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  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Kid Power Hour featured two segments: Hero High and Shazam. let's start with Hero High.

    Hero High was intended to be a new Archies cartoon, featuring their superhero identities: Pureheart the Powerful (Archie), Captain Hero (Jughead), Superteen (Betty), and Evilheart (Reggie). However, Filmation couldn't get the rights to do it so they tweaked it a bit and came up with this. Here's the breakdown of characters: Captain California (Archie), Glorious Gal (Betty), Weatherman (Jughead), Dirty Trixie (Veronica), Rex Ruthless (Reggie), Principal Samson (Mr weatherbee) and Miss Grimm (Miss Grundy). The show featured live action sketches, as well as cartoon adventures. The humor was the typical lame Filmation jokes, but at least it had a sense of fun about it. It was entertaining enough for kids, though not quite up to previous standards.

    The other segment was Shazam!, which was very faithful to the comics, unlike the previous live action show. All of the major villains made appearances, as well as the entire Marvel Family (including Freckles Marvel, in at least one episode). Uncle Dudley had the correct WC Fields voice and shady character, as well as his perpetually acting up "Shazambago". Burr Middleton, a veteran of 70's TV shows, like Fish, voiced the Big Red Cheese, while Alan Oppenheimer (Rudy Wells in the early 6 Million Dollar Man episodes and voice of Skeletor in He-Man) handled Dr. Sivana.

    The Marvels had always had a sense of whimsy to them, so little alteration was required for their adventures, to meet the Broadcast Standards and Practices requirements (the censors). As such, the stories were very imaginative and inventive. Amongst the villains who appeared were: Dr. Sivana, Black Adam, Mr. Atom, Mr. Mind, Aunt Minerva, Ibac, and the crocodile creatures. Mr. Tawky Tawny also made his on screen debut.

    Hero High is due to be released from BCI, but Shazam! is still in limbo, as well as the live-action show. Hopefully, the proposed movie will help shake them loose on DVD. It is well worth watching and deserving of DVD treatment.
  • This was one of my favorite TV shows growing up. It had a cheesy theme song, weird characters, and great humor. It was a sad day when the show went off the air. It is not available on video either. :( My favorite character on the show was Rex Ruthless. It was campy, cheesy, but overall, it was a barrel of laughs. A CULT CLASSIC! In my opinion anyways!
  • Shazam was okay, but Hero High was my favorite when I was a kid, I mean before there was Sky High(2005) and Zoom(2006), there was Hero High, a school for super hero's in training, Teenagers with super powers would help police capture bad guys, and other times they would get in embarrassing situations like The Greatest American Hero(1981). It was a fun cartoon to watch, what was also fun, was the live action stage show called The Kid Superpower Hour with Shazam. The actors who voiced the characters, also dressed has there characters in the show. Rex Ruthless(John Berwick), Misty Magic(Jere Fields), WeatherMan(Jim Greenleaf), Captain California(Chris Hensel, who also sang the theme song), Dirty Trixie(Maylo Mccaslin), Glorious Gal(Becky Perle, who looks like the love child of Superman and Wonder Woman), and Punk Rock(Johnny Venocour). The whole cast just went with anything, when it came to the jokes. The cartoon was a fun superhero comedy, I shore up it will come back in live action like Fat Albert(2004)
  • Filmation,a studio that was well known for its cheesy animated cartoons and live-action programming was one of the best that came out of the mid-1960's all the way toward the late 1980's. In the mid-1960's Filmation was responsible for bringing a variety of shows based on superheroes(Superman,Batman,Aquaman and The Lone Ranger);movies based on novels(Isaac Asimov's Fantastic Voyage which was also based on the Oscar winning 1966 science fiction film of the same title not to mention bringing Jules Verne's classic novel Journey To The Center Of The Earth to television as well which was also based on the 1959 film of the same title and also bring Franklin Dixon's classic Hardy Boys novels to Saturday Morning television)and not to mention one of the biggest hits ever to grace Saturday Mornings---The Archies. During the 1970's,Filmation brought us "Sabrina,The Teenage Witch", "The Groovie Ghoulies","Fat Albert","Waldo Kitty",and the musical group "The Osmonds",not to mention animated versions of TV favorites as well including "Star Trek","Lassie","My Favorite Martian","The Brady Bunch"(The Brady Kids), and"Gilligan's Island",not to mention the live-action fiasco of "Shazam!","The Secrets Of Isis","Space Academy"(which featured Lost In Space's Jonathan Harris and Star Trek's James "Scotty" Doohan),"The Young Sentinels","Ark II","The Real Ghostbusters",and "Jason of Star Command". During the late 1970's Filmation resurrected several shows based on Alex Raymond's Flash Gordon not to mention new episodes featuring "Tarzan", "The Lone Ranger",and "The Legend of Zorro." This was also the same studio that gave us also from the 80's "He-Man and the Masters Of The Universe","She-Ra:Princess of Power",and "Bravestarr". Filmation also resurrected two of the biggest stars of Terrytoons(Mighty Mouse and Heckle And Jeckle)during the early part of the 1980's after a 20-year hiatus from Saturday Morning television.

    However,Filmation wanted to try something big here which basically copied Hanna-Barbera and the Kroffts with their own live-action/animated children show and when it premiered on NBC-TV on September 12,1981,"The Kid Superpower Hour" was one of the biggest colossal failures ever conceived in the history of the Peacock network. The reason? This was an odd combination of live-action sketches(done live in front of an audience)and cartoons that featured a rock and roll septet whose members(actually actors)served as hosts and performers and provided the voices for the animated segment of "Hero High," which was a cartoon segment featuring the characters in their teenage years. This was a blatant attempt by Filmation of ripping off their most successful show "The Archies",but actually it was basically a copy-cat formula with one exception...the kids in this segment had superpowers. In all perspective,"The Kid Superpower Hour" was a carbon copy format of Hanna-Barbera's classic late-1960's children show "The Banana Splits",not to mention plagiarizing Sid and Marty Krofft's "The Krofft Supershow" in the process.

    While "Hero High" was not that great,the one segment from this that was a winner featured the characters of Billy Batson and Captain Marvel in the animated version of "Shazam!" which was very faithful to the comics and followed the exact comic book formula. This segment featured the familiar Saturday Morning superhero(and was also based on Filmation's live-action version of the same title). Here Captain Marvel was joined by two other members of his superhero entourage "family" (Billy's sister Mary and Marvel's "foster child" Freddy)battle wrongdoers and save the world from the forces of evil. Scam artist Uncle Dudley tried to convince others that he was just as strong as his kin,while Tawky Tawny was a tiger who assisted Captain Marvel. "Shazam!" was based on the DC Comics characters and the only thing that was great during the entire segment of the show. Most kid viewers didn't care for the live-action part of the show and that was part of the problem especially with some of the actors who portrayed them.Unfortunably,some of the viewers who tuned into this fiasco of a disaster thought the show was neither "super" nor a "power hour" with the exception of the animated version of "Shazam!" After 13 episodes,the program was cancelled on September 11,1982. After this show ended after a season of poor ratings and lack of viewership,the show that replaced it went onward to become one of the second longest-running show of the 1980's and well into the early part of the 1990's...The Smurfs.
  • the cartoon Shazam! was better the live action one because it was based solely from the comics. also noticed the music from the 1st series was in this one as well. in fact when i see the older show and hear the music, sometimes i think of the animated series. too bad Uncle Dudley and Mentor never met in the show , you know. Cap sounded a bit like He-Man and Mary sounded like She-Ra; i thought they were voiced by the same folks, but they're not. too bad they didn't have them and Isis side by side; that would have been cool. imagine that; Andrea Thomas and the Batsons and Freddy Freeman transforming into Isis and the Marvels at the same time. oh well. it was still a good show; i'm surprised this is not on DVD yet. when in doubt, say the magic words: Shazam! Captain Marvel!