Thats a shame. Is that due to copyright issues with other characters under separate animation houses or something similar?It's too bad, though, some of the stuff the 90s show had they this one can't use, like the Kingpin and guest star heroes.
Thats a shame. Is that due to copyright issues with other characters under separate animation houses or something similar?It's too bad, though, some of the stuff the 90s show had they this one can't use, like the Kingpin and guest star heroes.
Crap, I totally forgot about this.
Does anyone here know if there are plans to re-air the first few eps, or if they can be seen online?
im sure it could be done again, it might be the more traditional King Pin, but that this series that isnt a problem.I know, which is why I was surprised, but that's the word from Weisman, who would know.
Watch the preview: www.kidswb.com/home
Interview:
Dave Bullock, director of the recently released Justice League: The New Frontier, told The Continuum he has directed four episodes of Kids' WB!'s The Spectacular Spider-Man.
"The first one I directed was the Lizard episode," Bullock said. "I specifically asked for that, knowing it would absolutely be a much moodier, darker type story. Curt Connors is such a great character, so I pushed for that."
The episode, "Natural Selection," will be the series' third.
Bullock directed one episode in each of the first season's four arcs.
This show airs on KidsWB that means that the first couple of eps will probably air at least five times beween now and December.![]()
The Enforcers' boss is the Big Man, their original leader from the comics; real name Frederick Foswell, a reporter at the Daily Bugle (JJJ mentions him by name in the first episode); he died in the late Silver Age as a result of a power struggle with the Kingpin, with the Enforcers continuing on without him, so he's a rather obscure character.
I would; he's been dead since 1967. Modern readers/viewers would never have heard of him.I wouldn't say that. Foswell was a major character from 1964-'67, first as the Big Man, then later as a reformed man who became the Bugle's top reporter (as well as a police informant in his disguise as "Patch"), before briefly turning back to crime and then dying heroically to save Jameson from the Kingpin.The Enforcers' boss is the Big Man, their original leader from the comics; real name Frederick Foswell, a reporter at the Daily Bugle (JJJ mentions him by name in the first episode); he died in the late Silver Age as a result of a power struggle with the Kingpin, with the Enforcers continuing on without him, so he's a rather obscure character.
Though I'm wondering if the gene cleanser will be used for "Spiderman no more" or their take on "Man-Spider", because there was a very similar moment in the old cartoon where he took a formula to remove his powers and instead it made him into Man-Spider.
I would; he's been dead since 1967. Modern readers/viewers would never have heard of him.
I'm also still not fond of the character design style. Eyes without pupils just don't look right to me. And while generally I believe that simpler character designs can allow for more expressive character animation, there are some design styles that are better at expressiveness than others, and I don't think this is one of them. I don't think the animation on Martha did a good job at all of conveying her feelings as she tried to get through to the Lizard/Curt.
Some do, sure, but a character who's been dead for 40 years and is never referenced anymore in the present cannot really be described as anything but obscure, especially since this is his first appearance in any other medium than comics.That's assuming that "modern" readers don't read old comics, and I don't buy that as a general rule. Heck, I never read any Spidey comics until the '90s or so, but I've gone back and read the whole run of Amazing from the beginning. Copies of the Essential Amazing Spider-Man volumes reprinting the early years of the series are widely available, and the copies I got from the library were quite well-thumbed.
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