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Wendy Harris and Marvin White are two junior superheroes in training who were created in an era in which many cartoons featured main characters with sidekicks who were supposed to serve two purposes: comic relief and viewer identification. In the comics, some additional information was given.
The Justice League of America, one of the most famous superhero teams, as they appear in JLA, Secret Origins. Art by Alex Ross. The following is a partial list of teams of superheroes from various comic books, television shows, and other sources.
The premise was that "humble and lovable" Shoeshine Boy, a cartoon dog, was in truth the superhero Underdog. When villains threatened, Shoeshine Boy ducked into a telephone booth, where he transformed into the caped and costumed hero, destroying the booth in the process when his superpowers were activated.
Slapstick (Steve Harmon) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He resembles an animated clown and has the abilities of a slapstick cartoon character, such as one from Looney Tunes , including warping reality to match that of an animated cartoon.
Based on comic book sales, Captain Marvel was the most popular superhero of the 1940s, outselling even Superman. [2] [3] Captain Marvel was also the first comic book superhero to be adapted to film, in a 1941 Republic Pictures serial, Adventures of Captain Marvel, with Tom Tyler as Captain Marvel and Frank Coghlan, Jr. as Billy Batson.
Cartoon-within-a-cartoon on Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids. Cutie Honey [11] 1973–1973: Akita Shoten: TV Asahi: Series based on the manga by Go Nagai. Microid S [371] 1973: Akita Shoten: TV Asashi: Star Trek: The Animated Series [24] 1973–1974: Original: NBC: Animated sequel to Star Trek. Inch High, Private Eye [372] 1973: NBC: Hong Kong ...
The series, produced in color, had extremely limited animation produced by xerography, consisting of photocopied images taken directly from the comics and manipulated to minimize the need for animation production. The cartoons were presented as a series of static comic-strip panel images; generally the only movement involved the lips when a ...
Harley Quinn (Dr. Harleen Frances Quinzel, PhD) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.She was created by Paul Dini and Bruce Timm for Batman: The Animated Series as a henchwoman for the Joker, and debuted in its 22nd episode, "Joker's Favor", on September 11, 1992.