*just some creative critique: 1) this is packed to the tits with lego movies, annoying because they are not germane/apropos. 2) the clips were a bit too long, esp when they didn't focus on superman.*
@@long-timelistenerfirst-t-us2yy Also, if their purpose was to show the complete compilation of Superman's entire animation history, there were a few significant omissions: The Fleisher/Famous finale with the Superman brand by using Popeye, Olive Oyl, and Bluto. Filmation saying it's own sayonara to the Superman character by teaming Clark and Lois with...wait for it...the Brady Bunch. Anything from the 1988 Ruby-Spears series for Saturday morning. An animated/live-action commercial teaming Superman with Seinfeld. After the 1950s TV series with George Reeves ended, National Comics attempted a couple spin-offs to continue its Superman TV franchise, but neither pilot was picked up. One of the failed would-be spinoffs was animated, but not with cartoons but with animation of a different sort. The show was called "Super Pup", and featured a cast of puppets, all of which were...dogs, including the star superhero. Yes...REALLY.
Can you do an evolution of Green Lantern in animated movies please? It would be great to see how he evolved form 2009 foe his animated movies until now!!!!!!! Go Green Lantern!!!!!!
They seem right at home in their time actually, after all that was also the era of the classic Looney Tunes and Disney cartoons. These shorts were made to be shown in movie theaters, so they had a much higher budget than cartoons made for TV or DVD these days, hence why they look so damn good.
Moving from place to place with my parents, I mostly watched the modern cartoons since it rarely aired in the 2000's. Plus I wasn't even alive back in the 40's, nor were my grandparents.
lol to be straight forward. The S does stand for Superman originally. Later, someone had the idea to make it into a kryptonian symbol. IDK where in the comics or if that was made by The Man Of Steel movie. IDK.
@@r.rodriguez4991 It somewhat exposed his human side like for the most part he's grounded until donning the the Kryptonian Suit And after killing Zod he exposed his vices. Destroying the World Engine he became Superman. If there was a sequel it would have been an immediant aftermath of Man of Steel making his rules and codes.
R. Rodriguez The Man of Steel version isn’t like the Superman we knew. Or it could be that they skipped that part. Movies don’t change how you look at them mostly, since BvS had some weird writers and lacked the story impact but the fight was good. Could’ve made it longer, nonetheless the cartoons and the comic still defines the Superman through time.
The 1940's Fleischer Studios Superman is still my favorite. Not only does it perfectly reflect the style of the time, immortalizing it forever, but it's also just so beautiful and was so innovative for the time. Then of course Bruce Timm lovingly built upon the foundation it established while giving it his own twist.
Actually, it reminded me that Captain Marvel was actually beating Superman in newsstand sales at his peak, before Superman brought the Big Red Cheese to his knees and shut him down in the courts. The same scenario replayed itself out decades later, as Superman's owners' harassment helped sink another great but snake-bitten franchise, The Greatest American Hero. The problem with Supes' people is they couldn't understand the difference between copying and parody. Mighty Mouse, Underdog, even Super Goofy...com'onnn you legal beagles, get a sense of humor, it's a joke son!
IK,R? When "Justice League" first came out, I thought it was Tim doing Supes!! It really floored me when I found out it was George!! I'm like, "I can't tell the difference"!!
Eh, when the previews for JL first came out and I heard Superman talk, I could immediately tell it wasn't Tim Daly. They really don't sound that much alike, Tim's voice has more of a "rough" edge to it that makes Clark sound more authoritative. Newbern is the Boy Scout.
@@sabishiihito Timbre different enough that you can pick it up, inflections, pitch, and overall delivery are nearly identical. Basically, they did about as well as is possible using two different people to voice the same role in the same continuity.
Back when it was about making an experience not making a massive profit. Modern stuff only looks good now because it can be made cheap. The mindset has not changed
A lot better than the 1966 cartoon. You'd think they would get better animation 25 years after. But man...that was some cheap animation. The 1941 Superman cartoons still look good today, in my opinion. It was way ahead of its time.
30:00, Batman scaring the crap out of Deadshot was lol too much and thensome while Superman sadly was just too nice. Batman and Superman truly need their own World's Finest TV show after that one. They'd be the best double act going for real.
Lol, its funny because Supes has gone rogue once or twice with mind control and shit and now in INjustice he's turned into asshole by his own choice but Batman never has gone rogue ever except for some zombie shit earth ark where everyone's bad and still people fear batman more, add that to Superman's godly strength, no that just appears like unfunny plot ...
@@siddarth3955 those times superman does go bad are exceptions.Generally his repuattion is a good guy paragon fighter(U know...a boyscout)and batmans is...well...batman
I didn't grow up on Bud Collyer, but the vocal changeover from Clark to Superman is effortless. His voice sounds Herculean, like a giant. And undeniably unique. Tim Daly, Kevin Conroy,Adam Baldwin are pretty good too.
I freaking loved the 1941 Superman as a kid, even when I was sick and barfing everyehere, all I could think about was watching the man of steel in action.
@Eggster he could be old, but still he doesn’t have to be that old, a lot of people appreciate movies, tv, cartoons, etc before them, for example: me and my dad like the 1966 Batman series but neither of us were born at that time
Is it just me, or is almost everything before the classic 90s Superman Animated (part of the DCAU) - incredibly cringe inducing? The 1941 Fleischer cartoon being the notable exception - mainly on the strength of its WAY ahead of it's time animation technique! There were some groaners after 1990s of course. But I just flat found the 1960s through 1980s PAINFUL.
The 40s Superman cartoons are astoundingly timeless! They set the standard for all superhero cartoons. Thank you for helping me FINALLY find out who voiced Supes in the Superfriends cartoons. Tim Daly and Yuri Lowenthal are my favorite Superman/boy! Nightcrawler in all media. Green Hornet in all media. Vision in all media. Zorro in all media. Guy Gardener in all media. Gorilla Grodd in all media.
@@Jojo-oi5vi lol no, it was simply that it probably had a lot of budged for the time because that was not how most animations of the time looked like Still pretty fucking impresive
@@carso1500 No. It was due to the fact Max Fleischer was a genius. Believe it or not just throwing money at things doesn’t just make things good. Raw talent makes things good.
Wow really....this only has less than 300,000 views? Come on guys, lets get more people to watch this and get over a million views. I mean who doesn't love Superman? This is his evolution in cartoon form. IT IS FREAKING AMAZING!
Nothing like it had ever been done before, and hardly anything has come close to matching it since, each episode cost over $100,000 in animation (in 1940's money) with revolutionary (for it's time) rotoscoped actors. It's the reason superman can fly, even it's theme tune was the inspiration to what came after it, the Fleischer brothers were instrumental in shaping Superman to what he is today, like they did with popeye.
I love how they cherrypicked the lowest strength demonstration of the original Superman cartoon. That time he smashed an armada of robots? Forget it. The time he stopped a massive airborne aircraft carrier from crashing? Nope. The time he put a panther in a cage? Sure, use that one!
+DanQZ You clearly didn't watch them. He took down a skyscraper-sized Kaiju with a flying tackle, disloged a massive boulder with a simple push, dragged a warship to the bottom of the sea by it's anchor: all in that same cartoon. To Superman, moving a panther is like (was always like) moving a small beetle - not a feat worth discussing.
Idazmi7 A guy dumped molten steel on him and he covered Lois like it was a rain storm...... that’s actually quite badass when you think about it. To the panther one though that’s also badass in its own right as that human element like seeing him manhandle that shark in Luthor’s office by having him handle this completely lethal animal like nothing.
@@RadinV1 the joke is that often kids go "Mom can we go to McDonalds?" And the mom goes "We have McDomalds at home" But when they get home the food at home is way worse than the one in McDonalds, in this case, the kid wants that Nicely Animated superman, but instead he gets the one from 1:59
Michael Brent I'm still wishing for a good crossover between the Justice League and the Looney Tunes well maybe not like the comics books but it would be great.
Creed Luvari Yea, the Elmer Fudd one was so weird if you know the characters, but oddly worked. Would definitely like to see more from that whole thing.
The comics company Milestone was a DC Imprint with exclusive control over their own characters. DC acquired all the characters, which were all technically theirs anyways, when Milestone closed it's doors. Static came from there, along with a few other characters only just now showing up in Young Justice. Wish they'd stayed open longer.
Cartoons did bring the first evolution of Superman. Originally, he could, "leap tall buildings in a single bound." Which was fine for comics, but Feischer Studio thought that flying would be more cinematic, thus Superman gained his first new superpower.
I prefer the Superman of the old 50's through 70's comic books who was invulnerable, and incorruptible. This Superman never lost his humility, never acted out of anger, never destroyed cities, and never met his match in combat. The closest thing I have seen to this lately is 'Superman All-Star'.
So I was ready to hate on this video after the earliest segments but then the later ones grew on me for the humor. So good job Then & now. You won me over.
@@nexusprime2487 well that's because he brings in more toy Revenue because of all the gadgets that he needs in continuity. And because he's human you can manipulate him a little more storyline wise. While sups is too much of a Boy Scout and he's an nearly infallible alien. So you can't really bend him or torturing that much and when they deliberately tried to make him more Batman / Wolverine like with the Man of Steel it bombed and it was shity.
Like seeing more of the Clark Kent/Superman, Louis Lane, Jimmie Olson dynamic it's a shame that they leave that out a lot. It's what separates Superman from other superheros to me.
There was another actor..who performed:"Superman's" & "Clark Kent's"voice for the "Superman"movie cartoons that were produced and released thru "Famous Studios,Inc."..Sam Parker. Mr.Parker is best remembered as the voice of"Lemuel Gulliver" in the Fleischer Bros. animated feature film:"Gulliver's Travels" in 1939.
Man I watched the old old Superman when I was a kid on this special disk and the Superman intro hit me with such a freezing cold splash of nostalgia it hurt
Hey, guys! Check out our new website for more comic book content: www.comicbookjoint.com
Kontoool
*just some creative critique: 1) this is packed to the tits with lego movies, annoying because they are not germane/apropos. 2) the clips were a bit too long, esp when they didn't focus on superman.*
@@long-timelistenerfirst-t-us2yy Also, if their purpose was to show the complete compilation of Superman's entire animation history, there were a few significant omissions:
The Fleisher/Famous finale with the Superman brand by using Popeye, Olive Oyl, and Bluto.
Filmation saying it's own sayonara to the Superman character by teaming Clark and Lois with...wait for it...the Brady Bunch.
Anything from the 1988 Ruby-Spears series for Saturday morning.
An animated/live-action commercial teaming Superman with Seinfeld.
After the 1950s TV series with George Reeves ended, National Comics attempted a couple spin-offs to continue its Superman TV franchise, but neither pilot was picked up. One of the failed would-be spinoffs was animated, but not with cartoons but with animation of a different sort. The show was called "Super Pup", and featured a cast of puppets, all of which were...dogs, including the star superhero.
Yes...REALLY.
Can you do an evolution of Green Lantern in animated movies please? It would be great to see how he evolved form 2009 foe his animated movies until now!!!!!!! Go Green Lantern!!!!!!
My Adventures with Superman.
The original animated Superman was way ahead of its time when it came to how animated it was.
yeah it was lit and even back in the 40s DCs captain marvel was lit too
They seem right at home in their time actually, after all that was also the era of the classic Looney Tunes and Disney cartoons. These shorts were made to be shown in movie theaters, so they had a much higher budget than cartoons made for TV or DVD these days, hence why they look so damn good.
It was beautiful..shit it was art for real
The 40s Superman cartoon looks better then modern cartoons
@@The_Blue_Otaku lol no. That’s because a lot of money was shoved into it to make it look that good.
Loved how the 40s looked better than the 60s.
Same
40s looks better than most of them. Look at 2017!
@@thebalderthor4884 I like the 2017..
The 40s may be bland but I like the 60s better and I seen it canon...
@@glamrockfoxy477
You liked the 60s better than the 40s version!? That’s batshit crazy.
The first cartoon's animation was surprisingly good for something that came out in the 40's.
Morgan Craddock it’s always been good where have you been lol
Moving from place to place with my parents, I mostly watched the modern cartoons since it rarely aired in the 2000's.
Plus I wasn't even alive back in the 40's, nor were my grandparents.
Made by the Fleisher Studios, the art was amazing. Colors vibrant, and an Art Deco touch.
The Fleischer Bros Popeye as also EXCELLENT!!
Yes, the old Popeyes are very underrated. They are very good.
Wondy: "I think Superman needs help. Do we help him?"
Batman: " *MMMMMMMM* "
LOL
What
@Real. Super Don Rickles: "OK hockey puck. While you think about helping the "S Man" I'll order some KFC." 😂✌️👌🙂
"S" "Stands for a lot of things"
Me: I thought it was just a Kryptonian symbol that stands for hope
ThePeculiarSparrow it’s a symbol of the el’s like jor el. It does mean hope but it stands for the el family line.
ThePeculiarSparrow it’s an s that stands for superman, stop fucking around
Megasystem ! Nah, it ain’t that stupid
Captain Dope mhm yes it is
lol to be straight forward. The S does stand for Superman originally. Later, someone had the idea to make it into a kryptonian symbol. IDK where in the comics or if that was made by The Man Of Steel movie. IDK.
2:36 S is Superman's favorite letter,
Lois sure is happy about that
Lois: "What does the S stand for?"
Superman: "Sand....it stands for sand Lois"
Zachary Henning Anakin: *goes on an alien killing rampage*
Why do you have Bill Cosby as your avatar? Are you black, Zachary Henning?
@@jefftanner3803 you arent serious 😂
"It's irritating and it gets everywhere."
Zachary Henning is he real super sand?
I honestly don’t think anything beats the 1940s animation style. Now the sound design, that’s something different
Such a timeless and incredible character
@@r.rodriguez4991
Well to me Man of Steel revolutionized Superman.
To me only.
@@r.rodriguez4991
It somewhat exposed his human side like for the most part he's grounded until donning the the Kryptonian Suit
And after killing Zod he exposed his vices. Destroying the World Engine he became Superman.
If there was a sequel it would have been an immediant aftermath of Man of Steel making his rules and codes.
R. Rodriguez The Man of Steel version isn’t like the Superman we knew.
Or it could be that they skipped that part. Movies don’t change how you look at them mostly, since BvS had some weird writers and lacked the story impact but the fight was good. Could’ve made it longer, nonetheless the cartoons and the comic still defines the Superman through time.
He’s the comic book superhero that started it all.
@@r.rodriguez4991 ...A good show imo. I couldnt do better
Me: *ready for a fun filled video with a lot of fun super man moments*
24:48 : In about to end this man’s whole career
2:43 Superman: *screaming for help*
Wonder Woman: hmmm I think Superman may need help....
The 1940's Fleischer Studios Superman is still my favorite. Not only does it perfectly reflect the style of the time, immortalizing it forever, but it's also just so beautiful and was so innovative for the time. Then of course Bruce Timm lovingly built upon the foundation it established while giving it his own twist.
Superman was on Sesame Street? Huh, you learn something new everyday.
Don'tYouHateItWhen... how could he not.
He's Superman.
Timestamp?
@@glogloflexin5083 2:06
why wouldn't these american icons cross?
"SHAZA-"
*covers mouth*
"fight's over son..."
GUH
Actually, it reminded me that Captain Marvel was actually beating Superman in newsstand sales at his peak, before Superman brought the Big Red Cheese to his knees and shut him down in the courts. The same scenario replayed itself out decades later, as Superman's owners' harassment helped sink another great but snake-bitten franchise, The Greatest American Hero. The problem with Supes' people is they couldn't understand the difference between copying and parody. Mighty Mouse, Underdog, even Super Goofy...com'onnn you legal beagles, get a sense of humor, it's a joke son!
Knowing Superman's favorite letter is something I'd never thought I'd know. It's a long life.
Tim Daly and George Newbern. So hard to distinguish their voices. I thought they were the same person.
IK,R? When "Justice League" first came out, I thought it was Tim doing Supes!! It really floored me when I found out it was George!! I'm like, "I can't tell the difference"!!
I never liked Christopher McDonald I always preferred Tim and George over Christopher
Eh, when the previews for JL first came out and I heard Superman talk, I could immediately tell it wasn't Tim Daly. They really don't sound that much alike, Tim's voice has more of a "rough" edge to it that makes Clark sound more authoritative. Newbern is the Boy Scout.
@@sabishiihito Timbre different enough that you can pick it up, inflections, pitch, and overall delivery are nearly identical. Basically, they did about as well as is possible using two different people to voice the same role in the same continuity.
“Oooh and they call me 'The Flash'” 😂😂😂😂
I lost my sides at that part
Luther handing out flashes
XD
The animation in the black adam fight was exquisite
1:56 why does that avocado wants to destroy the world?
he wants everyone to avoca-go
@@dylang1138 2 years late but you're op
I know people love Kevin Conroy as Batman but Tim Daly has made his own mark on his Superman as well
I can't discredit George Newbern either
Oh we know. Nothing better than a Kevin Conroy/Tim Daly match-up.
bandotaku
Except for Kevin Conroy/Mark Hammill
TheWe1c0meMatt, Oh, too true!
Yea, Tim Daly was amazing.
what!?! HOW IS THAT LEVEL OF ANIMATION USED IN A YEAR LIKE 1941?!?! man that was just Ahead of its time!
Back when it was about making an experience not making a massive profit. Modern stuff only looks good now because it can be made cheap. The mindset has not changed
the 1941 superman cartoon have the best animation out of all of cartoons on the list.. very fluid movements..
Yes indeed.
Indeed
I think a lot of it was rotoscoped if the techniques of the era are anything to go by.
+Jrg
You are correct.
A lot better than the 1966 cartoon. You'd think they would get better animation 25 years after. But man...that was some cheap animation. The 1941 Superman cartoons still look good today, in my opinion. It was way ahead of its time.
That superdog cartoon looks like the most wholesome thing you will ever find.
Krypto the Super Dog! I loved that show when I was a kid.
"Here it comes" , Superman's so tired of the same trick lol
My favorite superhero though❤
HE'S A GARY STU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
But it was foolproof! FOOLPROOF!
@@Satire-yj9jq just like batman
@@diegodelafuente5056 IKR?!
@@Satire-yj9jq on earth in space he is pretty normal and to some weak
2:06
1970: its the letter S!
2013: It's not an S...
Yeah me too
Aka symbol of the house of El
Doe anybody remember the kryptonian symbol for hopw5
30:00, Batman scaring the crap out of Deadshot was lol too much and thensome while Superman sadly was just too nice. Batman and Superman truly need their own World's Finest TV show after that one. They'd be the best double act going for real.
Coffee?
Gaaaah, don't do that (wink).
Lol, its funny because Supes has gone rogue once or twice with mind control and shit and now in INjustice he's turned into asshole by his own choice but Batman never has gone rogue ever except for some zombie shit earth ark where everyone's bad and still people fear batman more, add that to Superman's godly strength, no that just appears like unfunny plot ...
Donut??
@@siddarth3955 those times superman does go bad are exceptions.Generally his repuattion is a good guy paragon fighter(U know...a boyscout)and batmans is...well...batman
"Up, up and away" too old school for some of the oldest fans of superman who are barely still alive today
I didn't grow up on Bud Collyer, but the vocal changeover from Clark to Superman is effortless. His voice sounds Herculean, like a giant. And undeniably unique. Tim Daly, Kevin Conroy,Adam Baldwin are pretty good too.
2:48 Wonder woman Kind of looks like Michael Jackson here LMAO
I love those old '40s Superman cartoons! I used to watch them all the time in those 6-hour vhs cartoon collections
YamiGenkusu Same!!
I remember watching those too.
Superman's favorite letter is S
good to know
How come his girlfriends names have an LL. Lana Lang, Lois Lane, Lori Lemaris, Choe Sullivan. Okay exception of Alicia Baker it had only one L.
It’s not an S
@@redreploid1713 it is an S
I freaking loved the 1941 Superman as a kid, even when I was sick and barfing everyehere, all I could think about was watching the man of steel in action.
How old are you wtf
Egg • you know digiview remastered the 40’s Superman in 2002-2004 right
@Eggster he could be old, but still he doesn’t have to be that old, a lot of people appreciate movies, tv, cartoons, etc before them, for example: me and my dad like the 1966 Batman series but neither of us were born at that time
@@JaqueefiusJarquavius Dude, My dad bought me the remastered DVD of the cartoons in like... 2005
Is it just me, or is almost everything before the classic 90s Superman Animated (part of the DCAU) - incredibly cringe inducing?
The 1941 Fleischer cartoon being the notable exception - mainly on the strength of its WAY ahead of it's time animation technique!
There were some groaners after 1990s of course. But I just flat found the 1960s through 1980s PAINFUL.
It was not ahead of its time dammit. Major animation was on par if not better than this. Disney movies, Warner Bros, Tom and Jerry, Popeye.
Super friends is one of the best programs in all of television history wym
At first I read this as "The DCAU is incredibly cringe inducing" and I was about to throw hands
@@GJBattles Sure there were other great works of animation during the 40s but the 40s Superman cartoon was still quite ahead of its time.
7:28 Ah! The always trusty , FCC-Aproved Skirt. Marking the distinction between cartoons and anime since 1941.
24:52 WOW! That was dark!
Did he kill him or cut off his powers I didnt see the movie
@@VicenteA43212 he killed him…which is dark as fuck!
The 40s Superman cartoons are astoundingly timeless! They set the standard for all superhero cartoons.
Thank you for helping me FINALLY find out who voiced Supes in the Superfriends cartoons.
Tim Daly and Yuri Lowenthal are my favorite Superman/boy!
Nightcrawler in all media. Green Hornet in all media. Vision in all media. Zorro in all media. Guy Gardener in all media. Gorilla Grodd in all media.
the 1941 looks kinda impressive for it's time
exactly, props to the animators! 👏👏👏👏
Because that is always how the 1940 animation was frpm old cartoons always had more realistic movement.
@@Jojo-oi5vi lol no, it was simply that it probably had a lot of budged for the time because that was not how most animations of the time looked like
Still pretty fucking impresive
@@carso1500
No. It was due to the fact Max Fleischer was a genius. Believe it or not just throwing money at things doesn’t just make things good. Raw talent makes things good.
@@thebalderthor4884 money allows you to find and hire those kinds of talents
2:06 “do you know what this is? This is an S”
Man of steel 2013 supes: “it’s not an S”
Tim Daly and George Newbern are the best.
Hell yeah
Ben Minns I honestly agree
Ben Minns わかる。やっぱその2人だよな。ガキの頃、よく観てたわ。
I agree. Similar voices, too
I honestly agree too
The best plot twist of anime of all time 3:25
“Woahhhhhh and they call me the flash”😂😂
2:05 "Do you know what this is?"
Me: The kryptonian symbol for hope?
"It's the letter S!"
Me: Oh...
_Faster than a speeding bullet..._
_Powerful than a locomotive..._
_Jump high than any buildings..._
*Strong enough to pick a pancake*
Honestly, the first is hands down the best up until the Justice League show. And it came out in the fucking 40's. Goddamn it was ahead of its time.
Look up in the sky it's a bird,it's a plane,it's Superman.
Superman: help help, i need help
Wonder woman: i think superman needs help!
Well, you don't say?
Superman: "You didn't save anything."
Cyborg: "We saved room for dessert!"
Wow really....this only has less than 300,000 views? Come on guys, lets get more people to watch this and get over a million views. I mean who doesn't love Superman? This is his evolution in cartoon form. IT IS FREAKING AMAZING!
Hello from the future. View count is at 1.8 million and counting.
I always love how cool Superman really is
This was soo fun to watch. Thanks for putting this vid together.
damn that 1941 superman animation is fucking butter smooth. looks so good.
29:35 - 30:09 Superman trying to play the bad cop while Batman makes the good cop gets me everytime :D
I think that the 1941 superman series is the best one
Way ahead of it's time.
Nothing like it had ever been done before, and hardly anything has come close to matching it since, each episode cost over $100,000 in animation (in 1940's money) with revolutionary (for it's time) rotoscoped actors. It's the reason superman can fly, even it's theme tune was the inspiration to what came after it, the Fleischer brothers were instrumental in shaping Superman to what he is today, like they did with popeye.
Than better 1966
Just how much time has changed is unreal
I love how they cherrypicked the lowest strength demonstration of the original Superman cartoon. That time he smashed an armada of robots? Forget it. The time he stopped a massive airborne aircraft carrier from crashing? Nope. The time he put a panther in a cage? Sure, use that one!
In the original cartoon he was much more toned down. He was JUST Superman, not God man.
+DanQZ
You clearly didn't watch them. He took down a skyscraper-sized Kaiju with a flying tackle, disloged a massive boulder with a simple push, dragged a warship to the bottom of the sea by it's anchor: all in that same cartoon. To Superman, moving a panther is like (was always like) moving a small beetle - not a feat worth discussing.
Idazmi7
A guy dumped molten steel on him and he covered Lois like it was a rain storm...... that’s actually quite badass when you think about it.
To the panther one though that’s also badass in its own right as that human element like seeing him manhandle that shark in Luthor’s office by having him handle this completely lethal animal like nothing.
+SuperShanko
While that's true, I would have preferred if they'd used one (any) of his more major feats for a video like this.
He still comes off better than the 60s one.
Me: Mom can we buy a 10:33 ?
Mom: No, we have 10:33 at home.
10:33 at home: 1:59
What?
@@RadinV1 the joke is that often kids go
"Mom can we go to McDonalds?"
And the mom goes
"We have McDomalds at home"
But when they get home the food at home is way worse than the one in McDonalds, in this case, the kid wants that Nicely Animated superman, but instead he gets the one from 1:59
@@diegodelafuente5056 thx.
The symbol of hope.
Brandon Gaston
All might?
All might is the japanise Shazam
all might is nothing compare with superman
Be their hero clark. Or be none of it. You don't owe this world a thing
Brandon Gaston no its
"THE WORLD'S SYMBOL OF PEACE AND JUSTICE!"
3:58 thats the superman i grew up with
Superman and Bug Bunny are such old characters. Just wish RockSteady would just announced the Superman game.
Michael Brent I'm still wishing for a good crossover between the Justice League and the Looney Tunes well maybe not like the comics books but it would be great.
Vincent Fichtler from what I’ve heard those comics are pretty good
Now I’m kind of wanting a Rocksteady Looney Toons game with Bugs as the lead.
Creed Luvari
Yea, the Elmer Fudd one was so weird if you know the characters, but oddly worked. Would definitely like to see more from that whole thing.
There are rumors that they're working on one now.
Random person: Superman, you don't need to say anything when you fly.
Superman: **Looks angrily* *UP UP AND AWAY*
Superman of Tokyo? WTF?......
ca294 you know Japan
They be weird
Captain Windshire Japanese people.....
I guess they really love Superman as well in a weird way...lol.
ca294 where auperman tokyo????
Goku is Japanese Superman
nobody:
literally nobody:
Superman: GREAT SCOTTS!!!
gods it never even occured to me as a kid that Static Shock was a part of the DC universe
The comics company Milestone was a DC Imprint with exclusive control over their own characters. DC acquired all the characters, which were all technically theirs anyways, when Milestone closed it's doors. Static came from there, along with a few other characters only just now showing up in Young Justice.
Wish they'd stayed open longer.
Static Shock also showed up in Young Justice show and I think Justice League movie (maybe)
It wasn't until the episode "The Big Leagues"(first crossover with The New Batman Adventures)
Be careful when using the word God. So that you don’t accidentally misuse the name of the Lord.
Same
Cartoons did bring the first evolution of Superman. Originally, he could, "leap tall buildings in a single bound." Which was fine for comics, but Feischer Studio thought that flying would be more cinematic, thus Superman gained his first new superpower.
From rounding up escaped zoo animals, to facing off against Dommsday and Darkseid.
Clark has come a long way
2:47
Superman: Help! Help me someone!
Wonder Woman: I think he needs our help!
Bruh.
I prefer the Superman of the old 50's through 70's comic books who was invulnerable, and incorruptible. This Superman never lost his humility, never acted out of anger, never destroyed cities, and never met his match in combat. The closest thing I have seen to this lately is 'Superman All-Star'.
so.... deadshot is not afraid of someone who can blast him to bits, but he's scared of the bad cop becoming good cop...
LOL @ "yeah they did a green lantern film , we uh, don't talk about that..."
3:01 This is the first time I see Batman laughing 😂😨
Ouch! I think I felt that pain of Flash's crushed leg through my computer screen!
Great Scott!!! So many Superman versions.
To be honest the 60's and 70's were dreadful for Superman animation. Or any animation. The budgets were tiny and the quality took a nose dive.
I agree
The anime style of Superman is pretty cool actually.
"But it was fool proof!" *Takes off suit* "FOOL PROOF!!!"
"Orbit. He went into Orbit, at Mach 7" coldest line from a pissed off Superman.
23:29 idc who voice acts him but that is my favorite representation of Superman ever!
10:37 “and they call *me* the Flash”
My God I'm wheezing
As a kid my parents had a dvd set of the 40’s superman. It was my first introduction to him. And i would watch the same episodes almost everyday
13:45
Yo he was ready
I laughed so hard when i saw that, it was just such an instant reaction from supes
The most most most iconniiiccccccx and my most favourite SUPERHERO.....😍😍😍
How is it that the 1940s animation looks more alive and fluent than the animation both 20 and 30 years later
04:59 "we're talking about". That is my favorite voice. 2001 justice league!.
So I was ready to hate on this video after the earliest segments but then the later ones grew on me for the humor. So good job Then & now. You won me over.
Tim Daly is the best voice for superman, just like Conroy is Batman
Rip Kevin Conroy
That Superman vs Doomsday animation was really awesome. I love it
When is Superman getting his own Lego movie? It's 2018, it would be a good way to celebrate his 80th anniversary.
That would be awesome!
He deserves better!! Lego movies are simply mafe when creators run out of ideas
Yess!!!
Sadly, DC sees Batman as their poster boy for the time being.
@@nexusprime2487 well that's because he brings in more toy Revenue because of all the gadgets that he needs in continuity. And because he's human you can manipulate him a little more storyline wise. While sups is too much of a Boy Scout and he's an nearly infallible alien.
So you can't really bend him or torturing that much and when they deliberately tried to make him more Batman / Wolverine like with the Man of Steel it bombed and it was shity.
(Superman the animated series) ah yeah now we're getting to the good stuff
17:15 Superman punched an add onto my screen
2:25 wait, Superman was on Sesame Street? I have to find that episode
Like seeing more of the Clark Kent/Superman, Louis Lane, Jimmie Olson dynamic it's a shame that they leave that out a lot. It's what separates Superman from other superheros to me.
13:40 actually made me laugh, I forgot how fun the Brave and the Bold was.
I swear the old Superman animation moves way more smooth then now😂
Great job!
80 YEARS OF SUPER MAN
There was another actor..who performed:"Superman's" & "Clark Kent's"voice for the "Superman"movie cartoons that were produced and released thru "Famous Studios,Inc."..Sam Parker. Mr.Parker is best remembered as the voice of"Lemuel Gulliver" in the Fleischer Bros. animated feature film:"Gulliver's Travels" in 1939.
7:38 their relationship is beautiful! I think they in love with each other.
Man I watched the old old Superman when I was a kid on this special disk and the Superman intro hit me with such a freezing cold splash of nostalgia it hurt
In the first one why would Superman need to leap over a tall building when he can easily walk around it?
Why would Superman need to walk around a tall building when he can easily leap over it?
Cause it’s easier
Why does a man jump over a wall instead of walking around it?
How tall is the wall?
It's not a matter of why, it's just that he can. If he was ever fighting a giant monster or robot, he could leap up to the top.
Batman: "Donut?"
Deadshot: "OK! OK! I'LL TALK!!!!"