Tue Jul 13, 2010 8:45AM2 comments ›
Tue Jul 13, 2010 — by Robert Greenberger
Today's Warner Animators Praise the Past
Brandon Vietti and James Tucker Recall 'Super Firends'
Brandon Vietti is just two weeks away from his solo directorial film debut with Warner Home Video’s looming release of Batman: Under the Red Hood, a dark, emotionally wrenching journey as Batman’s past and present collide.James Tucker is enjoying another successful season producing the Warner Bros. Animation/Cartoon Network hit series, Batman: The Brave and the Bold, a much lighter take on the Caped Crusader’s adventures
Ironically, the super hero roots of both contemporary animators can be found in the same content – Super Friends, the one-hour ABC series that began in 1973, inspiring generations of young imaginations and spawning numerous cartoon series sequels.
Warner Home Video and DC Entertainment will release Super Friends! Season 1 Volume 2 on DVD on July 20, 2010. Available for the first time since its debut in 1973, this highly-anticipated deluxe two-disc collector’s set features eight exciting one-hour episodes starring the most recognizable DC Comics super heroes and villains of all time.
Super Friends! Season 1 Volume 2 follows the adventures of Superman, Batman, Robin, Wonder Woman and Aquaman as they join forces to save the world from unthinkable disasters. This crime-stopping squad, along with heroes in training Wendy, Marvin and Wonder Dog, combine their special superhuman skills to defeat the evil villains at hand. The collection also features DC Comics favorites Plastic Man, The Flash and Green Arrow. Each hour is packed with timeless adventures of the universe’s greatest heroes as they pave the way for a brighter future.
Both Vietti and Tucker fondly recall the wide-reaching impact Super Friends had on their young lives.
“The Super Friends show was my first exposure to the world of DC
super heroes,” says Vietti, who also co-directed Superman Doomsday
and was the director for much of the first season of Batman: The
Brave and the Bold. “The show was on TV during the first 12 years of
my life so I was the prime audience. From the first episode I ever
watched, I was hooked! My parents bought me the DC action figures, the Super
Friends bed sheets, and, of course, the Underoos. I guess the Super
Friends show was a rather formative influence on me as a kid since I
now have career making cartoons about DC super heroes.”“To me, Super Friends really represented what Saturday morning cartoons were all about,” remembers Tucker. “When I think of Super Friends, I’m really reminded of waking up at 6 a.m., getting my bowl of cereal, and camping in front of the TV for about four or five hours of cartoons.
“It was probably the first show I saw that featured DC Comics characters that wasn’t in reruns. It was just cool seeing heroes in animation that I was reading in the comics at the time. And even though I knew the cartoon wasn’t at the same intensity level as the comics, it was still cool. The novelty of watching animated super heroes was enough to make up for the goofy stories and non-violence.”
The series also placed some important design and character seeds in minds of two of the leading super hero animation veterans in the industry today.
“I loved the scale of the adventures in Super Friends,” Vietti adds. “Episodes would often take place in fantastic locations under ground, under the sea, or in deep space. There was no end of aliens, monsters and evil scientists that had to be stopped before executing some evil plan. The Super Friends show was my first exposure to stories and characters like that, so that kept me tuning in again and again.”
“I thought the designs were appealing at the time – I didn’t know Alex
Toth had done them, but they felt like the comic book designs,” Tucker
says. “They had the anatomy that the comics had, and there was a
simplicity to them that I can appreciate now but I probably wasn’t aware
of back then. “Super Friends was a consistent version of the DC characters when you just didn’t get that in another cartoon show. It kept those characters alive in my imagination, and I know it has had a direct effect on the way I work in animation today. I always say that Batman: The Brave and the Bold is the show I was watching when I watched Super Friends. The spirit, the fun, the excitement and the innocence of that series is what I wanted to capture with Batman: The Brave and the Bold.”
Jump to comments (2) ![]()
More News from ComicMix
- Mark Waid's speech and the Napsterization of comics5 hours ago, 2 comments
- The Snark Files: The Flash in a Marathon6 hours ago, 0 comments
- Baltimore Comic-Con 2010 summed up in three pictures1 day ago, 1 comment
- Lost 'Dial M for Monkey' Cartoon Surfaces!1 day ago, 0 comments
- Review: 'Amulet Book Three: The Cloud Searchers'1 day ago, 0 comments
- Season 11 of 'Dancing with the Stars' Released!3 days ago, 6 comments
- Henson Family Donates Original Muppets to the Smithsonian3 days ago, 0 comments
- Review: 'FlashForward The Complete Series'3 days ago, 1 comment
- 'Spider-Man' caught by Australians3 days ago, 2 comments
- The Point Radio: WHITE COLLAR Stands Out4 days ago, 0 comments


Comments (2)
Anonymous (3:20 PM on Tue Jul 13, 2010)
"The 'Super Friends' show was my first exposure to the world of DC super heroes," says Vietti, who also co-directed Superman Doomsday and was the director for much of the first season of Batman: The Brave and the Bold. "The show was on TV during the first 12 years of my life so I was the prime audience."
Brandon makes me feel old--My first exposures to DC Comics' heroes were THE ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN, starring George Reeves (in reruns) and the BATMAN series starring Adam West & Burt Ward (first run).
Andrew Laubacher
Delmo Walters Jr. (4:10 AM on Wed Jul 14, 2010)
I watched vol.1 and never realized, Toth's designs notwithstanding, how bad the animation was. The animation on the Filmation DC cartoons was better.