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TRIVIA: Cast and Crew

Brian Austin Green leaves the show after Season 1 and is replaced by Quinton Flynn, who took over the role of the Human Torch.

 

Fantastic Four (1994)

Fantastic Four

When Reed Richards, Sue and Johnny Storm and pilot Ben Grimm take a premature space flight on a new shuttle, they find themselves massively bombarded with cosmic radiation. Barely managing to re-enter and land safely, the quartet find themselves forever transformed with superpowers. Deciding to use these new powers to help people, they form the Fantastic Four, a superhero team dedicated to the protection of Earth from menaces like the Latverian King Dr. Doom and Galactus, the planet consumer.


In the mid-1990s, Marvel Productions syndicated a new Fantastic Four animated series as part of The Marvel Action Hour. The first half of the hour was an episode of Iron Man; the second half an episode of Fantastic Four. During the first season, Stan Lee was featured speaking before each show about characters in the following episode and what had inspired him to create them.

The vast majority of episodes in the first season consisted of fairly accurate re-tellings and intelligent re-interpretations of classic 1960s FF comic book stories by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, but the season's cost-effective animation and attempts to add humor through the inclusion of a fussy British landlady for the FF were generally met with displeasure by fans - to say nothing of then-current FF comic book writer Tom DeFalco, who got in trouble for penning a scene in issue #396 of the series that featured Ant-Man watching and lambasting an episode of the cartoon.

Both the Fantastic Four and Iron Man series were radically retooled for the second seasons, sporting new opening sequences, improved animation, and more mature writing (the first season was primarily written by Ron Friedman), though noticeably having fewer introductions by Stan Lee, with several of the new shorter intros being used more than once. The Season 2 episodes also drew upon John Byrne's 1980s run on the Fantastic Four comic, in addition to further Lee and Kirby adventures. The Marvel Action Hour lasted two seasons before being canceled.

Following the release of the 2005 live-action film, The Walt Disney Company released the series on Region 1 DVD, now featuring new introductions by Stan Lee for all 26 episodes (replacing the original introductions, which had been removed for network broadcast). Additionally, pieces of footage from the episodes themselves had also been removed for network broadcast, and it is these cut episodes that comprise the DVD set. Region 2 received only a DVD comprising of the first four episodes.

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Also Known As :
* Los Cuatro Fantásticos (Alternative Language)
* The Marvel Action Hour: The Fantastic Four (Syndication Title)
Status : Ended Edit Status
Running Time : 22 minutes
Premiered : September 24, 1994
Date Ended : February 24, 1996
Number of Episodes : 26
Season Count : [Edit Season Count]
Language : English
TV Station : Syndicated
Country : United States
Picture Format : [Edit Picture Format]
Audio Format : [Edit Audio Format]
Camera Setup : [Edit Camera Setup]
Caption : Closed Caption
Genre : Action, Science Fiction, Animation, Adventure

Tags : Superhero, Based on Comic, Based on Comic Book, Superheroine, Superhero Team, Marvel Comics, Flying, Superhuman Strength, Elasticity, Marvel Entertainment, Person On Fire, Super Powers, Superhuman Speed, Invisible Woman, Fantastic Four, Human Torch, Pyrokinesis