What's new

Welcome to the DiscussionHub 👋, Guest

Become part of our community! Register or log in to connect with other members, share your thoughts, and explore the forum. It's free and easy to join.

  • We have now changed the post count rule to post your website in the Website Directory and the Member Showcase to 10, this was previously 50 but we felt it was too high. You can read more about this change here >>> https://discussionhub.net/threads/update-of-rules-for-the-member-showcase.4356/

TV Database Superman: The Animated Series (1996)

OmegaMeistro
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
4.00/5 1 Votes

Genre: Animation,Action & Adventure,Sci-Fi & Fantasy,Kids

Director: Bruce Timm,Alan Burnett

First aired:

Last air date:

Show status: Ended

Overview: Superman, an incredibly powerful alien from the planet Krypton, defends Metropolis from supercriminals. Superman hides his identity behind the glasses of Clark Kent; a mild-mannered reporter for the newspaper the Daily Planet. At the Daily Planet Superman works with fellow reporter Lois Lane and photographer Jimmy Olsen.

Where to watch

Cast

    • Tim Daly

      Superman / Clark Kent (voice)
    • Dana Delany

      Lois Lane (voice)
Show information in first post provided by The Movie Database
Superman: The Animated Series
Blasts from the Past (1)
Season: 2
Episode: 1
Air date: 1997-09-08

Guest stars: Clancy Brown,Leslie Easterbrook,Jim Cummings,Ron Perlman,Corey Burton,Lauren Tom,Victor Brandt
Superman decides to release Mala, a Kryptonian criminal, from the Phantom Zone, but when Mala proves too power-hungry for this world, Superman tries to send her back. Mala escapes with the Phantom Zone Projector and releases Krypton's most notorious traitor, Jax-Ur.

Mala and Jax-Ur because WB didn't have the rights to General Zod at this point in time. lol

It's a pretty standard "Superman is too naive and trusts a stranger from his home planet" storyline that goes about as predictable as you'd expect.
Superman: The Animated Series
Blasts from the Past (2)
Season: 2
Episode: 2
Air date: 1997-09-09

Guest stars: George Dzundza,Leslie Easterbrook,Ron Perlman,Ron Glass,Keri Tombazian,Corey Burton,Victor Brandt
Superman and Professor Hamilton start building a new Phantom Zone projector to balance the odds. However Jax-Ur and Mala manage to send Superman into the Phantom Zone, and then destroy the Projector. As their decimating attacks begin, it's up to Lois and Professor Hamilton to rescue the Man of Steel in time.

Because of how powerful he is, it's hard to write a good Superman episode. You have to set him up with villains that could either match his strength or manipulate him, and considering how naive the Big Blue can be early on in his career, especially in Superman: TAS, it can be pretty easy to perform the latter.

Due to copyright issues regarding General Zod involving the ongoing lawsuits between Warner Bros. and Siegel and Shuster, it's the likely reason we got diet Zod instead this episode with, uh... *looks it up* Jax-Ur and... Mala (which means "spicy" in Mandarin), the latter of whom acted more like a jilted lover than a war criminal to be feared as she only lost her shit after Superman said they're not a thing in front of Lois Lane, but not when she had eavesdropped on him talking about sending her to the Phantom Zone in an earlier scene.

This resulted in a pretty generic beat 'em up manner of resolving the plot, with the two criminals barely making an effort to dodge the ray beam that sends them back to the Phantom Zone, like two deer in the headlights.

What's worse is that this squandered any storytelling opportunity to explore Kal-El's feelings about his heritage, or seeing two of his Kryptonians. Instead, the best we got from Supes was a shrug. Just another day at the office.
Superman: The Animated Series
Ghost in the Machine
Season: 2
Episode: 14
Air date: 1997-09-29

Guest stars: Clancy Brown,Lauri Fraser,Michael Horse,Corey Burton,Lisa Edelstein
Lex Luthor is forced to build a new body for Brainiac who has downloaded himself into LexCorp's computers.

“What went wrong? Premature product launch?” - Lois dropping a Freudian bomb on Lex

The problem with CW shows, as one might have observed, is the myriad amount of plot and character inconsistencies and convenient plot-devices - basically, your average television production issues. With Saturday morning cartoons, that problem is equally relevant, perhaps even more amplified as producers dismiss them as merely a children's TV show and doesn't deserve the type of coherence or intelligent writing a real TV show would receive.

While Batman: TAS mostly had a better treatment of intelligent writing (though not always; see "I've Got Batman in My Basement"), Superman: TAS just simply didn't have that privilege, to the point where showrunner Bruce Timm received exaggerated claims of "hating Superman," favoring the Dark Knight. While a cartoon like Disney's Gargoyles, to make an example, would have character decisions that still can be justified and are perhaps even complex (albeit in a family-friendly Saturday morning cartoon setting), it's episodes like "Ghost in the Machine" that exemplified how the TV animation medium can sometimes compromise consistent characterisations.

Because in order to believe that Lex Luthor is somehow dumb enough to let himself be trapped by Brainiac, you'd require zero knowledge of whom Lex Luthor is outside of the animated series. In-universe, it makes sense, but it also makes Lex look painfully pathetic. Perhaps an argument could be made that that is the point, to make Lex a pitiful human who's literally worked into exhaustion by the Kryptonian AI to build him a new body, perhaps even dumb enough to only realize that the killer-bot might kill him once he outlives his usefulness at the very last moment, when he's finished building Brainiac's new body.

But even so, Brainiac is no genius either. Aside from the goofy-ass name ("I am smart, ergo, I am Brainiac"), the super intelligent software decided to make itself vulnerable... by turning into hardware. Why? Why turn into the one thing your adversary - AKA Superman - could literally punch or just zap a magnetic laser gun at? Then again, that's probably asking too much from, as I mentioned, "a Saturday morning cartoon."

Mercy Graves is an interesting addition to the Superman lore, however, even if she's nowhere as compelling as Harley Quinn. She love for Lex is obviously one-sided, and yet Lex isn't nearly as abusive to her as The Joker is towards Harleen. However, unlike Dr. Quinzel, Mercy's motivation is perhaps not a kind of mad love, but merely that she has nowhere else to go. Or as the Big Blue puts it at the end of this episode, "Just a stray." That's powerful stuff, and it's a shame the rest of the character writing couldn't be this compelling.
Superman: The Animated Series
Action Figures
Season: 2
Episode: 9
Air date: 1997-09-20

Guest stars: George Dzundza,David Kaufman,Ernie Hudson,Hassan Nicholas,Lauren Robinson,Malcolm McDowell,Lauren Tom
On an island with an active volcano that is about to erupt, Metallo appears with temporary amnesia.

On a purely surface level, Metallo could be compared to Frankenstein's monster, but that would be somewhat disingenuous as it ignores the character's criminal and hedonistic background. Instead, John Corben is more akin to Emil Blonsky (aka The Abomination), a fighter who was used as a tool against the hero and ended up becoming something less than human.

The concept of a hedonistic man who's forced into an unfeeling shell should be a fascinating subject to explore, on paper anyway, as is the concept of said man losing his memory and reexploring the humanity within this metallic husk. It's why the first-half of the episode (more like the first-third) was at its strongest, focusing on an amnesiac Metallo coming out from his deep-sea baptism like a newborn child as he stumbles across a couple of kids. This should've been the angle the episode went with, but alas, this is but a Saturday morning cartoon.

So instead, we have Metallo crushing the doll with the S stitched across its chest and cursing Superman's name as he remembers his sworn adversary. There could be a way to handle this direction of the plot as well, such as having John express what he lost because of Superman's existence, but instead, we merely have a vessel of blind hatred and vengeance that sprouts villainous line like "Have a drink on me, Superman" while dunking the hero's head into molten lava. Brilliant.

It really doesn't help that the episode is ironically hilarious, like instead of flying the geologists away to safely, Superman chose to punch collapsing debris from the volcano like he's playing Fruit Ninja with solid rock, causing the smaller pieces to smash the campground and the geological equipment anyway. He also manages to grab a boulder and create a trench across the surface of the volcano, an amazing feat of strength that he periodically displays when it's convenient to the plot, but when lifting falling bridges or hell, punching out Metallo, he's holding back his strength like he's Spider-Man.

And that fight with Metallo also had an unintentionally hilarious beginning, with John exposing his Kryptonite heart, only to have Superman recite, and I quote, "It won't work this time" and yeeting the villain away without harm thanks to his Anti-Kryptonite suit, a suit that easily gets punctuated when Superman is thrown against the volcano, giving Metallo a more even fight.

We end the episode with Metallo's mind slipping away as he's encrusted in molten rock, but he tethers himself to his human identity to prevent that, reciting "I am Metallo... I am Metallo" like a glitching Alexa whose Bluetooth connection is not functioning well. Classic.

A goofy episode with squandered potential, but at least it's ironically funny.

Daily Poll: Which universe do you prefer?

  • Marvel

    Votes: 1 25.0%
  • DC

    Votes: 3 75.0%
  • Theme customization system

    You can customize some areas of the forum theme from this menu

    Choose the color that reflects your taste

    Wide/Narrow view

    You can control a structure that you can use to use your theme wide or narrow.

    Grid view forum list

    You can control the layout of the forum list in a grid or ordinary listing style structure.

    Picture grid mode

    In the grid forum list, you can control the structure where you can open/close images.

    Close sidebar

    You can get rid of the crowded view in the forum by closing the sidebar.

    Fixed sidebar

    You can make it more useful and easier to access by pinning the sidebar.

    Corner radius close

    You can use the radius at the corners of the blocks according to your taste by closing/opening it.

    Back