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The Real Superman - 1942

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
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14,393
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
Netflix dropped this off yesterday and we've been watching it in bits. The Max Fleischer Superman animated shorts from the early forties. They're amazingly evocative, though my kids find the animation pretty clunky. To me, it looks wonderfully hand-drawn and with much more character than, say, Lion King.

The stories are formulaic, of course. Evil doer is up to mischief, The Daily Planet sends Clark Kent and Lois Lane out for the scoop, Lois loses Clark the weenie on the way, Clark sees what's up, "This looks like a job {voice change} for Superman!" He shows up in the nick of time to save Lois, and gets a swell story in the papers next day.

The Magnetic Telescope, Volcano! The electric Earthquake...

What's not to like?


11547120.jpg
 

jake_fink

Call Me a Cab
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2,279
Location
Taranna
I love these too. I have them on dvd, but when my son and I are watching Maxwell DeMille's Movies in Your Home on the computer in the evening we'll watch one of the Superman cartoons between Flip the Frog and Betty Boop - just coz we both love them. They are total eye candy. They were a big influence on the Batman animated series of the 90s and they were ripped off outright for the best part of the Sky Captain movie. The stories are a little.... flat, though.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
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33,840
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Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
It's also worth noting that the excellent voice work in these cartoons is provided by Bud Collyer and Joan Alexander -- who were also playing the lead roles in the "Adventures of Superman" radio serial at the time. It was there that Collyer originated the idea of playing Superman's voice an octave lower than Clark's -- the Clark Kent voice was actually Collyer's natural voice, which he was also using to hawk Duz every afternoon as announcer for "The Goldbergs". While his identity as the actor who played Superman was supposed to be a closely held secret, any kid who listened to Ma's soap operas when home from school wouldn't have had too much trouble figuring it out...

Collyer and Alexander would return to the roles in the mid-sixties for a Saturday morning "Superman" cartoon series -- which was far below the Fleischer standard animation-wise, but the voice work was, as always, excellent.
 

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,262
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
I have loved these FOREVER. They used to run all the time on local NYC station kid shows back in the late 50s/early 60s when I was a kid, because they were public domain. And they were nearly the first thing I tracked down when I started collecting films - I got the first one on Super 8 sound back in 1972.

It's heartening to see that folks are still discovering them and getting blown away today...
 

The Wolf

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,153
Location
Santa Rosa, Calif
a big fan as well

I believe a DVD came out recently is the definitive Fleischer Superman. I'll try to find the name and maker.
Ironically on my various classic cartoon DVDs I have six Supermans on a disc that is suppose to be Popeye. It has one Popeye cartoon (from 1956), the over-used Woody Woodpecker cartoon, "The Pantry Panic" and the rest is Superman.

Sincerely,
The Wolf
 

Hondo

One Too Many
Messages
1,655
Location
Northern California
Max Fleischer

Jack Armstrong said:
The Fleischer Superman cartoons -- and tons of other films from the 30s, 40s and 50s -- can all be downloaded from :

http://www.archive.org/details/feature_films

Wow thanks, like many of you, I too recall these on TV many many moons ago. I loved these, and if I ran into them by chance, I'd quickly turn and stay and watch, Wow! I loved his Lois Lane with her black hair in bangs, how great they were, Amazon has a great selection if your a collector, I'll add these 2 mine as well, right as Superman should be, It was sad with I did a search on Max Fleischer, he was nearly broke and in poor health, he didn't see the wealth of his life’s work, for had he lived longer, he would have gained millions ($$) by signing a contract, his early animation deserves much credit for work done today, life, old age, can be so cruel, "death be not proud" :(
 

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