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Super Friends

  • TV Series
  • 1973–1985
  • TV-G
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
5K
YOUR RATING
Adam West, Norman Alden, Jack Angel, Michael Rye, William Callaway, Danny Dark, Shannon Farnon, Casey Kasem, and Ted Knight in Super Friends (1973)
Super Friends: Mysterious Space Traveler
Play trailer1:57
7 Videos
99+ Photos
Hand-Drawn AnimationSuperheroActionAdventureAnimationFamilyFantasySci-Fi

The greatest of the DC Comics superheroes work together to uphold the good with the help of some young proteges.The greatest of the DC Comics superheroes work together to uphold the good with the help of some young proteges.The greatest of the DC Comics superheroes work together to uphold the good with the help of some young proteges.

  • Creator
    • Gardner Fox
  • Stars
    • Danny Dark
    • Casey Kasem
    • Olan Soule
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Creator
      • Gardner Fox
    • Stars
      • Danny Dark
      • Casey Kasem
      • Olan Soule
    • 73User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes93

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    Videos7

    Meet Maxwell Lord: The 'Wonder Woman 1984' Big Bad
    Clip 3:57
    Meet Maxwell Lord: The 'Wonder Woman 1984' Big Bad
    Super Friends: Mysterious Space Traveler
    Trailer 1:57
    Super Friends: Mysterious Space Traveler
    Super Friends: Mysterious Space Traveler
    Trailer 1:57
    Super Friends: Mysterious Space Traveler
    Super Friends: Batman Sees Blue Jet
    Trailer 0:33
    Super Friends: Batman Sees Blue Jet
    Super Friends: Season 1
    Trailer 2:02
    Super Friends: Season 1
    Super Friends: Superman Carries Aliens
    Trailer 0:45
    Super Friends: Superman Carries Aliens
    Super Friends: Superman's Weather Warning
    Trailer 0:56
    Super Friends: Superman's Weather Warning

    Photos925

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Danny Dark
    • Superman…
    • 1973–1985
    Casey Kasem
    Casey Kasem
    • Robin…
    • 1973–1985
    Olan Soule
    Olan Soule
    • Batman…
    • 1973–1984
    Shannon Farnon
    Shannon Farnon
    • Wonder Woman…
    • 1973–1983
    Michael Bell
    Michael Bell
    • Gleek…
    • 1977–1984
    Frank Welker
    Frank Welker
    • Marvin…
    • 1973–1985
    Louise Williams
    Louise Williams
    • Jayna…
    • 1977–1983
    William Woodson
    • Narrator…
    • 1977–1985
    William Callaway
    William Callaway
    • Aquaman…
    • 1978–1984
    Michael Rye
    • Green Lantern…
    • 1977–1985
    Jack Angel
    Jack Angel
    • Samurai…
    • 1977–1985
    Norman Alden
    Norman Alden
    • Aquaman…
    • 1973–1977
    Stan Jones
    Stan Jones
    • Lex Luthor…
    • 1978–1985
    Stanley Ralph Ross
    Stanley Ralph Ross
    • Gorilla Grodd…
    • 1978–1985
    Buster Jones
    • Black Vulcan…
    • 1977–1984
    Bob Holt
    Bob Holt
    • Additional Voices…
    • 1978–1983
    Ted Cassidy
    Ted Cassidy
    • Black Manta…
    • 1977–1978
    Vic Perrin
    Vic Perrin
    • Sinestro…
    • 1978–1983
    • Creator
      • Gardner Fox
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews73

    7.24.9K
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    Featured reviews

    vs661966

    Good show, but the Legion of Doom episodes are better

    As a kid I used to watch this show every Saturday morning on ABC. This show featured Superman, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, Batman & Robin, and the Wonder Twins, Zan & Jayna, with their pet monkey Gleek. I did like the Wonder Twins but Gleek was annoying. Aquaman was my favorite character, although he was unfortunately relegated to flying around with Wonder Woman in her invisible jet whenever the action took place on land or in space.

    A previous reviewer was correct in the format used: there were three mini-episodes, approximately 10 minutes in length, with one half-hour episode. The first mini-episode featured a pair of the Superfriends battling evil scientists or scheming enemies. The second mini-episode featured the Wonder Twins in stories about adolescents who were either up to no good or were in dangerous predicaments. The third was the half-hour episode with the entire cast, generally battling aliens or other life forms from far away galaxies. The final mini-episode paired one principal Superfriend with a guest Superfriend such as Green Lantern, Flash, Apache Chief, Samurai, Black Vulcan, Rima, Atom, or Hawkman & Hawgirl.

    The stories were good but were definitely preachy. I liked the mini-episodes that paired Aquaman and Superman together. My favorite half-hour episode dealt with an evil zombie woman named Minerva or Medusa or something like that(she didn't have any eyeballs, just white eyes!) who, along with her other female assistants, planned to transform all the women of Earth into similar zombies in order to use them to help her rid the planet of all men by changing them into microchips to be stored on tape so that she could ultimately conquer the world. When Wonder Woman and Jayna, thinking they would be undetected as females, infiltrated her base of operations, they were transformed into zombies with white eyes. They then transformed Aquaman, Batman, Robin, and Zan into microchips and stored them on tape. They thought they also did that to Superman, but he had substituted a statute of himself; he then singlehandedly saved the other Superfiends, changed all the women of Earth back to normal, saved all the men by reversing the deeds of the zombies, and finally caught the main zombie woman.

    Also, there originally were several brief spots throughout each program that featured the Superfriends dispensing health advice and safety tips to children and teens.
    grendelkhan

    "Meanwhile, back at the Hall of Justice..."

    Ah, the Super Friends. Anyone who grew up in the 70's and calls themselves a comic book fan has a special place in their heart for this show; the first cartoon to depict the Justice League of America (well, apart from the Filmation cartoons, but they didn't have the big guns of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman in the JLA cartoons). Some hated it because it was watered down, with no memorable villains. Other enjoyed its charm and goofy fun. Some of us were glad to see any show with superheroes.

    Now, in the 70's, the networks didn't allow much in the ways of violence in cartoons (except for Bugs and company), so we didn't get any slobberknockers with the bad guys. Still, there were memorable conflicts, with some creativity involved. Yeah, most of the "villains" were misguided and not evil, but there was fun to be had.

    Some of my personal favorites were the GEEC episode, where a computer controls all of man's machines, only to go haywire when a mouse gets inside it; The planet-splitting episode, where Superman's origin is retold; the Gulliver episode, where everyone is reduced to the size of a doll; and the episode with the Flash.

    The series went out of its way to present environmental issues, moral dilemmas, and other thought-provoking conflicts. It had far greater educational value than the "commercial" cartoons of the 80's and was far more entertaining than most. Yes, Wendy and Marvin were annoying at times, but they did have some value. I'll take them over the Wonder Twins any day. Besides, Marvin made it into Alex Ross' Kingdom Come.

    If you wanted action in the 70's, you had to find Jonny Quest reruns or catch Speed Racer in syndication. The Super Friends would suffice until something better came along. It took two more series, but arrive it did; and, it still carried the name, Super Friends.
    comic207

    It didn't last long enough

    This was an even better season, with improved art and animation. With the introduction of Cyborg to the TV, the stories seemed to improve both in characterization and plot. For Batman, it became less about the utility belts and more about the man. For Wonder Woman, she finally got to flex her muscles (I think she did last season, too.).

    And some of the stories were risque for the time, most notably in "The Fear," which retold Batman's origin and the murder of his parents (The writer of this and the Fox/WB Batman series says he can't believe TPTB let him do it), and "The Death of Superman."

    Why they let this series end after one season is beyond me. I truly loved this show and I'm glad Cartoon Network has been rerunning them, even if they *are* on the thin line between Saturday night and Sunday morning.
    Cinema_Lover

    Truly Excellent

    Now this is how you make an animated series based on superheroes. "Super Powers Team: The Galactic Gaurdians" aired in 1985-'86 and it was the last SuperFriends show based on the Justice League of America from the 1973-1986 run. In my opinion, this was also head and shoulders the best. The animation is greatly improved from any earlier SuperFriends show. The characters act like mature adults, and a few of them even have some distinct personalities that separate them from the rest of the JLA. There were also no stupid teenage tag along like Wendy & Marvin or Zan & Jayna on this show. And thankfully, no stupid animals like Wonder Dog or Gleek. A new character Cyborg is introduced, he is an African American teenager, but he is not a silly background extra that screws up and gets captured repeatedly so Superman and Green Lantern could come save the day the way the previous non-White heroes (Black Vulcan/Lightning, Samurai, and Apache Chief) did on the other shows. Cyborg is a great character that is not a cardboard cut out of Superman. Firestorm is back from the "Super Powers" series from the previous year, and he too is in top form. Wonder Woman acts, well like a woman and we see her life more fleshed out. Superman even behaves more adult like and does not have the ridiculous God-like powers he had in the 70s. The Batman in this show is more in line with the comic book character.

    Here Batman behaves like a very mature grown man, a man that is tormented over his compulsion to go out and fight crime. He is also a detective in this show like he should be, and not a blundering buffoon that pulls out all kinds of stupid gadgets from that little utility belt. 'The Fear' is a stand out episode that illustrates the difference in Batman in this show from the previous SuperFriends. It is ironic that this Batman is the most serious, since he is voiced by Adam West who played the idiot Batman in the 1960s TV series. Green Lantern, Flash, Aquaman, and Samurai don't get a whole lot of time devoted to them, but at least they don't do anything embarrassing.

    The JLA team primarily butts heads with the villainous Darkseid and his cronies Dessad and Kavlik, but the Joker and Scarecrow turn up in two episodes as well. I always get the feeling that the two "Super Powers Team" series from the mid 80s doesn't have the incredibly loyal Gen Xer following that 1978's "Challenge of the SuperFriends" enjoys because Darkseid and Dessad were too comic book heavy for mainstream viewers. The plots could be a bit comic book heavy as well. That and I think children were just burned out on SuperFriends by 1985, the whole thing had been around for 12 years at that point. "Challenge" was a great and memorable show no doubt, and DC comic book villains like Lex Luthor and Black Manta were there, but the Legion of Doom tended to formulate rather childish plans to knock off the SuperFriends and rule the planet. Nevertheless a kid today will probably look at this show and still laugh at it while finding a ton of problems with it (because there are problems). "The Super Powers Team" is not nearly as rounded out as the current Justice League animated series. But I remember being blown away by how far the whole SuperFriends deal had come since the stupid early years of the 70s when Wonder Dog or the annoying space monkey Gleek would hang around the Hall of Justice with those kids. A long way indeed. Watch this show, "SuperFriends: The Legendary Super Powers Team", and "Challenge of the SuperFriends". They are the 3 best ones, with "The All-New SuperFriends Hour" and "The Worlds Greatest SuperFriends" being not all that bad and entertaining at times. The worst one remains the original "SuperFriends" from 1973-1977.
    comic207

    This is where I first got into comics

    I had seen a couple of the 1973 Super Friends cartoons, but don't remember enough about them from that time. There was Superman, Batman and Robin, and the first time I had seen Wonder Woman and Aquaman. When this series premiered, I had noticed that Wendy, Marvin, and Wonder Dog were gone (In retrospect, an improvement). The series had several formats. The first story was a team-up between the central Super Friends (Superman, Batman *and* Robin, Wonder Woman, and Aquaman), followed by a solo Wonder Twins story, an extended story with the entire main cast of Super Friends, and the part I lived for...a team-up with a Super Friend and another super-hero...this is how I first learned about the Flash, Green Lantern, Hawkman and Hawkgirl, Rima, the Atom, and other "made-up" heroes like Black Vulcan (who should've been Black Lightning), Samurai (whose wind powers reminded me of the Red Tornado), and Apache Chief (can you spell stereotypical?). I might have the line-up mixed up.

    The art was pretty good even if the stories were simplistic (again, in retrospect). When I found out many characters had their own comics, I had to read about them, and the dominoes rolled...I hope to see those team-ups again.

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    Related interests

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    Hand-Drawn Animation
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    Superhero
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    Action
    Still frame
    Adventure
    Daveigh Chase, Rumi Hiiragi, and Mari Natsuki in Spirited Away (2001)
    Animation
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    Family
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Superman (Danny Dark) and Robin (Casey Kasem) were the only two characters voiced by the same performer in every Super Friends series.
    • Goofs
      Apache Chief and Giganta can both grow to 50 feet in height. However, in the opening credits, they are seen to be taller than skyscrapers that are much larger than 50 feet tall.
    • Quotes

      [repeated line]

      Narrator: Meanwhile, at the Hall of Justice...

    • Connections
      Edited into Superman 75th Anniversary (2013)

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    FAQ32

    • How many seasons does Super Friends have?Powered by Alexa
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    • Who are the members of the Legion of Doom?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 8, 1973 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Challenge of the Super Friends
    • Filming locations
      • Hanna-Barbera Studios - 3400 Cahuenga Boulevard W, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Hanna-Barbera Productions
      • Warner Bros. Television
      • Eric Porter Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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