Spider-Man on television
Encyclopedia : S : SP : SPI : Spider-Man on television
Spider-Man has appeared on television numerous times, in both live-action and animated television programs.
- 1 The series
- 1.1 ''Spider-Man'' - 1967 animated series
- 1.2 ''The Electric Company - Spidey Super Stories''
- 1.3 ''Spider-Man'' - 1977 live action series
- 1.4 ''Spider-Man'' - 1978 tokusatsu series
- 1.5 ''Spider-Man'' - 1981 animated series
- 1.6 ''Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends'' - 1981 animated series
- 1.7 ''Spider-Man'' - 1994 animated series
- 1.8 ''Spider-Man Unlimited'' - 1999 animated series
- 1.9 ''Spider-Man: The New Animated Series'' - 2003 animated series
- 1.10 Future series?
- 2 External links
The series
Spider-Man - 1967 animated series
The first animated series was simply titled Spider-Man, and ran on ABC from 1967 to 1970. The show's first season was produced by Grantray-Lawrence Animation, which soon went bankrupt. In 1968, animator Ralph Bakshi took over. Bakshi's episodes, which suffered from extremely low budgets, were stylized and featured dark ominous settings and pervasive background music. One episode reused complete background animation, characters, and storyline from an episode of Rocket Robin Hood. The series may be best remembered for its theme song. Spider-Man was voiced by Paul Soles. [link]Spider-Man also made two guest appearances in the Spider-Woman animated series also voiced by Soles.
The Electric Company - Spidey Super Stories
Spider-Man was also an occasional character in the 1970s children's educational show The Electric Company which presented brief tales using a combination of animation and live action called the Spidey Super Stories. In addition, in the educational spirit of the series, Spider-Man communicates only in word balloons for the viewer to read. Comic book adaptations of these stories were included in a companion kids-oriented comic book, Spidey Super Stories, published by Marvel.[link]Spider-Man - 1977 live action series
In 1977, a short-lived live action television series was produced called The Amazing Spider-Man, starring Nicholas Hammond in the title role. Although the series earned good ratings, fans complained about its low-budget production values and its writing, which neither followed the comics' spirit nor provided adventures that were distinctively appropriate for the character. It also suffered from a sporadic broadcast schedule. The CBS Television Network cancelled it, along with Wonder Woman, to avoid being called "the superhero network." Several episodes from this series were released as full-length motion pictures outside the U.S. Three movies were released overseas, including Spider-Man (the original TV-movie pilot from 1977), Spider-Man Strikes Back (1978), and The Dragon's Challenge (1981).
Spider-Man - 1978 tokusatsu series
In 1978, a Spider-Man live-action tokusatsu series was produced for Japanese television by Toei Company. Due to a request by Bandai that the show include giant robots and vehicles, it was not a faithful adaptation. Instead of Peter Parker, Spider-Man is . It was not related to the from 1970. This show is notable for introducing the convention to use human controlled mecha or 'Giant Robot' to battle other giants, and was a predecessor of the Super Sentai series, adapted to English as Power Rangers.Spider-Man - 1981 animated series
In 1981, with the creation of the animation studio Marvel Productions Ltd., Marvel endeavored to translate more of their comic characters to television. To garner the attention of the major networks, Marvel first created a new syndicated Spider-Man cartoon that was partially based on the old 1960s show. The strategy worked, and NBC became interested in having their own Spider-Man cartoon.Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends - 1981 animated series
Towards this end the cartoon series Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends was created for NBC featuring Spider-Man, Iceman of the X-Men, and a new character, Firestar. Actor Dan Gilvezan gave voice to this incarnation of the wall-crawler. This series also featured a number of Marvel guest stars, and shared many of its character designs with the solo Spider-Man show produced just before it.Spider-Man - 1994 animated series
In 1994, was made for the Fox Network, (to accompany their X-Men series) with Christopher Daniel Barnes providing the webslinger's voice. This series had a bigger budget and used a novel system of one large story arc per season developed by John Semper. As a result each of the individual 65 episodes (starting with Season 2) were called "chapters." This series more closely reflected the comic book as it focused on the personal conflict Peter Parker felt as Spider-Man, instead of following the action-oriented shows that preceded it. [link]Spider-Man Unlimited - 1999 animated series
In 1999, an animated series named Spider-Man Unlimited was developed for Fox (intended to be an Expanded Universe final season of the 1994 show) in which Spider-Man is transported to an animated Counter-Earth inspired by the one created by the High Evolutionary in early 1970s comics. Here Spidey was voiced by Rino Romano. [link]Spider-Man: The New Animated Series - 2003 animated series
In 2003, another television series adaptation, this time using computer animation was produced by Mainframe Entertainment for Sony Pictures Television and broadcast on MTV; it featured characters and continuity from the 2002 Spider-Man film, as well as the character Kingpin as depicted in the Daredevil movie. Spider-Man was voiced by Neil Patrick Harris.Future series?
Marvel Studios CEO, Avi Arad revealed that Marvel and Sony are currently making a new Spider-Man cartoon which would come out the same time as Spider-Man 3.[link]
External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
