Join our mailing list:
View Cart
New Account | Log In 
Search

Help Desk

DVD Genres



ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN-SEASON 1-DISC 1 (DVD) DVD Movie

ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN-SEASON 1-DISC 1 (DVD) DVD



PN: 012569809000     Release: 06/04/2008
Starring: George Reeves, Phyllis Coates, Jack Larson
Director(s): Lee Sholem


The Adventures of Superman: Season 01
Part of Series:
The Adventures of Superman [TV Series]
The first of several TV series based on the comic-book character "Superman" created by Joe Siegel and Jerome Schuster in 1938, The Adventures of Superman was one of the most popular adventure series of the 1950s, and one of a handful of syndicated programs from that era still in active distribution. Production began in 1951 with a 58-minute pilot film, released theatrically as Superman and the Mole Men. George Reeves, who had launched his movie career as one of the Tarleton twins in the 1939 blockbuster Gone With the Wind, starred as Superman, "strange visitor from another planet with powers and abilities far beyond mortal men." In other words, Superman could fly through the air, could bend metal and other ductile objects in his bare hands, was impervious to bullets and knives, and possessed X-ray vision (he was vulnerable only to Kryptonite, the radioactive element from his home planet Krypton). When not busy fighting crime and rescuing the helpless victims of dastardly villains, Superman assumed the guise of Clark Kent, mild-mannered, bespectacled reporter for "The Daily Planet," the leading newspaper in the city of Metropolis. Also appearing in Superman vs. the Mole Men was Phyllis Coates as Clark's fellow reporter Lois Lane, who despite her otherwise keen powers of observation never figured out that Superman and Clark Kent were one and the same (nor for that matter did anyone else). Like the pilot film, which was subsequently re-edited into two half hour episodes to be compatible with the series proper, the 24 first-season Adventures of Superman installments were filmed in black and white; they were also faster paced and more adult-oriented and violent than the series' subsequent seasons. Added to the cast were John Hamilton as Perry White, irascible editor of "The Daily Planet"; Jack Larson as cub reporter Jimmy Olsen, a character originally created for the radio version of Superman in the 1940s; and Robert Shayne as police inspector Bill Henderson, the only character that had not previously appeared in any other Superman incarnation. From the outset, The Adventures of Superman cut down production costs by adopting an assembly-line filming method, shooting scenes from several different episodes on the same day, recycling sets (Clark Kent's office was the same as Lois Lane's, albeit with rearranged furniture), utilizing the same costumes in every show, and hiring many of the same supporting actors as often as possible, among them Herb Vigran, Billy Nelson, Tris Coffin and especially Ben Welden. For the series' second season of 26 episodes, Noel Neill took over from Phyllis Coates as Lois Lane, and Whitney Ellsworth inherited the producer's reins from Robert Maxwell. Unlike his predecessor, who preferred serial-like "blood and thunder" melodrama with genuinely frightening bad guys, Ellsworth tended to avoid overt violence, and preferred his villains less menacing and more buffoonish. As a result, the series now appealed more to younger viewers than to adults. By the time the third season went into production in 1954, The Adventures of Superman was for all intents and purposes a kiddie show, with broad, tongue-in-cheek performances and an emphasis on gimmickry, gadgetry and juvenile science fiction. Also beginning with its third season, the series was filmed in color, which would boost its appeal and salability in the decades to come. Although the budget became increasingly tighter in the ensuing years, the series' special effects were generally quite impressive for their time, thanks largely to the canny (and frugal) expertise of technical wizard Thol "Si" Simonson. After 104 episodes, The Adventures of Superman shut down production in 1957. There was talk a few years later that the series would begin turning out new episodes, but this became a moot point when, on June 16, 1959, star George Reeves was found shot to death in his home. For many years, the conventional wisdom was that Reeves committed suicide, despondent over being so typecast as Superman that he could not find any other work. More recently, however, it has been revealed that the actor had just signed a lucrative contract to direct several films; also, new evidence has opened up the possibility that Reeves was murdered, possibly as the result of a love triangle involving a powerful and influential Hollywood executive. Making its national TV debut in the fall of 1952, The Adventures of Superman was seen exclusively in off-network syndication and later on cable TV -- except during the 1957-58 season, when 52 episodes were run as part of ABC's weekday-afternoon lineup. The program was sponsored by Kellogg's cereals during its original run (1952-59), and footage still exists of the cast members promoting various Kellogg's products in commercials. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Includes Seasons:
The Adventures of Superman: Season 01
Adventures of Superman, also sometimes known simply as Superman, went into production in 1951, following the shooting and theatrical release of the feature film Superman And The Mole Men. The latter, produced by Robert Maxwell and directed by Lee Sholem, starred George Reeves in the dual role of Superman and Clark Kent, and Phyllis Coates as Lois Lane. Superman had already come to the big screen on three occasions in the 1940's, in a series of much-admired cartoons produced by the Fleischer Studios in the early part of the decade and two serials from Columbia Pictures starring Kirk Alyn as the Man of Steel and Clark Kent during the second half of the decade. In the wake of the second, Superman Vs. Atom Man (1950), the decision was made to do a television series, with a feature film as the "pilot"; unlike the serials, however, which were relatively low-budget productions, the series would break new ground in terms of quality and special effects, mostly because -- in contrast to the serials, in which Superman turned into a cartoon in those scenes in which he flew -- this version of Superman would actually show him flying. That meant that the show would be shot on film, which was then a new concept in television production -- up to that time, virtually all dramatic programming (and almost all programming, for that matter) was done live, and all science fiction-oriented programming and kids programs up to that time had been done live, in front of the camera, as it went out over the air; coupled with the low budgets involved overall, a lot of it looked cheap and it was impossible to do the kinds of special effects to which film audiences had become accustomed, or to properly preserve the material. Shooting on film was much more expensive, but it would allow for a sharper image, proper editing and the insertion of special effects, better sound and superior sound effects, and for the preservation of that program over time. Although it's lost on viewers in the twenty-first century, these were bold decisions for a series in 1951, especially one aimed at kids. Indeed, in those days, no one knew whether there would ever be a marketplace or a value in subsequent plays (what we now call reruns) of this (or any) kind of programming. The first thing that the producers -- radio veteran Robert Maxwell and serial hand Bernard Luber -- had to do was find a new Superman. They were originally intending to use Alyn again, but the actor wanted too much money for the feature film, and his reticence to do the role proved fortuitous -- it gave the producers a chance to recast the role in a tougher manner, which they did in the guise of a 36-year-old film actor named George Reeves. Born in 1914 in Woolstock, Iowa, he had been in Gone With The Wind in a small but prominent role, and also in such high-profile films as Lydia and So Proudly We Hail, the latter in a starring role, but his career had faltered since the end of World War II. In contrast to Alyn, who brought a dancer's agility to the part of Superman, Reeves was a former aspiring boxer, a well-built, powerful looking man, and also an intense actor. In addition to making a more powerful looking version of Superman, he would make a much more substantial Clark Kent, all of which would make the television show more complex than the serials had been. The next cast member in place was Texas-born Phyllis Coates, 11 years younger than Reeves who, in addition to being very pretty, projected a toughness in the role of Lois Lane, and also had one of the great moviescreams of her era -- one never forgot those moments in which Coates' Lois Lane had to let out a shriek for the cameras, as exhibited in the pilot, Superman And The Mole Men. The latter, running just over an hour, was produced and released through Lippert Pictures in early 1951 and was a success, showing what Reeves and Coates could do in the roles in an unusual science fiction-oriented story that also had sinister topical and political overtones, regarding prejudice and mob violence, that made it unusual for a movie aimed at younger viewers. The series itself, with a younger actor named Jack Larson as Jimmy Olsen and veteran Hollywood character actor John Hamilton as Daily Planet editor-in-chief Perry White, plus Hollywood and theater actor Robert Shayne in the new, recurring (and later regular) role or Inspector William J. Henderson of the Metropolis police, went into production in mid-1951, with Adventures Of Superman intended to be offered into syndication in 1952. As it turned out, in most parts of the United States, the series didn't get on the air until 1953, by which time Kellogg's had been lined up as a sponsor. Most elements of the series followed the pattern set up in the comic book. The planet Krypton is destroyed, its race of hyper-advanced, super-powered beings is destroyed with it but not before one scientist, Jorel, and his wife Lara send their newborn child Kalel into space in a rocket of his design; it lands of Earth and the infant is found by a couple, the Kents, who raise him as their own on their farm; he grows up as Clark Kent, and discovers that he possesses extraordinary abilities, including super-strength, the ability to see through objects, and the power of flight. He grows to manhood and assumes the role of Superman to defend the world against evil, ranging from criminal elements to threats from outside of the planet, while in his guise as Clark Kent, becomes a reporter for the Metropolis Daily Planet -- his best friend, as Superman or Kent, is Jimmy Olsen, a cub-reporter, while his rival and colleague is reporter Lois Lane; all three of them work for Perry White, the blustery editor-in-chief of the Planet. And Kent's (and Superman's) work frequently brings him into contact with Inspector Henderson of the police department. Through all of this, he maintains his secret dual identity, despite the fact that Kent's only real "disguise" differing him from Superman, other than a seemingly mild-mannered demeanor, is a pair of glasses, the first thing to come off when he switches identities. The first season of Adventures of Superman turned out to be a lot more than a kid's show. In fact, unlike Captain Video or such subsequent science fiction series as Rocky Jones, Space Ranger, it was categorized as a general action-adventure show and scheduled for the early evening, intended as much for parents to watch as for kids, and most of its content and focus came from the radio version of Superman, which Maxwell produced and had been airing for several years; it was actually closer in spirit to detective series of the period than to the Superman comic books or to most children-oriented programs of the era. The filmed shows looked sensational on television, with crisp photography and sound, and the special effects -- mostly the work of Thol Simonson -- did, indeed, show Superman flying with incredible realism that made the preceding serials look pathetic, by comparison. The acting was also exceptionally good, with an array of solid, working character actors supporting the main cast, including many screen veterans and experienced stage performers, including Dick Elliott, Myra McKinney, Dan Seymour, Veda Ann Borg, Jonathan Hale, Rhys Williams, and Peter Brocco. They also began developing a stock company of sorts, including Ben Welden and other character actors in supporting roles, although this wouldn't become standard practice until the second season. The two directors who handled the first season shows, Tommy Carr and Lee Sholem, were also top-notch action filmmakers from motion pictures, who were excellent at establishing pace and dramatic rhythm. From the show depicting the origins of the Man of Steel, "Superman On Earth", everything seemed perfect, and perfectly compelling, retelling the story of the planet Krypton and its destruction, the sole survivor, a baby in a Kryptonian rocket, arriving on Earth, his childhood in small-town America of the 1920's and 1930's, and his subsequent discovery of his super-powers and the responsibility that went with them. The television show's version became the most widely known retelling of the story for many, many years to come, rivalling the ubiquitousness of the account repeated in Superboy comics, and Superman and Action Comics, and George Reeves' portrayal defined the character for several generations of television viewers, thanks to the original decision to shoot it all on film -- its crisp, sometimes glittering images made reruns of the series viable for a half-century and counting, long after live, kinescope-preserved shows like Captain Video were consigned to history. The only problem -- and there was a serious one -- lay with the violence. Producer Robert Maxwell, who was primarily responsible for the tone of the series, had patterned the show after the radio series, even adapting many scripts from the latter, and many of those scripts, as well as the whole tone of the series, came out of 1940's radio crime shows. That was fine for adults, and overlapped nicely in look and feel with the booming field of film noir in movies, but for a program whose sponsor aimed at entertaining children, it created shudders -- there were bodies everywhere in that first season, not just of people but of dead dogs in one episode, and people getting knifed, hit over the head with shovels and other implements, and generally pummeled and serious hurt -- Coates herself had been accidentally knocked cold in shooting one scene in an episode, "Night Of Terror"; and there were stories involving lunatics imprisoning people, apparently suicides, and torture being depicted on screen, and even an old lady in a wheelchair being pushed down a flight of stairs, and (in a scene that is still painful to watch in the twenty-first century) a crippled young girl's leg brace being forcibly and painfully removed by a villain; Superman even manages to kill two people, albeit not intentionally, who discover his secret identity in one episode. A handful of episodes were even recut at the insistence of the sponsor in order to make them less violent. Kellogg's loved the ratings but hated these moments in the series, and found far too many of them, and decided that a change had to be made in subsequent shows, in both the content and the producer behind it. This made the first season of the series unique, as a show with a level of violence that would be unthinkable in any program of that era, or of any subsequent time. It gave the resulting series a dark, threatening, film noir-like tone -- one episode, the season finale, "Crime Wave", would assemble many of the most violent scenes from the rest of the season plus an array of violent shots taken out of film noir of the period, into a pair of harrowing and downright scary montages. The effect was especially startling and memorable with the scoring to the eerie canned music used for the production that first year, which, although used in many filmed shows of the period -- thanks to the fact that the Musicians' Union made it all but impossible for producers of early filmed shows to commission their own background scores -- became uniquely associated with Adventures of Superman thanks to the fact that it was rerun, decade after decade, while the other series in which it was used (Terry And The Pirates, Dick Tracy etc.) disappeared from view. Subsequent seasons, which would see one key role recast and major changes in the focus of action and stories, plus the addition of color filming (in anticipation of color television), would extend the run of the series across the decade, but it was this first season that would prove the most memorable to longtime fans. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Includes Episodes:
The Adventures of Superman: Superman on Earth
The sole survivor of the doomed planet Krypton is the baby son of scientist Jor-El (Robert Rockwell) and Lara (Aline Towne), who providently place the child in a rocketship and blast him to earth just before their planet explodes. Rescued by a farm couple named Kent, the infant, renamed Clark, grows up with the knowledge that he is "different" from other children--mainly, he has powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men, including the power of X-Ray vision and the ability to fly. Making his way to the big city of Metropolis, the adult Clark Kent (George Reeves) applies for a reporter job at the "Daily Planet", but irascible editor Perry White (John Hamilton) wants nothing to do with the bespectacled greenhorn--at least, not until Clark offers to "arrange" the rescue of a man dangling from a dirigible guide wire 1000 feet above ground. Of course, Clark neglects to tell anyone that he is able to pull off the rescue himself--as his alter ego, Superman! This "origin" episode of The Adventures of Superman was the first to be telecast, but was actually the 24th episode to be filmed for the series' inaugural season. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The Adventures of Superman: The Haunted Lighthouse
Cub reporter Jimmy Olsen (Jack Larson) pays a visit to his Aunt Louisa (Sarah Padden) who lives in a lighthouse off the coast of Maine. Upon arrival, Jimmy begins to suspect that something is amiss: Though he's never met Aunt Louise, she sure doesn't live up to her description. And besides, there's a sinister looking "cousin" (Jimmy Ogg) and a very terrified young woman (Allen Roberts) on the premise. It is up to Clark Kent (George Reeves) to figure out that the lighthouse is being used by a gang of smugglers--and it's up to Kent's alter ego Superman to save Jimmy from a watery doom.. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The Adventures of Superman: The Case of the Talkative Dummy
The staff of the "Daily Planet" investigates when several armored trucks are hijacked in Metropolis. It turns out that the thieves are being supplied with information concerning the truck's routes by a specially rigged ventriloquist's dummy. Stumbling on to vital evidence, cub reporter Jimmy Olsen (Jack Larson) is kidnapped a locked in safe. Good thing that his colleague Clark Kent (George Reeves), alias Superman, possesses the gift of X-Ray vision. Pierre Watkin, who previously played "Daily Planet" editor Perry White in two Superman movie serials, is here seen in a different role. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The Adventures of Superman: Mystery of the Broken Statues
Lois Lane (Phyllis Coates) runs across a pair of mysterious men who are going around Metropolis, purchasing cheap plaster statuettes at various gift shops and then smashing them. Intrigued by their bizarre behavior and positive that there's a story behind it somewhere, she enlists the help of Clark Kent (George Reeves) to see what they're up to and even gets ahead of them, purchasing some of the statues herself and smashing them, whereupon she discovers some small, seemingly meaningless objects inside. But before she can figure out what it all means, she's kidnapped out of her own apartment. Kent and Inspector Henderson (Robert Shayne) are positive that notorious international criminal Paul Martin (Tris Coffin) is behind the kidnapping and the plot, but can't get a lead on his whereabouts, or the meaning of it all. Inspector Henderson is slowly sweating the truth out of one of Martin's henchmen, but it looks as though only Superman can help Miss Lane, if he can find out where she's being held. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
The Adventures of Superman: The Monkey Mystery
A fortune handed to Lois Lane (Phyllis Coates) by an organ-grinder's monkey -- a monkey dressed in a Superman costume, no less -- sends her on the trail of a secret formula, the last work of slain Eastern European atomic scientist Jan Moleska (Fred Essler). She finds Moleska's daughter Maria (Allene Roberts) unconscious, and is, herself, knocked cold by an enemy agent; Superman (George Reeves) arrives in time to save their lives, but not to keep the formula from being stolen. When Jimmy Olsen (Jack Larson) is kidnapped while following up a lead to the enemy agents, Superman finds himself with a doubly urgent mission, to save his friend and find the formula. He hopes that the organ-grinder's monkey will lead him to both before it's too late. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
The Adventures of Superman: A Night of Terror
While taking a well-deserved vacation in Canada, reporter Lois Lane (Phyllis Coates) ends up at a seedy motel where the owner's wife (Ann Doran) is behaving in a strangely terrified fashion. It turns out that the motel is the refuge for a pair of gunmen who are awaiting the arrival of a paid killer. Before long, Lois has been kidnapped by the villains--and when cub reporter Jimmy Olsen (Jack Larson) comes to her rescue, he is snatched as well. Looks like this is another job for Superman (George Reeves). Watch for the notorious scene in which supporting actor Frank Richards accidentally knocks Phyllis Coates unconscious for real! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast
George Reeves as Superman
Phyllis Coates as Lois Lane
Jack Larson as Jimmy Olsen
John Hamilton as Perry White
Robert Shayne as Inspector Henderson
George Reeves as Clark Kent
Crew
Lee Sholem - Director
Robert Maxwell - Producer
Bernard Luber - Producer
Bob Luber - Producer
Thol Simonson - Special Effects
Danny Hayes - Special Effects
The Adventures of Superman: Season 01
(not reviewed)
 
(no awards)

General Specifications:

Language Options:
Subtitle Options:
Sound Processing:
Additional Features:
MPAA Rating:
DVD Discs Included:
DVD Sides:
DVD DVD Region Code:
Content Length: min
 


 Home | HD DVD's | Blu-Ray DVDs | Browse DVDs by Genre, or Actor   | Contact Us 
 Music by Genre, or Artist  | Books by Genre, or Author | Reviews | Affiliate Program 

Copyright 1996-2008, ULN Corp. Content by Registered Trademark All Media Guide LLC 2008. All rights reserved.