• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

current childrens scifi TV shows and movies

Also, there was a Spiderman series that took place in an alternate universe that certainly acted like science fiction.

That wasn't an alternate universe, it was a "Counter-Earth" on the opposite side of the Sun. And Spider-Man Unlimited was one of the weakest animated Spidey series of the past two decades; it's hard to choose between it and the MTV 3D-animated series that came out between the first two movies.
 
I'd like to see things along the lines of the great Filmation live-action sci-fi of the 70's: Ark II, Space Academy, and Jason of Star Command. (I've got ideas for reviving the latter two.)

So have I.

With Filmation long gone, I wonder who has the rights to those shows these days? I think even the company (Entertainment Rights) that put out the DVDs is now defunct as well.

Even though these shows were made on a reletively low budget, they looked pretty good for the time, and the stories weren't bad.

Space Academy benefitted from snapping up a number of FX artists and designers who'd just finished work on a little film called Star Wars. They really did terrific work with their micro-budget. In fact, I think SA's in-camera miniature shots tend to look better than Jason's more high-tech bluescreen work, because the bluescreen shots have pretty obvious matte lines.

Agreed. Space Academy looks better in almost every respect compared to Jason. I have always got the impression (correct or not) that Jason was a more hurried production that SA was. That difference in effects techique moght be why, I suppose.
 
^Well, the space shots in SA were much better, but the stop-motion creature animation in Jason was immensely superior to the jerky stuff we got in one of the SA episodes.
 
Also, there was a Spiderman series that took place in an alternate universe that certainly acted like science fiction.

That wasn't an alternate universe, it was a "Counter-Earth" on the opposite side of the Sun. And Spider-Man Unlimited was one of the weakest animated Spidey series of the past two decades; it's hard to choose between it and the MTV 3D-animated series that came out between the first two movies.

I enjoy it-sorry you don't. On the other hand, I look at such things through the innocent eyes of my little boy instead of the cynical, whiskey-sodden persona of a professional writer...:techman:
 
^I'm a teetotaller, thank you very much. And at the time the series aired, I'd only sold one novelette, so I barely qualified as a professional writer.

I guess it wasn't too bad in concept, but it was a disappointment after the preceding animated series (particularly since it initially pretended to be a continuation despite ignoring or contradicting a number of things about it), and it was fairly ugly in its animation style and color palette. If it hadn't been preceded by a better-written, better-cast, and better-looking Spidey series, it might've been more appealing.
 
I'm surprised Power Rangers hasn't been mentioned yet. Giant robots, space travel, time travel, aliens, artificial lifeforms, and alternative dimensions. It's got everything.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top