Argue with me at your own peril, but cartoon #20 is the best animated Spiderman series ever. Once you saw Spidey climbing across your screen, you knew you were in for thirty minutes of Marvel merryment.
Spiderman and His Amazing Friends came to children's television sets in the fall of 1981 courtesy of NBC. It was meant to be a follow up to the 1981's Spiderman series, a show which has a similar start to it's opening, but no mention of any amazing friends. Truth be told, I had no knowledge of this prior series until it appeared on Disney+. To be fair, I was 3 when it originally aired and I don't recall ever seeing it in reruns while Amazing Friends ran for years later on various channels.
And the greatest gift Amazing Friends gave us was, of course, Videoman, I mean, Firestar. And to think that almost didn't happen. The original plan for the show was to have the Human Torch, but the character was unavialble at the time, similarly to 1978's The New Fantastic Four TV show that replaced Johnny with HERBIE because the character's rights were apparently tied to a television movie by Universal Studios that never actually happened. So Johnny was replaced by a new character named Angelica Jones, and the rest, as they say, is history. Various names were tossed about for the character including Firefly, Heatwave, and Starblaze. The character proved to be so popular that she would eventually force her way into the comic Marvel Universe by way of 1985's Uncanny X-men 193. A perennial top-10 want in the Fwoosh polls until her Marvel Legends figure was finally released, Firestar has gone on to be a founding member of the New Warriors and a valuable member of the Avengers.
I know, I know, but isn't the 1990's Spiderman Animated Series really the best Spiderman series ever? Eh, it's hard to reconcile that with this...
Don't break my wings,
my achy breaky wings,
I just don't think they'd understand...
"A mullet? Noooooooooooooooooooo!"
To this day it's a wonder comics survived the xtreme 90s full of mullets and soul patches and pouches and over-compensating firearms, but I digress. How does Rob Leifeld still get work? Okay, now I really digress. Honest.
Spiderman and His Amazing Friends was everything a child of the day could hope for in a superhero cartoon. It had Spidey voiced by Dan Gilvezan (who would later voice Bumblebee on the Transformers and Cooler on Pound Puppies and it always made me marvel that Spidey and Cooler sounded the same!), great villains, and amazing superhero guest stars...it all started with the Triumph of the Green Goblin (an amazing costume party--LOOK! There's Medusa!) and everything else after was just ice cream on top of ice cream. One week you might have the Uncanny X-men and the next it might be a weirdly colored Black Knight, but it was Black Knight nonetheless!
Nothing says Black Knight like a giant yellow helmet, great work animation team!
Plus, season two added the voice of Stan Lee himself to narrate episodes. Did the 90s cartoon have that? Did it? I rest my case, your honor.
Ok, so you're not quite convinced? I give you...
Videoman was originally created by Electro using electronic data from a video arcade (it's science!) but once Electro was defeated, and Videoman contained inside an arcade console, the console was sent to the landfill where it was struck by lightning and Videoman would live again! Only to be defeated once more. But in season 3, Farncis Byte was in an arcade when an explosion granted him the ability to transform into Videoman and thus, Videoman lived again again! Only this time VD (maybe not the best nickname?) would help Spidey, and he'd go on to join the X-men.
"But wait, if an explosion gave him his powers, he's not a mutant, how could he join the X-men?"
Shutup, never question Videoman!
But that's not all, SAHAF also gave us great characters like Iceman's half sister, Lightwave!
Arachnoid!
Tharok, I mean, Cyberiad!
Mr. Frump
And best of all, Ms. Lion!
Despite airing three season, Spiderman and His Amazing Friends only clocks in at 24 episodes (season 2 was only 3 episodes eachan origin of one of the main characters) but it would air for two more seasons on Saturday mornings as straight reruns but you'd never hear me complain!
Seriously, though. Whereas shows like the Superfriends gave us some villains with the Legion of Doom, and other superhero shows were just godawful in name only messes like The Thing, Spiderman and His Amazing Friends was like the Marvel Team-Up of television, each week was another great guest appearance by a hero and/or Marvel villain...
Captain America, Thor, Namor, Sunfire, Doctor Strange, Shanna, Iron Man, Daredevil, and the freakin' X-men with Aussie Wolverine!
And villains! Oh, sweet Yancy Street, the villains! Green Goblin, Red Skull, the Kingpin, Magneto and the Brotherhood of EVil Mutants, the unstoppable, unpantswearable Juggernaut, Scorpion, Shocker, the Beetle, Swarm, and even Dracula and Frankentstein!
And they somehow did this in 24 episodes (take that, Jack Bauer!).
If you were a kid, and you wanted true to comic portrayal of superheroes, well...
Unless you wanted MJ. Mary Jane Watson never appeared on screen (though Firestar did bare an uncanny resemblance!)
I could go on and on about this show and how great it is but I think most of us have seen it, and if you haven't, and you happend to have Disney+, then you're in luck, my friend, because you can see the whole series there. Well, almost the whole series, because the Red Skull episode is unavailable because in our current climate we can't see a cartoon that has a depiction of HItler because we're all fragile or something. Mean tweets!
But go watch the rest of the series. I still do on occassion!