My teenage son said these 1960s cartoons look cheesy. I told my son , Look , these cartoons brought a lot of pleasure to people of my generation and we were happy to see our comic book heroes on TV. My son said , "Ok, boomer!" I replied , "Yeah and Stan Lee laughed all the way to the bank". Stan Lee lived long enough to see comic book heroes on the movie screen and comics become an art form. I have a lot of Marvel and DC comic books from the 1960s and I told my son one day he'll probably be able to buy a house or two because most are in good or fair condition.
This generation know nothing of how Stan and Jack brought such power and grandeur and glory through the pages of Thor. I would sit and read for hours fully immersed in the adventures and was awed by the glory, grandeur and might of Thor and the omnipotent power of Odin. All with a paper comic and my brain doing the rest. This generation will never know what they missed.
Honestly these cartoons were more serious than the movies. The voice acting alone is way better than the all the Thor live action movies. Even the look of Marvel Thor is much better than Chris Hemsworth
NO ONE has ever topped Thor's voice here. The voice actor sounded much like Richard Burton in his delivery. And every time I read a Thor comic, this is the voice I always hear. "BY THE BRISTLING BEARD OF ODIN"!
I watched these in the 1960s when I was a kid, and even though I enjoyed them then and continue to enjoy them now, I was surprised by how greatly they altered the original comic book storylines. Decades later I read in The Jack Kirby Collector how Stan was given the job of creating the scripts for these animated cartoons, and for some reason altered the stories substantially. Having followed Marvel scholarship for decades, here's what I think happened: first, as was standard practice, Jack Kirby created the comic book plots he while he drew them, writing notes in the margins of his artwork telling Stan what was going on. (Many original Kirby artwork pages still exist, which show Kirby's notes in the margins.) Kirby would then mail his artwork bearing his notes to Stan, who then wrote the dialogue and the narration, both of which were superb. Having practiced copyright law, I can say with complete accuracy that the resulting published comics were what copyright law calls joint works of authorship. It seems to me that Kirby did the lion's share of the work---that is, that he was the primary co-creator all of the comics that he drew---including their characters. Unfortunately, Marvel never gave him proper credit as both artist AND story creator of his 1960s Marvel comics. Stan was a scripter of genius, but he was not the primary co-creator of the comics that he scripted. Hence a proper credit for Stan would have been "scripter." The credit that he usually got, "writer," gave him too much credit, and Jack not nearly enough. As stated earlier, when Stan got the job of creating scripts for the 1960s Marvel superheroes cartoons, for whatever reason Stan altered Kirby's original comic books plots/storylines. IMHO, Stan considerably weakened the stories by doing so, and I wish that he had stuck to Kirby's original plots/storylines. Nevertheless, the cartoons are still quite enjoyable, the voice actors are utterly superb, and the music is magnificent! One commenter wrote that nobody has ever surpassed Thor's voice in these cartoons. He is absolutely right! What a ***perfect*** voice for Thor. To the actor who voiced Thor, I can only say, BRAVO to the nth degree!
13:44-13:56 THIS is the Thor I fell in love with as a child! No matter the odds, he faces his foes head on, ready to fight to the very end. Bravery, honor, and courage. I love Thor!
As I recall the afternoon lineup in the sixties: Monday afternoon was Captain America, with an Avengers story once a month; Tuesday was Iron Man, Wednesday was the Hulk, Thursday was Thor and Friday was Sub-Mariner. The production company saved money by taking actual Jack Kirby, Don Heck or Gene Colan panel frames from the comics themselves and adding animation to the lips and mouths to create the impression of speech, etc. The cartoon stories of course followed the actual comic book story lines to the letter and we end up with a true portrayal of the state of Marvel comics circa 1966. For those of us who grew up on this stuff, it's a real treat to see it again.
*THOR on "Thors-day"* / Thursday (e.g. Freya - Friday). Done 100% on purpose The Occult connections w/ BiG Entertainment Runs Deep! Im gonna Make A Video right now & Pull All this together. Maybe do THOR 600 First though!
Mark Shepherd You are correct. I prefer these cartoons to the ones of today since today the cartoons don't follow the comics at all. The series on Netflix are a joke, they don't follow anything. The heroes look like villains or bums - scruffy and unwashed - the villains are clean cut. How sad.
We LOVE the classic Grantray-Lawrence Marvel Superheroes cartoon! These wonderful stories and this astonishing art possess a power and passion that still knock us out!
The spoken dialogue, sound effects and background music are astonishingly good. I saw this cartoon when it new in 66' and have not seen it since the mid 80s when it was available at VHS rental. I love John Vernon's narration (Dean Wormer from Animal House)
KHJ-TV 9 in L.A. in the late '60s-early '70s...later KTTV Ch. 11 in the early-to-mid '80s. During that time, we also got The(New) Fantastic Four and Spider-Woman, too.😃
I have read the Jack Kirby first appearance of the Destroyer. I also remember trying to get home after school to watch these cartoons. There was no set schedule for the Marvel cartoons, some days were skipped. I still remember being bewildered when the show was over and, no Marvel cartoon!
Fun fact: this show was actually animated using drawings from pre-existing comics and just adding movement to them which is why it looks so weird and it's just so lazy and such a cheat I cant help but love it
so sad,he spoke like a god-was he british?that's the kind of voice needed for the THOR movies which didn't have this cartoon's magic unfortunately.i doth say.
Perry Pruitt, see above comment. If you doubt what I say, look up Strange Paradise. He played the part of Laslo Thaxton. Listen to his voice. Hell, he even looks like a real life Jack Kirby drawing.
I loved these cartoons so much as a boy.And not only that but the soundtrack as well.Japanese animae is king now but this archaic animation still does it for me.
I loved these when I was a kid, and they were on at about 6:30 a.m. on our local channel (back when there were four channels, and PBS was on UHF). Got up to watch them almost every morning. Lame animation now, but not to a 9-year-old back in 67.
WE Belong to The Merry Marvel Marching Society.... Nuff Said, or as Stan told me at The San Diego Comic-Con..... Excelsior, True Believer! Long Live Stan and Jack.... Drop the Mic! 😁😎
Talents. For some, it's a direct gift , for others, it is the beginning, something honed to legendary greatness by hours, weeks, even years of meticulous practice and work. All of these classics show both, the actors, the music, the stories, the artwork- all made to create awe and inspiration. Thor was my favorite character; here he is believable as an immortal, inspiring a passionate appreciation for all thing Nordic. Perhaps in some future time people will be creative enough to regale the public with new and inspiring stories blessed with these timeless standards of superior quality.
I wasn't around in the 60's, but they used to show this on South African TV in the early 90's. It was my first glimpse at all these iconic characters and I remember it all fondly.
Awesome.. things were just better back in the 60s 70s 80s n 90s...this was a little b4 my time, spiderman and his amazing friends and scooby doo and so many more were on when i was a kid but every so often youd catch a rerun of Thor and i always loved it... still do
Mark Shepherd... you may be wrong-or I saw this telecast from a different region. Anyway, what I remember is Captain America was seen on Mondays, Hulk was seen on Tuesdays, Iron Man was seen on Wednesdays, Thor was seen on Thursdays and Sub-Mariner was seen on Fridays. In fact these were the very first introductions of Marvel Superheroes in its cartoon form-albeit limited. Nonetheless, as a then 8 year old kid watching these comic book characters literally come to life (back in 1966)... I was simply thrilled to no end! Lol
Brasil, sao paulo, 06/05/2021, em meio da pandemia de COVID-19, assistir a este desenho anos 60, e muito bom, fiel as HQ da epoca, sem muita tecnologia e recursos, mas um belo desenho do THOR o deus do Trovao, muitas saudades do tempo que era so ligar a TV e assistir
Funny story here. One time I was watching a Thor episode and realized I had the exact comic upstairs in my bedroom. I ran upstairs, got the comic, bought it back into the living room and started reading along with the cartoon. I was reading it aloud, ahead of the dialog on the tv, imitating the accents of the characters. My older sister was in the dining room doing here homework. After a few minutes, she stomped into the living room and yelled,"STOP THAT SHIT RIGHT NOW. I'M DOING MY HOMEWORK AND YOU'RE FREAKING ME OUT." I grinned but stopped. My sister had a mean right hook.
Some of the music here sounds nearly identical to the music in the Spiderman animated series of the sixties. Same composer, perhaps ? I recall a male animated character named Don Blake whose alternate ego was a super hero; I've always thought it was Thor. I may be mistaken--It's been 53 years since I was in the first grade. Thanks for this !
Fellow Marvel Retro Fans, for a GROOVY take mute the sound track and open another RUclips window and play The Spencer Davis Group, Gimme Some Lovin, followed by Marvin Gaye, Got to Give it Up.... Perfect Comic-Combo, ENJOY! 😎
Him and his struggles between his Adolescent Adopted brother Loki the lord of magic and mischief the true hierarchy of the Ice Kingdom and the Ice giants
This is a classic episode of THE MIGHTY THOR A TALE OF TALES BEFORE MY BIRTH THE LEGENDARY GOR OF THE VIKINGS AND NORSE AND NETHERLANDS PEOPLES HES BE KNOW TIME AND TIME AGAIN THE SON ONE OF THE SONS OF ODIN AND HIS SON THE MIGHTY GOD OF THUNDER THOR OF ASGARD A HERO OF MINES AND HIS MIGHTY HAMMER #MJönir The hammer Weapon of The Gods forged for him personally By The Great Dwarfs of Forge mastery
this is the Thor I came 2 admire as a kid. the recent depiction of him in these Marvel movies is unwatchable. it seems like they didn’t attempt 2 make him him look like this. and the worst part is his speech. I always loved the thees & thous and the old English speech.
Dear siblings, comics lovers fellows, you don't know the incredible success that those cartoons reached here in Brasil! Please, be free to fix my poor English grammar.
No one ever mentions the background music in these old cartoons.. The music is actually high quality.
My teenage son said these 1960s cartoons look cheesy. I told my son , Look , these cartoons brought a lot of pleasure to people of my generation and we were happy to see our comic book heroes on TV. My son said , "Ok, boomer!" I replied , "Yeah and Stan Lee laughed all the way to the bank". Stan Lee lived long enough to see comic book heroes on the movie screen and comics become an art form. I have a lot of Marvel and DC comic books from the 1960s and I told my son one day he'll probably be able to buy a house or two because most are in good or fair condition.
Underrated
Nuff said
This generation know nothing of how Stan and Jack brought such power and grandeur and glory through the pages of Thor. I would sit and read for hours fully immersed in the adventures and was awed by the glory, grandeur and might of Thor and the omnipotent power of Odin. All with a paper comic and my brain doing the rest. This generation will never know what they missed.
No doubt. Mr malone
You can always adopt me !😂
What I remember the most about these older Marvel animated shows are the music and voices. Great stuff.
Honestly these cartoons were more serious than the movies. The voice acting alone is way better than the all the Thor live action movies. Even the look of Marvel Thor is much better than Chris Hemsworth
And even though the animation is cheesy most of the art is original Kirby art taken right from the comic panels.
NO ONE has ever topped Thor's voice here. The voice actor sounded much like Richard Burton in his delivery. And
every time I read a Thor comic, this is the voice I always hear. "BY THE BRISTLING BEARD OF ODIN"!
Totally agree! Great voice casting in all of these shorts
Personal opinion the Avengers cartoon and UMVC3 Thor has the best voice acting
When Thor used to talk like Shakespeare.
I'd long thought that. All it would take is one of the voice actors to emote that way, and the rest would just fall into place, willingly and easily.
If you read the comic books he always talked Shakespearean.
Yes; he spoke Shakespeare, while imitating Richard Burton. It worked perfectly then, and now. Still the best.
I remember watching this 50 years ago!
I watched these in the 1960s when I was a kid, and even though I enjoyed them then and continue to enjoy them now, I was surprised by how greatly they altered the original comic book storylines. Decades later I read in The Jack Kirby Collector how Stan was given the job of creating the scripts for these animated cartoons, and for some reason altered the stories substantially.
Having followed Marvel scholarship for decades, here's what I think happened: first, as was standard practice, Jack Kirby created the comic book plots he while he drew them, writing notes in the margins of his artwork telling Stan what was going on. (Many original Kirby artwork pages still exist, which show Kirby's notes in the margins.)
Kirby would then mail his artwork bearing his notes to Stan, who then wrote the dialogue and the narration, both of which were superb.
Having practiced copyright law, I can say with complete accuracy that the resulting published comics were what copyright law calls joint works of authorship. It seems to me that Kirby did the lion's share of the work---that is, that he was the primary co-creator all of the comics that he drew---including their characters.
Unfortunately, Marvel never gave him proper credit as both artist AND story creator of his 1960s Marvel comics.
Stan was a scripter of genius, but he was not the primary co-creator of the comics that he scripted. Hence a proper credit for Stan would have been "scripter." The credit that he usually got, "writer," gave him too much credit, and Jack not nearly enough.
As stated earlier, when Stan got the job of creating scripts for the 1960s Marvel superheroes cartoons, for whatever reason Stan altered Kirby's original comic books plots/storylines. IMHO, Stan considerably weakened the stories by doing so, and I wish that he had stuck to Kirby's original plots/storylines. Nevertheless, the cartoons are still quite enjoyable, the voice actors are utterly superb, and the music is magnificent!
One commenter wrote that nobody has ever surpassed Thor's voice in these cartoons. He is absolutely right! What a ***perfect*** voice for Thor. To the actor who voiced Thor, I can only say, BRAVO to the nth degree!
13:44-13:56 THIS is the Thor I fell in love with as a child! No matter the odds, he faces his foes head on, ready to fight to the very end. Bravery, honor, and courage. I love Thor!
I hit for jasion and the orginnought
That makes it sound like he's changed over the years. That aspect has always been a constant.
Hey Cyn, Shepard,and gang pro this set age genre Actors Guild, there seems nothing like this theme in scene orchestra.Ω† Bill
The mcu our fathers had back in the day
The avengers 200 to 300 is awesome not this MCU filter carb.
As I recall the afternoon lineup in the sixties: Monday afternoon was Captain America, with an Avengers story once a month; Tuesday was Iron Man, Wednesday was the Hulk, Thursday was Thor and Friday was Sub-Mariner. The production company saved money by taking actual Jack Kirby, Don Heck or Gene Colan panel frames from the comics themselves and adding animation to the lips and mouths to create the impression of speech, etc. The cartoon stories of course followed the actual comic book story lines to the letter and we end up with a true portrayal of the state of Marvel comics circa 1966.
For those of us who grew up on this stuff, it's a real treat to see it again.
*THOR on "Thors-day"* / Thursday (e.g. Freya - Friday). Done 100% on purpose The Occult connections w/ BiG Entertainment Runs Deep! Im gonna Make A Video right now & Pull All this together. Maybe do THOR 600 First though!
Do t forget Steve Ditko! His stuff would show up in some of The Hulk episodes.
The funniest part of watching Thor was seeing the length of his helmet wings change as they shifted between Jack Kirby and Don Heck key frames.
Mark Shepherd
You are correct. I prefer these cartoons to the ones of today since today the cartoons don't follow the comics at all. The series on Netflix are a joke, they don't follow anything. The heroes look like villains or bums - scruffy and unwashed - the villains are clean cut. How sad.
Mark Shepherd Thank goodness these classics weren't given the Clutch Cargo treatment back then.
Well, Stan Lee I hope you're in Asgard with Thor the God of Thunder to watch over you! Watch out for Loki! Excelsior!!You will be missed!!
Yea. Rest in peace, Stan.
Given their conflicts over the years, Kirby might have something to say about that.
He's definitely up there with Odin and the boys.
We LOVE the classic Grantray-Lawrence Marvel Superheroes cartoon! These wonderful stories and this astonishing art possess a power and passion that still knock us out!
The spoken dialogue, sound effects and background music are astonishingly good. I saw this cartoon when it new in 66' and have not seen it since the mid 80s when it was available at VHS rental. I love John Vernon's narration (Dean Wormer from Animal House)
Think it's Bernard Cowen. John's the voice of Iron Man and Submariner, though!
The way the credits were done, B C is listed 1st on the Spiderman '67 cartoon led me to think he, rather than Paul Soles, voiced Spiderman/ Pete.
50 years for these animated cartoon series yet... hard to believe.
I used to hate these cartoons in my youth, but over time, I've come to love the classic. Marvel feel they give off.
Weird that Loki went from something like this to the Loki series.
I loved these stop action Marvels of the sixties they reran in the 70's it was awesome and still is
I love these cartoons. I remember them so well. Wish I could find them again!
Great!!! My all time favorite, this Destroyer make the one in the Thor movie look like a little girl. Thanks.💯
In New York it was Captain America on Monday, Hulk Tuesday, Ironman Wednesday, Thor Thursday and the Submarinar in Friday..WOR channel 9
thats how I remember it.
Haha. I was too young to know much about schedules. I simply ran home breathlessly from school every day not knowing which hero would be on.
Exactly how I remember it watching in New Jersey also on channel 9 from New york
@@PearsonJd2 ..the thing about it most of it was comic book scenes
KHJ-TV 9 in L.A. in the late '60s-early '70s...later KTTV Ch. 11 in the early-to-mid '80s. During that time, we also got The(New) Fantastic Four and Spider-Woman, too.😃
It's Really Amazing, How Fallen Angels influence this World though history!! ✍️
Simple as they are, the graphics on these shows were just terrific-- never been equaled.
because it is Jack Kirby's art ETERNAL MASTER ART AND LINE
Tom Hiddleston sounds different than I remember him.
Because Loki's voice is not spoken by Tom.
@@isbxtsvicsvcvhsugsbjx1846
Sarcasm is lost on you clearly.
@@zingzaber6989 why so rude? Did I do something to you?
@@isbxtsvicsvcvhsugsbjx1846
I was just making an observation. Didn't mean to upset you.
@@zingzaber6989 you didn't upset me. But yk it really could be that the person don't know that Loki wasn't always voiced by Tom *shrugs*
IM HIGH AS HELL AND THIS ITS TRIPPING ME OUT!
Thor was my favorite.
Used to watch these Marvel cartoons after kindergarten in the Haight-Ashbury in the 60s. Love the Jack Kirby art.
Outstanding late 1960s animation--the MCU of its day. A true classic! ⚡⚡⚡
This was an entertaining story. The Destroyer was a lot better than portrayed in the movie.
this was more accurate to the source material
Wow, as deep now as it was watching it back in 1966/67, age 5 and 6!
I have read the Jack Kirby first appearance of the Destroyer. I also remember trying to get home after school to watch these cartoons. There was no set schedule for the Marvel cartoons, some days were skipped. I still remember being bewildered when the show was over and, no Marvel cartoon!
Seemed like I'd catch them accidentally, this was mid 80s for me.
Fun fact: this show was actually animated using drawings from pre-existing comics and just adding movement to them which is why it looks so weird and it's just so lazy and such a cheat I cant help but love it
RIP to Christopher Wiggins voice of Thor.
so sad,he spoke like a god-was he british?that's the kind of voice needed for the THOR movies which didn't have this cartoon's magic unfortunately.i doth say.
The voice of the Don Blake/Thor is Jack Creley NOT Chris Wiggins.
OH WOW I DIDNTKNOW HE PASSED.HE IS STILL MY FAVORITE THOR VOICE.
Perry Pruitt, see above comment. If you doubt what I say, look up Strange Paradise. He played the part of Laslo Thaxton. Listen to his voice. Hell, he even looks like a real life Jack Kirby drawing.
@@CinematicComics You "doth say"? Me thinks you must know the way to Asgard!
Loki was voiced by Len Carlson in the 1966 series.
Andy Serkis owes this guy a check!
When is Disney going to remaster all of these and re release them??????? These are classic gold!
Hopefully never. Everything they touch turns to copper and I would rather it stay gold
It's funny how when Loki's life is on the line he can change his stripes in the blink of an eye.
I loved these cartoons so much as a boy.And not only that but the soundtrack as well.Japanese animae is king now but this archaic animation still does it for me.
Forget Thor love and thunder. This is the movie I want to see
That Was So Exciting!
I loved these when I was a kid, and they were on at about 6:30 a.m. on our local channel (back when there were four channels, and PBS was on UHF). Got up to watch them almost every morning. Lame animation now, but not to a 9-year-old back in
67.
WE Belong to The Merry Marvel Marching Society.... Nuff Said, or as Stan told me at The San Diego Comic-Con..... Excelsior, True Believer! Long Live Stan and Jack.... Drop the Mic! 😁😎
Talents. For some, it's a direct gift , for others, it is the beginning, something honed to legendary greatness by hours, weeks, even years of meticulous practice and work. All of these classics show both, the actors, the music, the stories, the artwork- all made to create awe and inspiration. Thor was my favorite character; here he is believable as an immortal, inspiring a passionate appreciation for all thing Nordic. Perhaps in some future time people will be creative enough to regale the public with new and inspiring stories blessed with these timeless standards of superior quality.
I wasn't around in the 60's, but they used to show this on South African TV in the early 90's. It was my first glimpse at all these iconic characters and I remember it all fondly.
When Marvel Comics was great 👍🏾
For some reason, I have been watching this over and over 😅
This is THOR! "Hold thy tongue Loki! Feel the power of Thor!" 😊
The classic super heroes cartoon always looks amazing for us !
Awesome.. things were just better back in the 60s 70s 80s n 90s...this was a little b4 my time, spiderman and his amazing friends and scooby doo and so many more were on when i was a kid but every so often youd catch a rerun of Thor and i always loved it... still do
Mark Shepherd... you may be wrong-or I saw this telecast from a different region. Anyway, what I remember is Captain America was seen on Mondays, Hulk was seen on Tuesdays, Iron Man was seen on Wednesdays, Thor was seen on Thursdays and Sub-Mariner was seen on Fridays. In fact these were the very first introductions of Marvel Superheroes in its cartoon form-albeit limited. Nonetheless, as a then 8 year old kid watching these comic book characters literally come to life (back in 1966)... I was simply thrilled to no end! Lol
6 in 1966 there were so many great toons back then, this wasn't a favorite but it was pretty good.
These same cartoons. With modern day technology. Would be outstanding
Loki.......son of Odin, brother of Thor!!!!
Brasil, sao paulo, 06/05/2021, em meio da pandemia de COVID-19, assistir a este desenho anos 60, e muito bom, fiel as HQ da epoca, sem muita tecnologia e recursos, mas um belo desenho do THOR o deus do Trovao, muitas saudades do tempo que era so ligar a TV e assistir
A guilty pleasure.
Best soundtrack!!
This Is The Best!
Funny story here. One time I was watching a Thor episode and realized I had the exact comic upstairs in my bedroom. I ran upstairs, got the comic, bought it back into the living room and started reading along with the cartoon. I was reading it aloud, ahead of the dialog on the tv, imitating the accents of the characters. My older sister was in the dining room doing here homework. After a few minutes, she stomped into the living room and yelled,"STOP THAT SHIT RIGHT NOW. I'M DOING MY HOMEWORK AND YOU'RE FREAKING ME OUT." I grinned but stopped. My sister had a mean right hook.
Lol!
Jack Kirby,! classic comics I remember when they cost 12 cents
My favorite cartoons
I love the Kirby style animation.
LOL AT 2:50!! Slapped the fire out of his ass! " STOW THAT VOODOO TALK!"
U mean "slow that booty talk"
wow. what a story.
Vim aqui depois do podcast do inteligência com o Wendell
Oknp
Jack Kirby art! 😎
3:32 - "Some strange force seems to be drawing me!" meta!
Awesome stuff
Sensacional 👏👏👏👏
O poderoso Thor! 😄
Better than the last Thor film.😁
That Thor is A Bad Mother~!!!
Some of the music here sounds nearly identical to the music in the Spiderman animated series of the sixties. Same composer, perhaps ? I recall a male animated character named Don Blake whose alternate ego was a super hero; I've always thought it was Thor. I may be mistaken--It's been 53 years since I was in the first grade. Thanks for this !
Don Blake was Thor's alternate identity. You remembered correctly.
Now, I think I know from where Andy Serkis got the voice of Golum, it’s the exact same as the voice of Loki.
Back when Thor was Thor
Fellow Marvel Retro Fans, for a GROOVY take mute the sound track and open another RUclips window and play The Spencer Davis Group, Gimme Some Lovin, followed by Marvin Gaye, Got to Give it Up.... Perfect Comic-Combo, ENJOY! 😎
Not the Destroyer! Get him, Thor!
ok, so has anyone noticed that any time there is any conflict or situation Odin goes to sleep? WTF.
You are brothers of heaven Asgard
Loki sounds like Waluigi.
LOL
7:59 Sleeping Odin Is adorable.
Ahhhh I miss Star Plus :)
I wished I owned all six 1966 marvel cartoon series!
sometimes i wonder why odin hasn't locked loki away and spare thor the trickster's mischief
He killed Loki's real father, and feels guilty. Plus, he loves Loki on some level, as does Thor.
This is goated
This was so funny. So he can be felled by some gas created by a mortal. I'm enjoying this old pic because I'm a Thor fan.
Him and his struggles between his Adolescent Adopted brother Loki the lord of magic and mischief the true hierarchy of the Ice Kingdom and the Ice giants
Sometimes Odin can be so obtuse and stupid. He is supposed to be all-knowing and all-powerful, yet Loki seems to get away causing so much trouble.
That's right Shawn and plus they had to start somewhere
HENENE FISCHER KONATBASS JAZZ ❤❤❤❤
Boy, these really owned the 'crude' brand.
What glorious choir sang that awesome theme song?
OMG! I was 6 yrs old
Way better than Love and Thunder
This is a classic episode of THE MIGHTY THOR A TALE OF TALES BEFORE MY BIRTH THE LEGENDARY GOR OF THE VIKINGS AND NORSE AND NETHERLANDS PEOPLES HES BE KNOW TIME AND TIME AGAIN THE SON ONE OF THE SONS OF ODIN AND HIS SON THE MIGHTY GOD OF THUNDER THOR OF ASGARD A HERO OF MINES AND HIS MIGHTY HAMMER #MJönir The hammer Weapon of The Gods forged for him personally By The Great Dwarfs of Forge mastery
Thor and Loki reminded me of Jonathan and dio
this predates jojo by 2 decades
Jojo part 1 is tragedy.
this is the Thor I came 2 admire as a kid. the recent depiction of him in these Marvel movies is unwatchable. it seems like they didn’t attempt 2 make him him look like this. and the worst part is his speech. I always loved the thees & thous and the old English speech.
Who were the faces behind these voices? They were masters!
Google it.
Christopher Wiggins aka "Jack Marshak" of the late 80's series Friday the 13th voiced Thor.
Dear siblings, comics lovers fellows, you don't know the incredible success that those cartoons reached here in Brasil! Please, be free to fix my poor English grammar.
anyone else see Jeff Bezos' space ship in the picture of asgard, in the first 3 seconds?
Same incidental music as Spiderman and Rocket Robin Hood.
As unintentionally hilarious this show is, it’s still better than the modern Marvel cartoons that advertise the MCU
5:04 he speaked faster than eminem
It’s a shame they made so few of these!
Anyone can do this using today's computer applications; Illustrator, Photoshop Windows Paint and Flash.
@@beedwarf I wish they would! But you also need the voices and music!