The Three Fantastic Supermen


The Three Fantastic Supermen is a 1967 superhero film directed by Gianfranco Parolini. The film was the first in a series of Three Supermen films.

Cast

The Three Fantastic Supermen was conceived during the period of a superhero film cycle during the mid-1960s in Italy. Howard Hughes described The Three Fantastic Supermen as being patterned after the film Superargo and the Faceless Giants. The director Gianfranco Parolini had worked in several genres including sword-and-sandal films where there are more than one hero helping each other achieve their goals. He also commented on the stunts in the film, noting that they were done on set with actor Aldo Canti having to jump out of 20 feet high window, jump into a trampoline and jump into a truck which was moving at full speed. The film was entirely shot in Yugoslavia.

Release

The Three Fantastic Supermen was released in Italy in 1967. In his book Diabolika: Supercriminals, Superheroes and the Comic Book Universe in Italian Cinema, Roberto Curti described the film as a "reasonable box office success in Italy". It was released in France on 3 September 1969.
The film spawned several sequels where the trio of heroes showing up in Japan, Africa, Hong Kong and the American West.

Reception

In a contemporary review, the Monthly Film Bulletin noted that the stunt work of the title characters and their various stunt doubles "provide a welcome relief from the standard secret agent/judo syndrome" as well as that the "ingenuity of this comic strip adventure begins to pall after the first half hour, and the inevitable final holocaust in the master criminal's lair is brightened by the villain's diverting scheme to produce an army of robot villains who all look like the hero."
From retrospective reviews, Roberto Curti described the film as a "mixed bag" taking too much material from its sources such as The Phantom, Zorro and Goldfinger.

Footnotes