The ‘Superman' Oscar nomination you (probably) didn't know existed
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While live-action Superman adaptations date back to the 1948 serial and the better-known 1950s TV version The Adventures of Superman starring George Reeves, the Man of Steel's first Oscar-worthy appearance came way back in 1941 and was actually in cartoon form, via the 1941 Superman from animation pioneer Max Fleischer.
The character of Superman first appeared in Action Comics No. 1 (1938), and his initial big-screen adaptation proceeded apace. Paramount Pictures acquired the highly coveted film rights to Superman in 1940, beating out Republic Pictures, which consequently grabbed the rights to adapt Captain Marvel (now DC Comics' Shazam) in serial form. Paramount pitched the Superman series to Fleischer, whose company was partially owned by the studio, and the rest is comic book movie history.
Max and his brother Dave founded Fleischer Studios in 1929. With Max serving as the lead animator and Dave as producer-director, the brothers found initial success in their adaptations of the comic strip Popeye the Sailor Man, with the 1936 animated short "Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor," which secured the Fleischers' first Academy Award nomination.
With an assist from Superman cocreator Joe Schuster, who helped the animators nail the character design, the brothers and their crew began work on their superhero reels, hoping to meet Paramount's stated goal of having the first short in theaters by Christmas 1940. But production took longer than expected, and the first Superman installment, 'The Mad Scientist,' didn't premiere until September 1941. It was the first of 17 shorts in the series.
Superman begins with the titular (but unnamed) 'Mad Scientist' sending a threatening note to Clark Kent's editor, Perry White. The letter claims the antagonist will use his newest deadly invention, the Electrothanasia-Ray, promising that 'total destruction will come to those who laughed at me and failed to heed my warnings.' Lois Lane has a lead and flies off to the villain's lair — quickly finding herself captured by the scientist just as he readies his weapon. Superman intervenes to save day, thwarting the nefarious plan and rescuing Lois.
The Fleischer Superman series marked an early high point for superhero adaptations, and Paramount knew it. The studio even commissioned theatrical trailers to promote the animated serial, a novel maneuver for an 11-minute cartoon.
Midway through production, the Fleischer brothers had a falling out, prompting Paramount to dissolve Fleischer Studios after only nine installments of Superman were completed. With the brothers no longer involved, the company was reorganized as Famous Studios, which cranked out eight additional episodes, with a new voice cast and darker storylines, and a notable decline in quality. The popularity of the Kryptonian cartoons soon waned. The final short, "Secret Agent," was released July 30, 1943. The rights eventually reverted back to National Comics (now DC Comics), which failed to renew their copyrights, resulting in the serials falling into the public domain.
In addition to being the first adaptation of the Man of Steel and paving the way for the superhero adaptations to follow, it also introduced the humorous plot device of Clark breaking the fourth wall, which gradually made its way into the comics. The series as a whole featured a number of classic Superman hallmarks, from mad scientists and giant robots to patriotic repudiations of Nazis.
At the 14th Academy Awards in 1942, Superman was nominated for Best Short Subject, Cartoons, becoming the first superhero film nominated for an Academy Award. The short ultimately lost to Walt Disney's Lend a Paw, the 115th short in Disney's Mickey Mouse series and the only to win an Oscar.
Superman left a large impact on both animation history and subsequent comic book adaptations. 1,000 animation historians ranked the 1941 outing at No. 33 in the book The 50 Greatest Cartoons. They praised its pulp magazine visuals and tight plotting, faithfully reproducing the feel of reading a comic book. Fifty years later, the look of the Fleischer series directly influenced the visual design of the Emmy-winning Batman: The Animated Series (1992-95).
And Gunn himself pays homage to that old-school Kryptonian: the very first image in the filmmaker's new Superman is a snippet of the Fleischer hero, serving as both a connection to the past and a symbolic passing of the Man of Steel torch.
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