
The Fantastic Four
The super-elastic Mr. Fantastic, the force field-wielding Invisible Girl, the orange rock-covered Thing and the data-crammed robot H.E.R.B.I.E. make up a team of superheroes dedicated to thwarting would-be world-dominating villains.
- Rated
- TV-Y7-FV
- Released
- 1978
- Country
- United States
Details
Release year: 1978
Storyline
The super-elastic Mr. Fantastic, the force field-wielding Invisible Girl, the orange rock-covered Thing and the data-crammed robot H.E.R.B.I.E. make up a team of superheroes dedicated to thwarting would-be world-dominating villains.
Top credits
Mike Road — Mr. Fantastic, Reed Richards
Ginny Tyler — Sue Richards, The Invisible Girl
Ted Cassidy — Ben Grimm, The Thing, Blastaar, Sandman, The Mole Man
Frank Welker — H.E.R.B.I.E., Doug, Impossible Man
Did you know
• It has been very widely reported that the character of H.E.R.B.I.E the robot was created because of concerns that The Human Torch might lead children to set themselves afire. Comics creator John Byrne did a story on the concept as writer/artist of the Fantastic Four comic book in the early 1980s, and Doug Wildey a frequent development artist and sometime producer for DFE claimed to have been part of the decision when interviewed for "Amazing Heroes" comics fan magazine. (Interestingly, as a longtime Hanna-Barbera contributor, he would have worked on Fantastic Four (1967), which DID feature The Torch). The actual catalyst for Herbie's creation was the simple fact that the TV rights to The Human Torch had already been optioned as part of the development deal between Marvel Comics, Universal Studios and CBS-TV, which resulted in prime-time, live-action versions of The Amazing Spider-Man (1977), The Incredible Hulk (1977), Captain America (1979) and Dr. Strange (1978). The character was just not legally available for use in these cartoons. A live-action Torch proved an unfeasible project given the limits of the budget and special effects technology of the day, and never reached production. One other character also optioned under that deal was The Sub-Mariner, abandoned because Man from Atlantis (1977) was felt to have been too similar.
• Don Messick, Mike Road, Ted Cassidy, & Vic Perrin were the only voice actors who have previously done voice work for Fantastic Four (1967).
• Rapper MF Doom has sampled audio from this cartoon for his songs, as Doctor Doom is the inspiration for his rapper persona.
Episodes
13 episodes – 1 seasons
User reviews
old TV animation
How Fantastic? Not very.
Return of The Fantastic Four
Technical specs
- Sound mix
- Mono
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- Color
- Color

















