Marvel Action Universe
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Marvel Action Universe | |
---|---|
Genre | Action / Adventure / Animation / Fantasy / Sci-Fi |
Developed by | Marvel Productions New World Entertainment Orion Television Sunbow Productions |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | Dino-Riders RoboCop: The Animated Series Spider-Man (1981 TV series) Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends X-Men |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Margaret Loesch Lee Gunther |
Producer(s) | Bill Hutten Tony Love |
Running time | 60 minutes (90 minutes in some markets) |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | First-run syndication |
Picture format | Color |
Audio format | Mono / Stereo |
Original run | October 2, 1988 – 1989 |
External links | |
IMDb profile |
Marvel Action Universe is a weekly syndicated television block from Marvel Productions featuring animated adaptions of Dino-Riders and RoboCop. Marvel Action Universe debuted in 1988.
Contents |
[edit] Format
The first half of the hour was an episode of Dino-Riders; the second half an episode of RoboCop. In some markets, reruns of the 1981 Spider-Man cartoon (alternating with Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends) were aired, making the program 90 minutes long. The block is notable for debuting the X-Men pilot, Pryde of the X-Men. Marvel Action Universe lasted two seasons before being cancelled. A one-shot comic reprinted the original Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends[1] one-shot from 1982.
[edit] Series overview
[edit] Dino-Riders
Dino-Riders was introduced primarily as a promotion to launch a new Tyco toy line. The series told the story of the Valorians, a peaceful race of telepathic humans whose home planet was conquered by the Rulon Empire. 400 survivors escaped on a space ship and time traveled to prehistoric Earth using the experimental Space-Time Energy Projector (also known as the S.T.E.P). But Emperor Krulos and his lead commanders accidentally followed them into the past when a tractor beam locked onto the Valorians' ship during the time jump. Stranded in the past, the two groups recruited the planet's dinosaur population into their struggle. The Valorians used their telepathy for taming dinosaurs to ride and for domestic use. The Rulons captured dinosaurs with 'brain boxes'. These were large metal helmets which fit onto dinosaur's heads and control their brains. Both Valorians and Rulons would often fit dinosaurs with huge arrays of laser and weapon platforms, upon which people could ride, and attack one another. Battles were mostly motivated by the Rulon's desire to steal the S.T.E.P. from the Valorians, and almost always inconclusive, seldom accomplishing more for either side than restoring the status quo from the beginning of the episode.
[edit] RoboCop: The Animated Series
The animated version of RoboCop is based on the character and events of the movie of the same name. The series is a continuation from the movie, with Alex Murphy (RoboCop) still fighting to save the city of Old Detroit from assorted rogue elements, and on occasion, fighting to reclaim aspects of his humanity and maintain his usefulness in the eyes of the "Old Man", president of Omni Consumer Products (OCP). Many episodes see RoboCop's reputation put to the test or soured by interventions from Dr. McNamara, the creator of ED-260 and the top competitor for the financial backing of OCP. McNamara often develops other mechanical menaces that frequently threaten RoboCop. On the home front, RoboCop is befriended as always by Officer Anne Lewis, but is also picked on and lambasted by the prejudiced Lieutenant Hedgecock, ever determined to be rid of him.
[edit] Spider-Man/Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends
The 1981 syndicated version of Spider-Man was based on the popular Marvel Comics character of the same name. The series featured Peter Parker having to balance his alter ego crimefighting with his responsibilities as a university student, a part-time photographer for the Daily Bugle and caring for his elderly Aunt May. Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, which originally aired on NBC around the same time, featured Spider-Man, Iceman, and Firestar. In this incarnation, the three superheroes are all college students at Empire State University, who operate as the "Spider-Friends" as the superheroes battle various supervillains.
[edit] Pryde of the X-Men
Pryde of the X-Men is an unsold animated television pilot from 1989 starring the X-Men. The title is a pun based on the name of X-Men member Kitty Pryde, with the episode told, mostly, from her point of view. The pilot aired infrequently, often in the time slot held by RoboCop.
[edit] Marvel Action Hour
During the second season of The Marvel Action Hour, the series was given the revived "Marvel Action Universe" banner in some markets.