Added: 5 years ago
From: Tuber77
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  • they need to reboot superman and make it more like this

  • @rlt34 Aggreed. Personally I don't get why it's always live action movies for comic book caracters since the 1970s or so.

  • It looks nothing like a tyrannosaurus... or i it just me used to jurassic park´s awesomeness?

  • Superman fighting a dinosaur. THIS IS AWESOME.

  • Ah life before safety protocols; when one idiot's misplaced oil can could put an entire city in danger.

  • 5:26 Is that Oliver Hardy from Laurel & Hardy?

  • I grew up on this episode and the one with the Mad Scientist and the Laser Cannon episode.

    Such great memories.

  • This is Yoshi's grandfather.

  • Heh, funny how fast the ice melts. Usually it takes days especially for a brick of a that size.

  • The classical superman is much more stronger than the "Superman" from Warner Bros

  • @melesio87 If we don't count his current weakness to cryptonite I would claim that he is weaker than he is now and WB version. Though I haven't seen too many WB versions so I'm not exactly too sure about that.

  • I LOVE the old superman episodes from the 40s! You learn a lot about the culture just from watching these episodes. I have this one on DVD.

  • The defrosted dinosaur looks nothing like a Tyrannosaurus.

  • Actually it looks more like Godzilla to me.

  • I love how this has absolutely no bearing whatsoever with fact or reason

  • @ 8:00 - "Yes mi-lord"?

    ...

    Since when have women addressed men as "me-lord"??? God... Louis was INCREDIBLY old fashioned!

  • well the fact that this is an old cartoon of course you'll hear lines like that. nothing wrong with that

  • No, I mean old fashioned as in 1550s. Not the 1950s.

  • You know even then some people would use phrases like that (considering how more goody goody the time was compared to now) it has nothing to do with being old fashioned...

  • sarcasm

  • @KaseyAkira she was being ironic.

  • @KaseyAkira Pretty sure she's being sarcastic- Lois in these shorts was always pretty smart mouthed.

  • What's the official explanation for that she never recognizes her colleague once he wears his superman costume?

  • @nillchen, I'm a huge Superman fan and I still haven't found the answer to that question.

  • @Superfan402 Golden Age Superman was able to alter facial features, Silver/Bronze age had hypnotic powers, Modern Superman takes more cues to how celebrities disguise themselves to hide among the public, his glasses hide his unhuman blue hue, he wears clothing that hides his toned body, his puts on a different voice, stance and pose in different as Clark plus the public while going about their daily lives aren't looking for him plus Clark & Superman have been seen together.

  • @Superfan402 Basically Modern Clark Kent comes across as a guy whom resembles Superman but his actions, voice, etc. quickly turn off the idea, plus not many people in Metropolis actually know Clark Kent, and the few that do have seen him Superman at the same time due Lex's cloning plans etc.

    i'm not a big Superman fan but they have explained this numerous times throughout his existance.

  • Shades of "Reptilicus" and Ray Harryhausen. Looks like Fleisher had the original idea.

  • A giant prehistoric dinosaur is in Siberia kept frozen in the arctic by the wastes in the arctic inside an iceberg. Shipped to American where it kept frozen and it was displayed at the museum. On the phone, Perry White tells the professor that the monster would be still be alive and get Lois Lane over the museum. The ice melts and the dinosaur rewawkens in the museum destroy the building on Lois Lane and Superman must stop her in the city.

  • A frozen Tyrannosaurus is in the arctic at Siberia and kept frozen at the museum. The ice starts to melt and guess what? The dinosaur comes to life! Superman flies back to the museum before he stops Lois Lane. Superman ties the dinosaur up on the ground and tries to eat Lois Lane. Superman flies out of the dinosaur's mouth and fall into the dinosaur's neck. The dinosaur is chained at the city zoo.

  • Comment removed

  • Explorers near the North Pole make a startling discovery: a perfectly preserved prehistoric dinosaur-like animal, frozen in ice. This invaluable discovery is brought to Metropolis, where the experts at the city's museum can study it more closely. The engineers work to restore power quickly, before the temperature rises and the ice surrounding the monster melts -

  • Explorers near the North Pole make a startling discovery: a perfectly preserved prehistoric dinosaur-like animal, frozen in ice. This invaluable discovery is brought to Metropolis, where the experts at the city's museum can study it more closely.

    The engineers work to restore power quickly, before the temperature rises and the ice surrounding the monster melts.

  • Why the hell does redruth keep saying the same thing over and over again?

  • 3:19 to 4:47 very bad!

  • A T-Rex was been frozen in ice by the wastes of Siberia where it's displayed at the museum only it thaws out and Superman must stop Lois Lane.

  • A giant prehistoric dinosaur is in Siberia frozen in ice that is brought to the museum until the ice begins to thaw out and Superman must stop Lois Lane eaten by the dinosaur in the city.

  • Superman battles a prehistoric dinosaur in the city and stop Lois Lane.

  • This cartoon predates Godzilla by 13 years, so Japan must have gotten inspired by this

  • & Just when I thought I saw all the old Superman cartoons.. Where they made during the 1940's?

  • tireless workers ?...are you kidding me ?...you know some one's gonna want to ban this cartoon just like those "racist" bugs bunny cartoons...tireless workers my ass...where's the union in the world of superman...

  • its Godzilla aaaaaahhhhhhh!!!!!!!!

  • I find it exceptionally odd that at no point in the cartoon did the monster let out a roar. Then again, after being frozen in ice for 65,000,000, I'd probably have laryngitis too.

  • I've always heard that dinosaurs didn't have vocal chords, so wouldn't it not roaring be more accurate? :)

  • I suppose. But now you've got me curious as to how the hell would anyone know nowadays whether dinosaurs had vocal chords or not?

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