Joan Alexander

Japoteurs

Superman vs. Japanese spies hijacking a new super-bomber.

The Mechanical Monsters

Superman battles a criminal mastermind and his robot army.

Terror on the Midway

When things go wrong at the circus, it's up to Superman to stop the escaped animals.

The Mummy Strikes

Egyptologists are attacked by mummies, drawing the attention of Superman.

Destruction Inc.

Superman has to thwart wartime saboteurs tampering with things at the Metropolis Munitions Plant...who have captured Lois Lane and loaded her into a torpedo!

Jungle Drums

Superman discovers a secret Nazi base in the jungle.

Showdown

Superman's reputation is tarnished when a crook begins committing crimes in a Superman costume.

Eleventh Hour

Using Clark Kent as a cover, Superman travels to Japan as a saboteur during the war.

The Underground World

Superman has to save Lois Lane from a cult of hawk-people in an homage to Edgar Rice Burroughs's "At the Earth's Core".

Secret Agent

A double agent trying to deliver information to Washington, D.C. is chased by Nazi operatives.

Billion Dollar Limited

Robbers target a special train carrying a billion dollars worth of gold, and the only one who can stop them is Superman!

The Arctic Giant

A frozen Tyrannosaurus rex is found and put on display in a museum, but when he thaws out and revives, Superman has to stop his rampage!

The Bulleteers

Criminals with rocket powered car loot and extort the city, and only Superman can stop them!

Volcano

Superman comes to the rescue when a volcano erupts.

Electric Earthquake

A scientist uses an earthquake machine to threaten the city, and only Superman can stop his extortion plan!

Superman

After The Daily Planet receives a letter from a mad scientist threatening to wreak destruction with his Electrothanasia Ray, Lois Lane heads out in the hopes of getting more information for a news story.

The Magnetic Telescope

When police interfere with a reckless scientist's experiment, it creates a deadly meteor shower only Superman can stop.

Max Fleischer's Superman 1941-1942

More than just a landmark in superhero animation, Max Fleischer's Superman shorts were no less than the foundation for so many shows that succeeded it. Playing in theaters in 1941-42, only a few years after the Man of Steel made his debut in Action Comics, these 17 exciting films were produced by Fleischer and made famous the phrase "This looks like a job for Superman!" At 10 minutes, each film had just enough time to run the opening credits, establish the threat, let Lois Lane make a headstrong rush into peril, and allow Clark Kent to change to his alter ego and save the day. The films show a remarkably dynamic and atmospheric storytelling style that enables them to hold up for modern viewers. At first the films followed a science fiction-fantasy theme, but not unexpectedly for that time soon focused on wartime concerns.