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Spiderman the New Animated Series Silver Sable

Spiderman the New Animated Series Silver Sable

Template:Short description

Spider-Human
Spider-Man The New Animated Series.png
Genre
  • Superhero
  • Science fiction
  • Mystery
  • Young adult
Based on

Spider-Homo
by

Developed by Brian Michael Bendis
Morgan Gendel
Marsha Griffin
Voices of
Narrated by Neil Patrick Harris
Theme music composer
  • John Digweed
  • Nick Muir
Composer
  • John Digweed
  • Nick Muir
  • William Kevin Anderson
Country of origin
  • United States
  • Canada
Original linguistic communication English language
No. of episodes 13
Production
Executive producer
  • Avi Arad
  • Rick Ungar
  • Stan Lee
  • Morgan Gendel (executive producer and Developer)
  • Audu Paden (co-executive producer)
  • Brian Michael Bendis (co-executive producer)
Producer Marsha Griffin
Running time 22 minutes
Product company
  • Mainframe Entertainment
  • Marvel Entertainment
  • Adelaide Productions
  • Sony Pictures Television
Distributor Sony Pictures Goggle box
Release
Original network MTV
Original release July 11 (2003-07-eleven) –
September 12, 2003 (2003-09-12)
Chronology
Preceded past Spider-Man Unlimited
Followed by The Spectacular Spider-Man
External links
Website

Spider-Man: The New Animated Series (also known equally Spider-Man 2003 and MTV Spider-Human ) is an blithe television series that was the kickoff of two shows based on the Curiosity Comics character Spider-Man to be produced by Sony Pictures Boob tube post-obit their acquisition of the character'southward entertainment license. Initially intended to serve as a continuation of Sam Raimi'southward 2002 Spider-Man flick, every bit well as a loose accommodation of the Ultimate Spider-Man comic books by Brian Michael Bendis, the show was made using computer generated imagery (CGI) rendered in cel shading. It ran for simply one season of 13 episodes, premiering on July 11, 2003, and was broadcast on cable channels MTV in America and YTV in Canada.

The show is no longer considered canon to the events of Sam Raimi's Spider-Man film series, every bit events in the serial were ultimately contradicted past the events of the first flick'due south eventual follow-up, Spider-Homo 2 , released theatrically a year after this show's debut and cancellation. [1]

Series overview

Set presently after the events of the 2002 picture, [2] Peter Parker, and his friends Mary Jane Watson, and Harry Osborn kickoff attending Empire State University together. Peter and Mary Jane effort to found a relationship without much success. Peter's superhero duties, and later his interest with Indira Daimonji, interfere with his romance with Mary Jane, while Harry continuously blames Spider-Man for the death of his father Norman Osborn. Peter faces an assortment of other villains including the Lizard, Kraven the Hunter and Electro while trying to maintain a job and his studies. He faces two psychic twins that ruin everything in the wallcrawler'due south life, causing Peter to give upward existence Spider-Man and try to alive a normal life.

Cast and characters

Principal characters

  • Neil Patrick Harris every bit Peter Parker / Spider-Human: A superhero who is besides an Empire Land Academy student and lensman for the Daily Bugle . Peter confronts with the want to apply his incredible, spider bite-derived powers to do practiced, he finds it hard balancing his responsibilities of beingness a superhero with schoolwork and his romance with Mary Jane Watson.
  • Lisa Loeb as Mary Jane Watson: A student at Empire Land University and model/actress. She is the on-and-off girlfriend of Peter Parker, but also seems to nonetheless hold some affection for Peter's modify-ego, Spider-Man, who she is unaware are both the aforementioned person.
  • Ian Ziering as Harry Osborn: The son of the late industrialist Norman Osborn. He attends Empire State University along with his friends Peter Parker and Mary Jane Watson. Ironically, he blames Spider-Man for his male parent's death and seeks revenge, but is oblivious to the fact that his father was secretly the Greenish Goblin, and accidentally triggered his own death; yet, every bit the series progresses, Harry has shown to warm up to Spider-Man, every bit well every bit helping him defeat Electro and accept beingness rescued from the Lizard.

Recurring characters

  • Angelle Brooks as Indira "Indy" Daimonji: An affiliation of Gwen Stacy and Betty Brant, she is designed as a single grapheme only for the series. Introduced in "Tight Squeeze", she is ofttimes described as a foil for Mary Jane and Peter's romantic interest at the Empire I Television Studio. The character showed an intense, flamboyant, and unabashed affection for Peter Parker, pursuing him publicly to MJ'southward consternation.
  • Keith Carradine as J. Jonah Jameson: The Daily Bugle newspaper publisher. Consequent with his appearances in the comics and films, Jameson spent most of his appearances berating Spider-Man and adding political spin to his activities, usually in front of Peter Parker. Jameson is so passionate about this that he fifty-fifty appears on a competitor's news broadcast to denounce Spider-Man.

Guest characters

  • Stan Lee as Frank Elson: Appears in the penultimate episode "Mind Games". His graphic symbol appeared for 1 scene in the next episode but did not have any dialogue, except grunts.
  • Rob Zombie as Dr. Curt Connors / Lizard in the episode "Constabulary of the Jungle".
  • Eve as Cheyenne / Talon: A villain possibly based on Blackness Cat in the episode "Keeping Secrets".
  • Kathy Griffin as Roxanne Gaines in the episodes "Mind Games" (Parts ane and ii).
  • Jeremy Piven as Roland Gaines in the episodes "Mind Games" (Parts ane and 2).
  • Michael Dorn as Kraven the Hunter in the episode "Mind Games" (Parts 1 and 2).
  • Michael Clarke Duncan equally Kingpin in the episode "Royal Scam". Duncan previously played the character in the Daredevil film.
  • Keith David equally FBI Agent Mosely in the episode "Royal Scam".
  • Jeffrey Combs as Dr. Zellner in the episode "Flash Memory".
  • Clancy Brown as Raymond (Richard Daimian's bodyguard) in the episode "Sword of Shikata".
  • Virginia Madsen as Argent Sable in the episodes "Spider-Man Dis-Sabled" and "Mind Games" (Function 1).
  • James Marsters every bit Sergei: The leader of a high-tech gang of mercenaries called Pterodax in the episodes "Tight Squeeze" and "Mind Games" (Function 1).
  • Harold Perrineau Jr. as Turbo Jet: A villain peradventure based on Rocket Racer or Bluish Streak in the episode "Heroes and Villains".
  • Ed Asner as Officer Bar in the episodes "Heroes and Villains", "Sword of Shikata", "Law of the Jungle" and "Mind Games" (Part 2).
  • Gina Gershon equally the ronin Shikata in the episode "Sword of Shikata".
  • John C. McGinley as Richard Daimian in the episode "Sword of Shikata".
  • Ethan Embry equally Max Dillon / Electro in the episodes "Head Over Heels", "The Party" and "When Sparks Fly".
  • Devon Sawa equally Flash Thompson in the episode "Flash Retentivity".
  • Tara Potent every bit Christina in the episode "Head Over Heels".
  • Cree Summer as Professor Williams in the episodes "The Political party" and "When Sparks Wing".
  • Jeff Fischer as Doug Reisman in "Heroes and Villains" and "The Party".

Production

Development

Spider-Man: The New Animated Series was initially supposed to be a direct adaptation of the Ultimate Spider-Man comics by Brian Michael Bendis, who also worked on the series' product and wrote the original unused pilot for Sony Pictures Entertainment, who had purchased the movie and idiot box rights to the character. Notwithstanding, after the success of Sam Raimi's 2002 Spider-Man picture show, the show was reworked to follow that continuity. [2] The series was redeveloped by Morgan Gendel, best known every bit writer of the "Inner Calorie-free" episode of Star Expedition: The Adjacent Generation . [3] Gendel, with the team of writers he hired, was given costless rein past Sony to develop several original characters who fit in with the series' more adult tone, including Indira Daimonji, Shikata and the creepily telepathic Gaines Twins. [4] The computer-generated imagery (CGI) was produced by Mainframe Entertainment. [5]

Peter Parker was originally supposed to wearable baggier clothes to hide his superhero musculature, but cost-effective difficulties with the CG format prevented folds from being put into his everyday attire. Every bit a result, Peter's street dress were redesigned to exist close-plumbing fixtures and contemporary, while nevertheless managing to hibernate his physique (and the costume he wore under his clothes) as Spider-Man. [two] The character of Aunt May was not included in the serial (except for a photograph in Peter's chamber), because MTV executives feared that the advent of any elderly people would deter their target youth audience from watching. [6]

The producers establish that the more relaxed standards of MTV allowed them more than creative freedom than normally immune for a Saturday morning cartoon show. [seven]

Cancellation and potential revival

MTV decided that, even though the ratings were high compared to other shows in the same time-slot, the series did not fit in with its other programming. [viii] Manager Brandon Vietti stated that had the series gone on he would have used the villains Mysterio, Vulture, and more of Kraven. [ii]

In February 2022, when a user on Twitter asked Mainframe Studios through a tweet if they will somewhen produce a second season for the series, they responded: "We would love to! Just need Marvel to become onboard". [9]

Episodes

Due to diverse production delays, the episodes aired on MTV out of the right scripted order. This caused some defoliation with audiences regarding the chronology of the series. The DVD releases feature the episodes in the right gild. Each episode has a montage at the stop of which states "Adjacent Fourth dimension On Spider-Homo". The order given hither is that of the DVD.

Reception

The series received mostly positive reviews from critics and audiences, with praise aimed at the voice acting (specially Harris), the mature tone, writing, animation and soundtrack, though information technology besides received criticism from fans for its deviation from the sequel films to the 2002 film, most notably with the abrupt bewilderment ending contradicting the events of the 2004 film Spider-Man two.

In 2004, the serial was nominated for an Annie Laurels for Outstanding Accomplishment in an Blithe Idiot box Production while "Keeping Secrets" got a nomination in Outstanding Storyboarding in an Animated Television set Production. [16]

Home media

The complete series was released on DVD as Spider-Man: The New Blithe Serial: Special Edition on January 13, 2004. Iv divide DVD volumes containing 3 episodes each were too released from 2004 to 2005. The entire series was licensed by Marvel and Sony to DigiKids/Sentimental Journeys, who re-edited the footage from many episodes into one feature, which is sold every bit a personalized DVD in which the purchaser's face is revealed under Spider-Human being's mask. [17]

References

  1. <templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>Erickson, Hal (2005). Tv set Drawing Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 778–782. ISBN 978-1476665993 .
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.two 2.iii <templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles> "Spider-Human: the NEW Animated Series episode #i-Heroes and Villains". Spider-Homo Crawlspace. Retrieved 2010-09-09 .
  3. Morgan Gendel
  4. Morgan Gendel
  5. Mainframe Animates New Spider-Man TV Series
  6. <templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles> "Aunt May". Comic Vine. CBS Interactive. Retrieved September nine, 2010.
  7. <templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles> "Brandon Vietti – Curiosity Animation Age". Archived from the original on 2022-05-30. Retrieved 2022-12-12 .
  8. Morgan Gendel
  9. "#BRINGBACKTNAS" Twitter. Feb 10, 2022.
  10. "SPIDER-Human ANIMATED UPDATE" . http://world wide web.comicscontinuum.com/stories/0307/30/index.htm .
  11. "SPIDER-Human ANIMATED UPDATE" . http://www.comicscontinuum.com/stories/0307/30/alphabetize.htm .
  12. "SPIDER-Human being Blithe UPDATE" . http://world wide web.comicscontinuum.com/stories/0307/03/index.htm .
  13. "SPIDER-Human being Animated UPDATE" . http://www.comicscontinuum.com/stories/0307/30/alphabetize.htm .
  14. "SPIDER-Homo ANIMATED UPDATE" . http://www.comicscontinuum.com/stories/0307/thirty/alphabetize.htm .
  15. "SPIDER-MAN ANIMATED UPDATE" . http://www.comicscontinuum.com/stories/0307/xxx/index.htm .
  16. <templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles> "Blithe Honor Nominations". Most.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2022-12-12 .
  17. <templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles> "Spider-Homo: The New Animated Series (Special Edition) (2003)" . Retrieved 2010-09-09 .

External links

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Template:Spider-Homo in Television receiver

Template:Curiosity animation Template:Spider-Man films Template:Adelaide Productions Template:MTVNetwork Shows Template:MTV Blitheness

Spiderman the New Animated Series Silver Sable

Source: https://fansonicwb.fandom.com/wiki/Spider-Man:_The_New_Animated_Series

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