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Challenge Of The Superfriends In Hindi Free Download

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Challenge Of The Superfriends In Hindi Free Download


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In this show, Superman leads a superhero team comprising of the greatest DC Comics superheroes against a team of 13 of the most notorious DC Comics supervillians called the Legion of Doom, led by Lex Luthor in a war that has the fate of Earth in the balance. The Justice League of America battles the plots of the supervillian team, the Legion of Doom. "Challenge of the Superfriends" from 1978 was the best Superfriends show for the mainstream viewer who is not a big superhero fan, but nonetheless enjoys entertaining tales about them on occasion. Like the other two previous shows, the Justice of League of America were compromised of Batman & Robin, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Flash, Aquaman and led by Superman are set up in the Hall of Justice. Supporting superheroes like Hawkman, and the hilarious "minority superheroes" like Black Vulcan/Lightining, Samurai and of course the one everyone loves to laugh at---Apache Chief were there to help out. For whatever reason, the Mexican superhero El Dorado from the previous show didn't get the equal opportunity call back from Superman and Wonder Woman in "Challenge". The minority superheroes were just background extras, if they did something it was usually to simply advance the plot by screwing up and in need of rescue from the White heroes like Superman and Green Lantern. They were hilarious because of all the well intentions of having non-White members on the JLA back in 1978, it still reveals the deep ingrained bigotry and lack of sensitivity of the times with those superheroes stupid ethnic names, being nothing but minor role players on the team, and tendency to just mess everything up for the rest of the JLA. Aquaman and Hawkman could be useless at times, but at least they weren't so embarrassing as the non-White heroes.

Personally I think the two "Super Power Team" shows from the mid 80s were the most mature and best Superfriends TV series period from the various incarnations from the original 1973 to 1986 run, but with the Justice League constantly battling more comic book heavy villains like Darkseid and Dessad on those later two shows, I can understand why a non-comic fan would be less then enthusiastic about them. "Challenge" is my favorite of the non-Super Power Team incarnations. "Challenge" is the best one for mainstream fans that just want to be entertained by a good yarn. Compared to the earlier shows, "Challenge" was a bit more mature and had the Superfriends acting more like true DC comic book heroes, battling real DC villains in the Legion of Doom. "Challenge" took itself more seriously and finally got rid of annoying kid tag alongs and goofy animals that plagued the previous early-mid 70s incarnations like Wendy, Marvin, & Wonder Dog, and those teenage "wonder twin" idiots from the planet Exor that were Zan, Jana, and that damn monkey Gleek.

Every episode had the evil Legion of Doom, led by the ever scheming Lex Luthor, coming up with diabolical plans to rule the world and get rid of the Superfriends. The Legion all gathered together in their mobile Hall of Doom, shaped to look like Darth Vader's mask. The Legion was made up of a great cast of characters, Solomon Grundy, Sinestro, Bizzaro, Scarecrow, Captain Cold, Grod the Gorrila, Riddler, Brainiac, Black Manta, Toyman, and Cheetah. Then there was the dominatrix like redhead Giganta, a favorite of mine because she was barely covered up in an animal bikini and was running around barefoot with ankle bracelets. Giganta could become a 50 ft giant like Apache Chief, and they both suffered the same problem of wearing a skirt while becoming giants. Giganta had a very small role on the show but well, she turned me on as a little kid.

Of course the Superfriends would always win at the end, and the viewer knows this, but it's still always so fun to watch these episodes and see how close the LD comes to knocking the JLA off. I loved the background music on this show, especially the creepy music they played in the swamps when they showed the Hall of Doom. There was some pretty hilarious humour here too on occasion, like when Lex Luthor called Superman "Stupidman" or "Superfool". Or when Lex beraded one of the lesser LD members for saying something stupid the way Bizzaro often did. And just when the Superfriends think they have captured the LD, they would escape somehow or the Hall of Doom would fly overhead and beam them all back up. There were problems with this show for sure, for some reason whenever the script demanded it Flash and Batman had superhuman strength and could even fly like Superman. Wonder Woman didn't display her own superhuman strength nearly enough. The JLA characters didn't have much of a personality difference either, Robin was always a whiny little girl, but everyone else basically acted the same. For instance what difference was there between Green Lantern and Superman? They both acted the same. The animation was usually Saturday morning flimsy. Kids today will probably laugh at this show for the bad animation, miscues with the animated characters and the actors voicing them, and the sometimes hokey schemes of the Legion of Doom. But overall the stories on "Challenge" are still very entertaining. This is a fantastic and memorable show, I highly recommend "Challenge of the Superfriends", it's a Generation Xer favorite. The people behind the SuperFriends series finally got the hint and banished The Wonder Twins and that God awful purple monkey back to their planet (Wherever they came from)and came up with the premise for the best of the SuperFriends series. The Justice League vs. The Legion Of Doom go head to head, good vs. evil, light vs. dark. You KNOW that no one EVER dies in the series and you KNOW that good will triumph, but it's just fun watching T.L.O.D. come up with ways to bump off T.J.L. (And come pretty darn close, too!). Strange that the women look a bit too sexy for Saturday morning cartoons (Wonder Woman always looked like she was about to pop out of her top), but considering the current state of Saturday morning cartoons (Or any cartoon for that matter), "Challenge Of The SuperFriends" is tame (No blood, guts or gore). If you have kids and you don't like the current state of animated programs, then this would be a safe bet. Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman, Robin, Aquaman, Green Lantern, Flash, Hawkman, Black Vulcan, Samurai and Apache Chief. Lex Luthor, Bizarro, Brainiac, Solomon Grundy, Toyman, Cheetah, Giganta, The Riddler, Scarecrow, Black Manta, Sinestro, Gorilla Grodd and Captain Cold. The headquarters for the Legion of Doom. It is metallic, dome-shaped and has two windows that look like eyes--making it resemble the helmet of Darth Vader, an evil space villain in a movie that was only a year old by 1978. This meeting hall doubles as a ship that can travel over the globe and across the universe. But one can usually find it "deep within a bleak and dismal swamp, hidden beneath its murky waters." Superman's arch-foes are Lex Luthor, Brainiac, Toyman, and Bizarro. Wonder Woman's are Cheetah and Giganta. Batman and Robin's are The Riddler, Scarecrow and Solomon Grundy. Aquaman's is Black Manta. Green Lantern's is Sinestro. Flash's are Gorilla Grodd and Captain Cold.

Isn't Solomon Grundy Green Lantern's foe? Sort of. But according to comic book lore, the Solomon Grundy, Batman and Green Lantern from the older comic books are distinct from those of the newer ones. Comic book fans know there's a Golden Age, a Silver Age and a Modern Age. There's also an Earth-1, an Earth-2 and so on. We won't go into that. Suffice it to say, this Solomon Grundy is the arch foe of this Batman and not this Green Lantern.

Isn't Captain Cold Batman's foe? You're thinking of Mr. Freeze.

Isn't Giganta Apache Chief's foe? In this series, yes. In the comic books, she is Wonder Woman's foe. No. And neither are Marvin and Wendy. There are no teenage sidekicks in this series; nor are there any cute animals (like Gleek or Wonder Dog) to provide comedy relief.

Are you sure the Wonder Twins aren't in this series? That depends on what you mean by "this series." IMDb categorizes this, the second segment of an hour-long program, as a separate series. The first half-hour segment does indeed feature the Wonder Twins. But the second segment - what IMDb means by "this series" - does not feature them. Black Vulcan, Samurai and Apache Chief were all created either for this series or for an earlier SuperFriends series. They were created to add racial diversity to the cast of heroes. Black Vulcan is black; Samurai is Japanese; Apache Chief is an American Indian.

Are you sure Black Vulcan did not come from the comic books? There was a very similar comic book superhero called Black Lightning. According to Wikipedia, Black Lightning could not be used for this series "due to disputes between DC Comics and Tony Isabella, the creator of the character." Cartoon fans love to ridicule Aquaman. But some look at the other characters and ask: "How is he especially ludicrous?"

Aquaman, who is very capable under water, has the power to call fish and other marine life telepathically and bend them to his will. But above the water? Well, he's not exactly Superman or Green Lantern. In fact, either of them would presumably be more capable than Aquaman, even in his own domain. Green Lantern would even have better control of the fish (unless they were yellow).

Aquaman fit very well into the first incarnation of the "SuperFriends" with its heavy-handed environmental themes. Early villains were always polluting the oceans, causing tidal waves and so on. By this series, Aquaman's dramatic usefulness was more dubious. He probably won his role in this series by virtue of precedent and inertia. Probably as a convenience to the writers and animators. Note the awkwardness of having Aquaman hitch a ride with Wonder Woman in her invisible jet. Supposedly his power ring cannot be used against anything that is yellow--which would seem to give Sinestro, who has a yellow power ring and no corresponding weakness, the power to crush him like an ant. But it never works out that way. In fact, according toseanbaby.com Green Lantern was able to use his ring against something yellow in 24 out of 30 "SuperFriends" episodes in which he appeared. In fact, in one episode, Green Lantern himself was making yellow objects from his own power ring. Filmation, which was producing a Batman and Robin cartoon at the time, had exclusive animation rights to The Joker and other Bat-villains.

Otherwise there are no glaring omissions from the roster of bad guys. Superman's primary arch-foe was Lex Luthor. The other villains were either the top enemies of the Justice League members, or they were pretty close. Hawkman was the only comic book hero without an arch-foe in the Legion. Black Vulcan, Samurai and Apache Chief were created for "The SuperFriends" and thus had no arch-enemies for the creators to draw from. (Giganta, Wonder Woman's enemy, became Apache Chief's for this series, as noted above.) Several DC Comics characters have given themselves the name of "Toyman." By 1978, there were two. This show's Toyman is modeled on the less familiar one, who appeared briefly in the 1970s and wore a jester-like costume.

The more familiar Toyman appears in "The New Adventures of Superman (1966)" (1966). In episode 7, "The Giants of Doom," four members of the Legion use a mixture of special elements to become 100-foot tall giants. They are Bizarro, Sinestro, Toyman and Captain Cold. Later, Superman, Green Lantern, Batman and The Flash become giants, too, and do battle with the oversized villains.

Couldn't Apache Chief and Giganta already grow gigantic? Yeah, but they could only grow fifty feet tall.

Were they jealous? Giganta expresses her derision. Apache Chief, in keeping with his nobler character, stays silent. In the 1970s, the word "lube" may have had a sexual connotation, but not as inescapably as it does now. The risibility of words comes and goes. Consider the ejaculating characters in the Sherlock Holmes stories. Or consider Lady Macbeth's speech: "Come, thick night,/And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell,/That my keen knife see not the wound it makes,/Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark,/To cry 'Hold, hold!'"

In Dr. Johnson's day, "dun," "knife," "peep," and "blanket" all seemed ludicrous in the context of a solemn tragedy, just as "lube" seems ludicrous in the context of ... a solemn episode of "SuperFriends"?

Why does Batman command Robin to use Bat-lube? They are escaping into the air, courtesy of their Bat-cables, when Solomon Grundy suddenly grabs their legs. They each press a button on their respective utility belts and an oily substance squirts out, which runs down their legs (!) and causes Grundy to lose his grip on them.

Oh, come on. Did he really say "Bat-lube"? Here's how the lines go exactly:

BATMAN: Quick, Robin, the Bat-cables!

ROBIN: He's got us, Batman!

BATMAN: But not for long, Robin. Use your Bat-lube! Superman: Great Scott! or Great Krypton!

Wonder Woman: Great Hera!

Batman: Great Gotham!

Robin: Holy [term relevant to the situation]!

Aquaman: Great Neptune! or Great Atlantis!

Flash: Great wings of Mercury! (once borrowed by Wonder Woman)

Green Lantern: Great meteors! or Great Guardians or Great galaxies!

Hawkman: Great thunder! or Great birds of prey!

Black Vulcan: Great lightning!

Apache Chief: Great Spirit! Of course, he says "Inuk-chuk," which means "big man," according to Wikipedia. This is not an interjection but a magic word that helps him to grow fifty feet tall.

Samurai has three magic phrases. "Kaze no Y ni Hayaku" causes the lower half of his body to become a tornado and propel him into the air. "Tmei Ningen" makes him invisible. "Igo Moen" engulfs him in flames. (See his Wikipedia page.) Don Messick was an extraordinary voice talent with a wide variety of characterizations. The taunting, raspy-voiced Scarecrow was created by the same man who gave us Scooby-Doo. Frank Welker, another extraordinary talent, is best known as Fred from "Scooby Doo, Where Are You! (1969)" (1969) and its countless follow-ups. The high-pitched voice of Toyman is similar to his characterization for Slimer from "The Real Ghost Busters (1986)" (1986). 646f9e108c

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