Une histoire animée originale basée sur le personnage de bande dessinée Marvel, Peter Parker, qui, après avoir été mordu par une araignée radioactive, assume des pouvoirs extraordinaires.Une histoire animée originale basée sur le personnage de bande dessinée Marvel, Peter Parker, qui, après avoir été mordu par une araignée radioactive, assume des pouvoirs extraordinaires.Une histoire animée originale basée sur le personnage de bande dessinée Marvel, Peter Parker, qui, après avoir été mordu par une araignée radioactive, assume des pouvoirs extraordinaires.
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe theme song for this show was composed by Paul Francis Webster and Bob Harris. The theme song was recorded at RCA Studios in Toronto (where the cartoon was also produced) featuring 12 CBC vocalists (members of the Billy Van Singers, and Laurie Bower Singers groups) who added to the musical backing track supplied by RCA Studios, New York. The singers were paid only for the session and have had no residuals from its use since then. The song became as synonymous with Spider-Man as his red and blue costume.
- GaffesDue to the low quality animation, Spider-Man can be regularly seen swinging off webs that appear to be connected to nothing but the sky. This mistake has been the subject of a fair few memes.
- Citations
[theme song]
Chorus: Spider-Man, Spider-Man, / Does whatever a spider can / Spins a web, any size / Catches thieves just like flies / Look out! Here comes the Spider-Man! / Is he strong? Listen, bud, / He's got radioactive blood / Can he swing from a thread? / Take a look overhead! / Hey there! There goes the Spider-Man! / In the chill of the night, at the scene of the crime, / like a streak of light, he arrives just in time! / Spider-Man, Spider-Man, / Friendly neighborhood Spider-Man / Wealth and fame, he's ignored / Action is his reward! / To him, Life is a great big bang-up / Wherever there's a hang-up/ You'll find the Spider-Man!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Les Bébés Muppet: Comic Capers (1989)
I love that Peter Parker sounds like a boy and Spidey sounds like a man. It's the uni, don't you know.
They best part for me is the theme song, one of the best of all time, and all of the incidental music (even the bulk of the special effects). Crime jazzy and dark. All of the episodes had great, swinging musical textures and overtones.
The Bakshi stuff is stellar. Really idiosyncratic and daring. Spidey ends up removed to different dimensions and levels of the earth, battling the supernatural than the super- villainous. The humans are generally pawns caught in a cosmic battle between good and evil and Spidey comes through, natch. The oft-referred to backgrounds (black, dark blue, purples, fiery reds, etc., were awesome, as were the castles and thorny, leafless backdrops (ala Sleeping Beauty). The color schemes were sickening (purple and off greens with splotchy reds and hints of bruisy yellow. Brilliant. The music also took a further leap from poppier crime jazz and soda stand teen rock to psych-out freak rock interludes, darker crime jazz, and even odd sci-fi and kraut-rockish stretches. Watch the first episode on disc 3 or 4, the one with the Mole Men. The music is absolutely incredible.
My two kids, 3 and 5, respectively, love these Spider-Man cartoons. They hold up for me, as well.
- ycam
- 16 déc. 2010
- Lien permanent