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IMDbPro

Les quatre fantastiques

Original title: Fantastic 4
  • TV Series
  • 1967–1968
  • TV-Y7-FV
  • 22m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,836
90
Jack DeLeon, Paul Frees, Gerald Mohr, and Jo Ann Pflug in Les quatre fantastiques (1967)
SuperheroActionAdventureAnimationFamilySci-Fi

Four costumed superheroes battle the world's most terrifying villains.Four costumed superheroes battle the world's most terrifying villains.Four costumed superheroes battle the world's most terrifying villains.

  • Creators
    • Jack Kirby
    • Stan Lee
  • Stars
    • Paul Frees
    • Gerald Mohr
    • Jack DeLeon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,836
    90
    • Creators
      • Jack Kirby
      • Stan Lee
    • Stars
      • Paul Frees
      • Gerald Mohr
      • Jack DeLeon
    • 13User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes20

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Photos17

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    Top cast18

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    Paul Frees
    Paul Frees
    • The Thing…
    • 1967–1968
    Gerald Mohr
    Gerald Mohr
    • Mr. Fantastic…
    • 1967–1968
    Jack DeLeon
    Jack DeLeon
    • The Human Torch…
    • 1967–1968
    Jo Ann Pflug
    Jo Ann Pflug
    • Invisible Girl…
    • 1967–1968
    Joseph Sirola
    Joseph Sirola
    • Doctor Doom
    • 1967
    Marvin Miller
    Marvin Miller
    • Gamma Ray…
    • 1967
    Hal Smith
    Hal Smith
    • Klaw
    • 1967
    Don Messick
    • Kurrgo
    • 1967
    Regis Cordic
    Regis Cordic
    • Diablo
    • 1967
    Charles Spidar
    • Citizen
    • 1967
    Vic Perrin
    Vic Perrin
    • Doctor Kragoff…
    • 1967
    Henry Corden
    Henry Corden
    • Attuma…
    • 1967–1968
    Mike Road
    Mike Road
    • Additional Voices…
    • 1967
    Ted Cassidy
    Ted Cassidy
    • Galactus
    • 1967
    Janet Waldo
    Janet Waldo
    • Princess Pearla
    • 1967
    Tol Avery
    Tol Avery
    • Warlord Morrat
    • 1967
    Ginny Tyler
    Ginny Tyler
    • Princess Anelle
    • 1967
    Frank Gerstle
    Frank Gerstle
    • Blastaar
    • 1968
    • Creators
      • Jack Kirby
      • Stan Lee
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.61.7K
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    Featured reviews

    primeop

    The Classics never die

    In my eyes, this version of the Fantastic Four is the best overall. Number one, all the voices are great except for Doctor Doom... he's not really scary enough. But Reed and all the gang have their ultimate voices here, especially Reed and Ben! Even the Mole Man has a cool voice.

    In the Silver Surfer/Galactus episode, they captured the essence of both characters far better than the 90's cartoon did in their telling of the tale (but they more than made up for it the following season). You get to see the Molecule Man, Super Skrull, and you KINDA get to see Namor... the other toon company had the rights for Namor's own series, so they actually replaced him with a Triton like character.

    The animation may not look all that great, but the tone and mood are just like the classic comics that inspired them.
    8redryan64

    Stan Lee & Jack Kirby's monumental Comic Book Feature Fantastically adapted & Faithfully Rendered to its Fantastic Origin & Storyline! so, "It's Clobberin' Time!"

    The move to television of Comic Book adaptations was surely in full swing or beyond that zenith when Hanna-Barbera brought us the "FANTASYIC 4", Saturday mornings, Fall TV Season in 1967 was the time and location. While CBS went with features from Filmation Associates like DC Comics' SUPERMAN/SUPERBOY('66), SUPERMAN/AQUAMAN Hour of Adventure('67-,68) and BATMAN/SUPERMAN Hour('68)(with other features like GREEN LANTERN, ATOM, HAWKMAN and "...all the Super-Super Heroes of THE JUSTICE LEAGUE OF America!", ABC stayed with FANTASTIC 4 and the other Marvel Comics' Star Feature, "SPIDER-MAN"('67).

    "SPIDER-MAN" was not however also a Hanna-Barbera Project. It was produced by Ralph Bakshi, Steve Krantz & Company(the future Producers of the animated feature adaptation of Robert Crumb's FRITZ THE CAT(1972). Because both half-hour shows aired back to back Saturday Mornings, had they shared a common production company, there would doubtless been plenty of "crossovers"(in comic book jargon, a Cameo Appearance by a character from a different feature, but from the same publisher.

    It was Stan Lee and Marvel Comics who turned "crossovers" from the occasional, to the expected! And returning to "FABTASTIC 4"; we find it to be a much more 'realistic' rendering than most any other animated series. Much like the Fleischer Brothers/Famous Studios Paramount Pictures' SUPERMAN Cartoons of the 1940's, the art design of characters and backgrounds were all adaptations of the Comic Pages.

    The 'look' of the production, together with a faithful transference of the personalities, the foibles and the rivalries of the team, all add up to a cinematic/electronic clone of the Comic Page Originals.

    The casting of proper voices for the group is the crowning glory of the hour, in order to make the series nearly perfect. Ideally the casting would involve examination of the Comic Page personalities of the principals. To make sure the voice would be fitting, proper and supportive amplification of the characters and plot lines, I would choose the voices as if we were doing a Radio Program. They did do that thing! The cast of voice actors led by veteran character actor and Road Show Bogart, Gerald Mohr(Mr. Fantastic/Reed Richards), Joann Pflugg(Susan Storm/Invisible Girl),Jack Flounders(Johnny Storm/The Human Torch) and the Dean of Voice Actors, Paul Freese(Ben Grimm/The Thing, many, many others).

    The weekly stories were neat adaptations of those Stan Lee/Jack Kirby masterful early Marvel Fantastic Four Classic sagas. We saw the "Screen Debut" of such great friends and foes as: The Mole Man, Super Skrull, Galactus, Silver Surfer, The Watcher and Dr. Doom. Because of the rights of animation adaption belonged to the previously mentioned Ralph Bakshi/Steve Bakshi/Robert L. Lawrence & Associates, their battles with Prince Namor, The SUB-MARINER and THE INCREDIBLE HULK as well as 'crossover' meetings with CAPTAIN America, THE MIGHTY THOR and THE INVINCIBLE IRON MAN, were not allowed to be portrayed on the TV Screen, at that time.

    The producers added appropriate Musical Theme and incidental music to underscore the action. Hanna-Barbera was well equipped to assure that this audio-emotional aspect of the stories was taken care of properly. They did.

    As a sort of dress rehearsal or a pre-courser to "FANTASTIC 4" and other of their other Comic Book-like characters*, Hanna-Barberra had given us "JONNY QUEST"(1964-65) as a Friday Night, early Prime-Time Entry on ABC.

    NOTE:* Just as The Comic Book Hero was adaptable to animation, so too we saw some original cartoon series that were very much in the Comic Book Hero tradition. Hanna-Barberra, for example, gave us SPACE GHOST(1966-68,1994-2004) and THE MIGHTY MIGHTOR(1967-'68). And by the by, SPACE GHOST was succrssfully adapted to his own Comic Book! So, the Wheel has spun a full turn, once again!
    9jedi1007

    One of the Best Superhero series ever!

    This Fantastic 4 cartoon series nailed it. It ranks right up there with the "X-Men" and "Spiderman" series of the '90s. The art direction matched the comics, the choice of villains was on the money, and most of the stories were taken directly from the comics. How about that? A TV series that has respect/regard for the source material? What a novel concept. These are worth seeking out for any fan of the FF4 comics. AND SPEAKING OF WHICH. . .There are now two FF4 films and this series has yet to see the light of day on DVD! What's up with that? I'm sure there's that issue of ownership of the rights, but no DVD release tie-in? The other FF4 series don't hold a candle to this one! I mean, c'mon, Herbie the Robot(ouch!)? This FF4 kept it real. Unfortunately, the only way to see this is if you have the Boomerang network(which I don't) Let's hope that the folks at Time Warner get the led out and get this series on DVD soon!
    zahno

    A lot of fun for fans of the comic book

    The stories and art direction for the series more than make up for its spare animation. These cartoons were made when companies understood that translating a comic to the screen requires keeping intact the elements that make the comic enjoyable and successful. If you enjoy the Lee/Kirby era of the Fantastic Four, you'll enjoy these faithful adaptations. Series is a lot of fun.
    7SnoopyStyle

    classic cartoon

    Reed Richards, his wife Susan Storm, her brother Johnny, and Reed's college friend and war hero pilot Ben Grimm travel into space. They are bombarded by cosmic rays and turned into the Fantastic Four. Reed becomes the stretchy Mr. Fantastic. Sue is the Invisible Girl. Ben is the Thing with the strength of a thousand men. Johnny becomes "Flame On", the Human Torch. Based in the Baxter Building in New York City, they battle many threats facing the world.

    Hanna-Barbera produced this Marvel property. Compared to its cousin Spider-Man, it doesn't have the iconic song although it does have the jazzy theme. It's not quite as action-packed fun. It's better than the 1978 series which ran without the Human Torch. This lasted for a season. Ownership probably separated the two shows. It also is more bent towards sci-fi. This is a classic cartoon at the dawn of a new era.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In the fall of 1966, Sy Fischer, a television agent who at the time worked at the powerful Ashley Famous Agency where his job was to sell shows on behalf of his clients, one day noticed his son Stuart reading a Fantastic Four comic book. Fischer saw potential in the Fantastic Four when he asked his son if this comic book could be a good cartoon who enthusiastically said, "Yes!" The very next day, Fischer got on the phone with Joseph Barbera, the co-founder and head of Hanna-Barbera and told him of this wonderful comic by Marvel Comics and recommended that Hanna-Barbera get the rights to develop it for Saturday morning. After taking a look at the FF, Barbera agreed. Both Joe Barbera and Sy Fischer then contacted Stan Lee and asked if the rights were available and luckily enough they were. A deal was quickly made between the two companies and Hanna-Barbera put the show into development and pitched it to ABC, and quickly it was on the ABC Saturday morning schedule for the Fall of 1967.
    • Connections
      Featured in Les Muppet Babies: Comic Capers (1989)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1978 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Fantastic Four
    • Production companies
      • Hanna-Barbera Productions
      • Marvel Comics Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      22 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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