles as if in an old serial or melodrama, so the limited technique does not become a problem, and certainly would not have been a problem for the juvenile audience at which this show was aimed. The template for the show was the 1960s BATMAN TV show, and Olan Soule and Casey Kasem bring interpretations to the characters of Batman and Robin that are similar to those of Adam West and Burt Ward (although camp was not a concept grasped by most seven-year-old youngsters in 1969, so Soule and Kasem rein in the hokum somewhat). The children's versions of the various villains--Joker, Penguin, Mr. Freeze, etc.--are fun and colorfully acted by the voice talent. Also, isn't that Ted Knight narrating these? If you need a break from the recent dark,expressionistic interpretations of Batman--even in animated form--this simple, entertaining children's show should do the trick. Don't know if these are in print or presently being aired, but an internet search should turn up some episodes for you...
Very kid-friendly Filmation superhero cartoon.
I watched this as a kid and found it very entertaining. Today's little ones will probably like it as well.
However, if you are a middle aged adult (like me) wishing to recapture your childhood (by watching this) you may run into an unexpected problem. Despite other Filmation cartoons of this period (Aquaman, Fantastic Voyage) still being fun to watch - this one comes over as a little average???
After 30 minutes or so the limited animation and dull dialogue starts to get your nerves a little. But it was a knockout for 30 minutes, so don't let this review stop you from re-watching it.
Not really sure what the problem is but maybe the fact that both Batman and Superman have been done in such wonderful live action productions (the 1966 Adam West series, the 1978 Superman movie) the cartoon comes over as a bit so, so. Unlike Filmation's Aquaman (1967), which still stands as the one and only GREAT version of this under water adventure (the 2018 movie was terrible).
A final comment about 60s Filmation cartoons in general, they all have wonderful music cues playing over them and The Batman/Superman Hour is no exception.
I watched this as a kid and found it very entertaining. Today's little ones will probably like it as well.
However, if you are a middle aged adult (like me) wishing to recapture your childhood (by watching this) you may run into an unexpected problem. Despite other Filmation cartoons of this period (Aquaman, Fantastic Voyage) still being fun to watch - this one comes over as a little average???
After 30 minutes or so the limited animation and dull dialogue starts to get your nerves a little. But it was a knockout for 30 minutes, so don't let this review stop you from re-watching it.
Not really sure what the problem is but maybe the fact that both Batman and Superman have been done in such wonderful live action productions (the 1966 Adam West series, the 1978 Superman movie) the cartoon comes over as a bit so, so. Unlike Filmation's Aquaman (1967), which still stands as the one and only GREAT version of this under water adventure (the 2018 movie was terrible).
A final comment about 60s Filmation cartoons in general, they all have wonderful music cues playing over them and The Batman/Superman Hour is no exception.
This is one of my all time favorite cartoon shows. The two elements that made up the show had plenty of action and just enough violence to keep you interested. And even though it was violent, I still turned out to be a normal adult and not a psychotic killer. Too bad that parents groups thought that it was too violent, or my generation would have been spared such shows as Shazam, Isis and Super Friends.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis was the first appearance in animation of Batman and his supporting cast.
- ConexionesEdited from The Adventures of Superboy (1966)
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- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora
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