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SuperMansion
Genre
Created by
Starring
ComposerKurt Oldman
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes41 (+ 5 specials) (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Running time22 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network
ReleaseOctober 8, 2015 (2015-10-08) –
May 9, 2019 (2019-05-09)

SuperMansion is an American adult animated stop-motion sitcom created by Matthew Senreich and Zeb Wells for Crackle. The series stars Bryan Cranston, Heidi Gardner, Tucker Gilmore, Keegan-Michael Key, Tom Root, Yvette Nicole Brown, Zeb Wells, and Jillian Bell. The series premiered on Crackle on October 8, 2015. The series was renewed for a third and final season which was released on May 7, 2018.[1] The series was removed from Crackle after it was fully sold to Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment in 2020.

Plot

[edit]

The League of Freedom is a superhero group that is led by the aging superhero Titanium Rex. From their base called SuperMansion in the fictional city of Storm City, Titanium Rex and his fellow superheroes Black Saturn, American Ranger, Jewbot/Robobot, Cooch, and Brad struggle to keep the team relevant when occasionally visited by the government accountant Sgt. Agony even if it involves fighting an assortment of supervillains like Dr. Devizo as well as Titanium Rex's daughter Lex Lightning.

In season two, Dr. Devizo and Lex Lightning form the Injustice Club in order to combat the League of Freedom. In addition, the League of Freedom deals with a Subtopian invasion led by Titanium Rex's older brother Titanium Dax.

In season three, the League of Freedom has to share the SuperMansion with the Injustice Club in light of Dr. Devizo helping to stop the Subtopian invasion.

Cast

[edit]

Episodes

[edit]
SeasonEpisodesOriginally released
First releasedLast released
113October 8, 2015 (2015-10-08)December 17, 2015 (2015-12-17)
210February 16, 2017 (2017-02-16)April 20, 2017 (2017-04-20)
318May 7, 2018 (2018-05-07)May 9, 2019 (2019-05-09)
Specials5December 8, 2016 (2016-12-08)April 18, 2019 (2019-04-18)

Production

[edit]

SuperMansion began life as a 12-minute pilot for Adult Swim, under the original name Übermansion[2][failed verification] where, along with several other pilots (including King Star King and Mr. Pickles, both of which were eventually greenlit), it competed for which pilot would be turned into Adult Swim's next series.[3] The pilot won and aired (along with the pilots to King Star King and Mr. Pickles) on August 25, 2013.[4] For unknown reasons, the series moved to Crackle instead with the name change from Übermansion to SuperMansion.[5]

On April 14, 2015, Sony announced that the stop-motion animated series was being developed by Crackle, which Bryan Cranston would voice and executive produce with his Moon Shot Entertainment.[6] Thirteen episodes were being produced, and also starring Seth Green, Keegan-Michael Key, and Jillian Bell.[6] Matthew Senreich and Zeb Wells wrote and would executive produce the series, while other executive producers would be Green, John Harvatine IV, Eric Towner, and James Degus, while Stoopid Buddy Stoodios would produce.[6] The first trailer was released on July 9, 2015, and the other cast included Senreich, Wells, Heidi Gardner, Tom Root, Tucker Gilmore and some other guest stars.[7]

For the show's second season, Arby's signed a product placement deal with the series as part of a broader deal with Crackle. In addition, Arby's was shown to be next door to the abandoned pizza restaurant which the Injustice Club uses as their hideout.[8]

Broadcast

[edit]

The series had its television premiere on January 1, 2017 on Adult Swim.[9][10]

In France, the series premiered on MCM on April 17, 2019, airing both French dub and English audio subtitled.[11]

Reception

[edit]

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series' first season has a 40% Tomatometer with an average rating of 5.8/10, based on 5 reviews.[12] On Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the first season a score of 59 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[13]

Home media

[edit]

Season 1 was released on DVD on October 11, 2016.[14] Season 2 was only released on DVD on September 12, 2018, in Australia.[15]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
SuperMansion is an American adult animated sitcom produced in stop-motion, created by Matthew Senreich and Zeb Wells, and originally streamed on Crackle from 2015 to 2019.[1][2] The series follows Titanium Rex, an aging superhero inspired by Superman and voiced by Bryan Cranston, who leads the once-mighty League of Freedom—a team of has-been heroes residing in a high-tech mansion—as they struggle to maintain relevance against emerging threats and generational shifts in heroism.[1][2] Premiering on October 8, 2015, the show ran for three seasons, blending satirical humor with action-adventure elements to parody superhero conventions and celebrity culture.[1] The narrative revolves around the League's internal dynamics and external battles, with Titanium Rex mentoring a new generation of disinterested millennial superheroes while confronting his own obsolescence.[1] Key characters are voiced by talents including Jillian Bell, Chris Pine, Jon Bernthal, and Donald Faison, alongside recurring guest appearances that enhance the show's pop culture commentary.[2] Produced by the team behind Robot Chicken, SuperMansion employs irreverent comedy to explore themes of aging, legacy, and adaptation in the superhero genre, earning praise for its voice acting and animation style despite its niche appeal.[1][3]

Overview and premise

Synopsis

SuperMansion is an adult animated series centered on Titanium Rex, an aging superhero who leads the League of Freedom, a team of has-been heroes operating from their high-tech headquarters in the fictional Storm City. The core premise follows Rex and his reluctant millennial sidekicks as they combat irrelevance in a modern world dominated by celebrity culture and changing societal values, while clashing with the villainous mad scientist Dr. Devizo and his schemes to dismantle society.[2][4] Across its seasons, the narrative builds through major arcs that escalate the stakes for the League. In the second season, the villains reorganize into the Injustice Club, introducing new threats, culminating in a Subtopian invasion led by Rex's estranged older brother, Titanium Dax, which forces an unlikely alliance between heroes and villains to defend Earth. The third season explores the aftermath, with the League and Injustice Club forming an uneasy cohabitation in SuperMansion following Dr. Devizo's pivotal assistance in repelling the invasion, highlighting ongoing tensions and forced teamwork.[5][6][7] The series parodies classic superhero tropes, emphasizing themes of generational conflict between veteran heroes and younger, disinterested recruits, the challenges of maintaining unity in a dysfunctional team, and the satire of faded celebrity status in a disinterested society. SuperMansion itself serves as both a malfunction-prone base of operations and a chaotic communal living space, underscoring the heroes' personal and professional struggles.[7][3]

Characters

The League of Freedom, the central superhero team in SuperMansion, is led by Titanium Rex, a 90-year-old alien from the planet Subtopia who arrived on Earth in 1946 and possesses flight, superhuman strength, and x-ray vision, making him a classic Superman archetype with a weary, authoritarian leadership style shaped by decades of heroism.[8] His outdated morals often clash with modern sensibilities, as he struggles to manage a dysfunctional team of immature heroes while grappling with age-related vulnerabilities like prostate issues.[9] Titanium Rex's rigid command fosters internal conflicts, satirizing the trope of the infallible leader by highlighting his inability to adapt to his team's chaos.[10] Other core League members include Black Saturn, a 28-year-old trust fund heir who bought his way onto the team and wields an assortment of unerringly accurate throwing disks, embodying a brooding Batman parody but undermined by his insecurity and incompetence.[8] His depressed demeanor and preference for nighttime operations due to his dark costume amplify the series' mockery of the tortured vigilante archetype, often leading to comedic failures in combat.[10] American Ranger, frozen in a stasis chamber since the 1940s and thawed into the present day, features wings for flight, enhanced vision, and combat skills rooted in patriotic soldiery, but his anachronistic worldview and incompetence render him a bumbling Captain America stand-in who salutes outdated ideals amid cultural shock.[8][11] Cooch serves as the team's evolved feline member, originally a Kentucky trailer park cat transformed by an evolution ray, granting her superhuman speed, agility, razor-sharp claws, and a humanoid tiger-like form that parodies Catwoman and Tigra with her distractible, seductive feline instincts and poor impulse control.[8][12] Robobot, formerly known as Jewbot, is a reprogrammed robot created by villain Dr. Devizo, capable of transforming his limbs into various tools and exhibiting super strength and durability; his identity crises stem from adopting Jewish traditions during his initial reprogramming, evolving into broader existential ponderings about humanity.[8][13] Brad, Titanium Rex's loyal but dim-witted sidekick, provides brute force through flight and super strength, satirizing the oblivious muscle archetype with his unwavering stupidity and blind devotion that often exacerbates team mishaps.[10][8] Antagonists drive much of the conflict, with Dr. Devizo as the primary mad scientist foe who deploys grotesque minions and inventions from his lair, representing the scheming genius trope with a flair for absurd experiments like evolving animals.[12] Lex Lightning, Titanium Rex's estranged daughter, embraces villainy with electrical powers inherited from her Subtopian heritage, her rebellious turn mocking the family drama in superhero narratives through her contempt for her father's heroism.[11] Titanium Dax emerges in later arcs as Rex's estranged older brother from Subtopia, wielding similar powers but with amplified malice to challenge the League's unity.[14][15] Supporting characters enrich the satirical landscape, including the Injustice Club—a ragtag villain group featuring eclectic foes like the groan-inducing comedian The Groaner, who serves as Black Saturn's arch-nemesis—and Subtopian invaders who threaten Earthly norms, underscoring themes of alien integration.[16] Minor heroes and villains, such as the cosplay enthusiasts in the Warriors of Cosplay arc, highlight niche archetypes, while broader dynamics within the League reveal Rex's authoritarianism clashing against collective dysfunction, lampooning superhero team tropes through petty squabbles, identity struggles, and failed collaborations that prioritize humor over heroism.[10][12]

Production

Development

SuperMansion was created by Matthew Senreich and Zeb Wells, who drew inspiration from their prior work on stop-motion parodies like Robot Chicken to develop a satirical take on superhero tropes. Senreich, a co-founder of Stoopid Buddy Stoodios—the animation house behind Robot Chicken—leveraged his expertise in stop-motion techniques to conceptualize the series as an original universe skewing DC and Marvel conventions, emphasizing character personalities and interpersonal dynamics over superpowers. The concept originated from their desire to explore dysfunctional superhero households, blending adult humor with dramatic elements rooted in comic book storytelling.[17][18] The series was pitched to and greenlit by Crackle, Sony Pictures Television's streaming service, with an announcement at the 2015 upfront presentation on April 14, ordering 13 episodes for a fall premiere. Senreich and Wells wrote the pilot episode, initially crafting the lead role of Titanium Rex for a "Bryan Cranston type," using a temporary animatic voiced by Seth Green; after Green's encouragement, they directly pitched the project to Cranston, who signed on as an executive producer and lead voice actor within 48 hours. Executive producers included Senreich, Wells, Cranston, Green, John Harvatine IV, Eric Towner, and James Degus, with production handled by Stoopid Buddy Stoodios under Sony Pictures Television.[19][17][20] Pre-production focused on building a writing team drawn from Robot Chicken's Emmy-winning staff, led by Wells as showrunner, to infuse the scripts with sharp adult-oriented satire on superhero culture. Decisions emphasized character-driven narratives, resolving creative disputes through passionate debate, with Wells holding final say to maintain tonal consistency. The series was renewed for a second season in April 2016, ahead of its early 2017 release, and for a third and final season in April 2017, accompanied by two specials planned for late 2017 and early 2018. Ultimately, the production resulted in five specials released from 2016 to 2019, including the Earth Day special World War Tree in April 2019.[17][18][21][22][23]

Animation

SuperMansion employs adult-oriented stop-motion animation, utilizing physical puppets and models crafted by Stoopid Buddy Stoodios, the production company behind the series. This technique, akin to that used in their shorter-sketch series Robot Chicken but adapted for longer-form episodes of 11-22 minutes, involves frame-by-frame manipulation of articulated figures to create fluid motion, emphasizing a tangible, three-dimensional quality that enhances the show's satirical take on superhero tropes.[24][25] The visual style features exaggerated, gritty aesthetics that parody comic book art, with characters and environments rendered in a grungy, lived-in texture to underscore the mundane dysfunction of its superhero world. Detailed sets depicting the SuperMansion headquarters and the urban sprawl of Storm City incorporate intricate tableaus, while character puppets are designed with interchangeable parts—such as swappable limbs and accessories—to facilitate dynamic action sequences and expressive poses without damaging the models.[24][26] Production for each episode requires a team of 20-30 puppeteers and animators operating across multiple miniature sound stages, a scale that supports the series' ambitious fight choreography and ensemble scenes. The process is highly time-intensive, with individual animators typically producing only 8-10 seconds of footage per day due to the meticulous adjustments needed for each frame, often taking weeks to complete a single minute of animation; this labor is compounded by the integration of CGI for complex effects like explosions and environmental destruction, which must seamlessly blend with the physical elements to maintain the stop-motion integrity.[24][27] Innovations in the series include custom armature rigs that enable more fluid and exaggerated movements during combat, allowing puppets to perform acrobatic feats beyond traditional limitations. Over the seasons, the animation evolved with refinements in lighting techniques to heighten dramatic shadows in Storm City's nocturnal settings and enhanced background details for greater depth, achieved partly through in-house 3D printing for prototyping and iterating on puppet components rapidly during production.[26][28]

Cast

Main voice cast

The main voice cast of SuperMansion features a ensemble of actors delivering performances that blend superhero tropes with comedic parody through distinctive vocal characterizations. Bryan Cranston leads as the aging leader Titanium Rex, employing a gruff, authoritative delivery that captures the character's weary heroism and frustration with irrelevance.[29][30] Keegan-Michael Key voices American Ranger, infusing the role with an over-the-top patriotic bravado and energetic flair suited to the show's satirical take on classic archetypes.[29] Tucker Gilmore portrays Black Saturn, bringing a sarcastic, brooding tone to the brooding alien hero that highlights the series' humor in dysfunctional team dynamics.[29] Heidi Gardner provides the sultry, versatile voice for Cooch, the shape-shifting seductress, allowing for a range of comedic inflections that play into her versatile and often absurd abilities.[29] Zeb Wells voices Robobot (also known as Jewbot), delivering tech-savvy, nerdy inflections that emphasize the robot's glitchy personality and loyalty to the team.[29] Tom Root handles Brad, the bumbling intern sidekick, with awkward, everyman enthusiasm that underscores his fish-out-of-water role among superheroes.[31][32] Yvette Nicole Brown voices Portia Jones (also known as Zenith), portraying a former League member turned talk show host with a grounded, no-nonsense demeanor that adds depth to the team's interpersonal conflicts.[29][33] Chris Pine serves as the primary antagonist Dr. Devizo, using a smooth yet menacing cadence to portray the mad scientist's intellectual villainy and escape artistry.[29] Jillian Bell voices Lex Lightning, the young, idealistic newcomer, with a bright, determined energy that contrasts the older heroes' cynicism.[29][34] Casting for the series prioritized actors with strong comedic timing to enhance its parody of superhero conventions, with auditions focusing on how performers could exaggerate archetypal traits for humor.[17] Cranston, who also executive produces, was recruited after initial hesitation, bringing his experience from Breaking Bad to shape Titanium Rex's arc.[17] Performances often involved improvisation, particularly from Cranston, who added unique sounds and ad-libs that directors incorporated into the animation process to amplify the comedy.[17] Voice recording preceded animation, allowing actors' deliveries to directly influence character movements and expressions.[17]

Guest and recurring voices

Chris Pine recurs as Titanium Dax in a Season 2 storyline arc, portraying Rex's charismatic and destructive older brother who leads a Subtopian invasion, adding layers of familial conflict and villainous charm to the narrative.[15][35] Pine also voices the recurring villain Dr. Devizo throughout the series, contributing to ongoing mad scientist tropes and jailbreak plots that challenge the heroes.[36] High-profile guest appearances enhance the show's satirical take on superhero tropes and Hollywood celebrity culture. In Season 1, Famke Janssen guest stars as Frau Mantis in two episodes, delivering a seductive insect-themed villain who parodies femme fatale archetypes from classic comics.[29] Ron Perlman appears as the brute force villain Blazar, emphasizing over-the-top action hero satire in confrontational episodes.[37] Anton Yelchin provides voices for various minor roles, including in the premiere, adding youthful energy to ensemble scenes.[38] Other notable guests include Breckin Meyer as Courtney/Ringler, recurring in comedic relief roles that mock bureaucratic superhero oversight,[25] and Michelle Trachtenberg as Blood Moon, a one-off lunar-powered antagonist in Season 1 that highlights gothic horror parodies.[29][39] In Season 3, guests like Mikey Day as the anti-hero Max Penalizer introduce vigilante justice satire, forming temporary alliances that underscore themes of reluctant teamwork among flawed supers.[40] Jay Pharoah and Gary Anthony Williams appear in supporting roles, their versatile performances amplifying the season's focus on ensemble chaos and parody of blockbuster team-ups.[41] These guest and recurring voices collectively infuse the series with star power, often exaggerating celebrity personas within superhero clichés to heighten comedic impact and cultural commentary.[42]

Episodes

Season 1

Season 1 of SuperMansion consists of 13 episodes that premiered on Crackle, beginning with the first three episodes on October 8, 2015, and continuing weekly thereafter until December 17, 2015.[43] Each episode runs approximately 22 minutes.[44] The season arc focuses on the League of Freedom's dysfunctional team dynamics, highlighting their struggles to maintain relevance amid personal conflicts and escalating villain threats, including the introduction of the mad scientist Dr. Devizo as a primary antagonist.[45] This foundational narrative establishes key character relationships, such as leader Titanium Rex's authoritative yet flawed command, while satirizing superhero conventions through humorous, stop-motion depictions of battles and interpersonal drama.[46] The episodes are as follows:
No.TitleOriginal air dateSynopsis
1"Groaner's Wild"October 8, 2015After damaging the Washington Monument in a battle, the League of Freedom faces a congressional hearing led by military auditor Sgt. Agony, while Black Saturn pursues the villainous Groaner.[47]
2"They Shoot Omega Pets, Don't They?"October 8, 2015The team cares for super-powered orphaned animals from a destroyed shelter and investigates the suspicious death of Rex's former ally, Omega Suit.[48]
3"Let's Talk About Rex"October 8, 2015Rex confronts the villain Blazar to restore his public image after a botched fight, as Black Saturn tracks a mysterious thief stealing food from the mansion.[49]
4"A Shop in the Dark"October 15, 2015Former League member Kid Victory visits for dinner, prompting Rex to seek government funding, while the team encounters chaos during a late-night grocery run.[50]
5"Puss in Books"October 22, 2015The League assists Cooch in preparing for her GED exam, as American Ranger pursues his vision of the American dream through questionable means.[51]
6"Lex"October 29, 2015A young woman named Lex arrives claiming to be Rex's daughter, forcing him to navigate sudden fatherhood, while the others form an impromptu rock band.[52]
7"A Midsummer Night's Ream"November 5, 2015Heartbroken Black Saturn enters the dating scene after a betrayal, as Rex, Ranger, and Brad endure an extreme workout session with trainer Johnny Rabdo.[53]
8"Brad Medicine"November 12, 2015Revelations about Brad's troubled past surface during a tense game night, while Ranger discovers the perils of online shopping.[54]
9"Unfortunate Son"November 19, 2015Black Saturn reunites with his disapproving parents, Jewbot experiments with babysitting, and Rex deals with the frustrations of canceling cable service.[55]
10"Babes in the Wood"November 26, 2015A team-building camping trip descends into disaster, with Saturn concealing a new romance and Cooch facing her discomfort in the wilderness.[56]
11"The Inconceivable Escape of Dr. Devizo"December 3, 2015As Dr. Devizo plots his prison breakout, the League scrambles to prevent it, with Black Saturn going undercover in a villain support group.
12"Lexanity"December 10, 2015Villain Ivan Whiff attempts to manipulate Lex, Jewbot conducts awkward team physicals, and Brad uncovers a bizarre personal allergy.
13"Lex as a Weapon"December 17, 2015Dr. Devizo executes a massive jailbreak, forcing Rex to confront elements of his past, as the League battles their deepest fears.[57]

Season 2

Season 2 of SuperMansion premiered on Crackle and Adult Swim on February 16, 2017, comprising 10 episodes that build on the League of Freedom's internal dynamics by introducing interstellar threats and rival factions, while amplifying the series' satire on aging heroes and modern celebrity culture.[58] The narrative arcs expand with the formation of the Injustice Club by former villains, escalating team rivalries, and the debut of Titanium Dax, Rex's long-lost brother, who arrives with ambitions that challenge the League's relevance.[15] The season culminates in a massive Subtopian invasion, forcing unlikely alliances and highlighting the heroes' obsolescence against advanced subterranean forces.[6] The episodes focus on personal backstories and absurd conflicts, such as time travel mishaps and existential crises among sidekicks, to underscore themes of legacy and adaptation in superhero society.[58]
EpisodeTitleAir DateSynopsis
1Virtual Reality BitesFebruary 16, 2017The League grapples with the destruction of SuperMansion, allowing villains to escape; while American Ranger consoles Cooch over a lost teammate, Rex and Jewbot confront a dangerous virtual reality cult leader.[59]
2School Me OnceFebruary 23, 2017Rex seeks to rehabilitate the League's image by recruiting an old college acquaintance at Champston University, while Black Saturn introduces Jewbot to wild fraternity antics.[60]
3The League of CheesedomMarch 2, 2017Portia launches a pizzeria-arcade venture that spirals into chaos; Jewbot undergoes an existential meltdown amid the absurdity.
4I Didn't Even Have to Use My J.K.March 9, 2017Actor J.K. Simmons shadows Rex for a biopic, complicating missions; meanwhile, escaped villains unite to form the Injustice Club as a rival force to the League.
5Black to the FutureMarch 16, 2017A future version of Black Saturn time-travels to avert a catastrophic apocalypse threatening the team.
6BlazarmageddonMarch 23, 2017The League partners with NASA to thwart a destructive space alien, but their inexperience with interstellar travel leads to comedic disasters.
7The Gurman FilesMarch 30, 2017Black Saturn probes a series of model kidnappings tied to a 1970s photographer; Rex confronts revelations about his hidden past identity.
8We Need to Talk About LiplorApril 6, 2017Rex's brother, Titanium Dax, emerges from Subtopia with his rock monster slave Liplor, threatening to expose a dark family secret that could upend the League.[15]
9Logs Day Journey Into NightApril 13, 2017Rex retreats to a lumberjack hideout to evade his brother; Robobot rallies the scattered League against an emerging subterranean menace.
10Titanium LexApril 20, 2017Dax's Subtopian army invades the surface, enslaving humanity; the League allies uneasily with the Injustice Club, but Rex, Lex, and Dr. Devizo's egos jeopardize the defense.[6][61]

Season 3

Season 3 of SuperMansion, the series' final season, explores the chaotic cohabitation of the League of Freedom heroes and Dr. Devizo's villains under one roof in the SuperMansion, building on prior invasions and rivalries to deliver uneasy alliances and character growth. Premiering on Crackle on May 7, 2018, and concluding on May 9, 2019, the 18-episode arc resolves multi-season threats like Devizo's schemes and Lex's unstable powers, emphasizing themes of redemption, teamwork evolution, and heroic-villainous truces that wrap up the narrative.[62][63] The episodes are as follows:
No. overallNo. in seasonTitleOriginal release dateSynopsis
241Home Is Where the Shart IsMay 7, 2018Dr. Devizo and his villains move into the SuperMansion alongside the heroes, establishing the season's cohabitation setup; meanwhile, Robobot searches for the villain Swine Kampf, highlighting early tensions in the shared living arrangement.[64]
252Masters of LexMay 14, 2018Rex and Devizo scheme to break up Lex's relationship with Max Penalizer to refocus her powers; the villains target Cooch, forcing initial hero-villain collaboration against external threats.[65]
263My Cousin KittyMay 21, 2018Claudette attempts to reclaim Cooch as her cousin; Robobot defends Rex in a trial, while Groaner probes Black Saturn's real name, deepening interpersonal dynamics in the mansion.
274Iliga of Their OwnMay 28, 2018The villains raid furniture stores for mansion upgrades; the League visits the International League of Global Guardians Association (ILEGA), where Saturn discovers a new arch-nemesis, testing alliances.
285Brokeback SaturnJune 4, 2018Storm City faces a leprechaun invasion, prompting the League to battle them; Saturn recruits Courtney into a mechanized suit, showcasing villain redemption arcs.
296The Long ChaunJune 11, 2018The League travels to Godsrealm to confront Zenith's uncle; Rex earns the Sword of Azimuth by proving his heroism, reinforcing team bonds amid Devizo's lingering influence.
307Back in Black to the FutureOctober 5, 2018The team time-travels to a dystopian future dominated by American Ranger; they repair a time machine to return, resolving timeline threats through cross-faction cooperation.
318Optimo RexOctober 5, 2018Returning home, the League discovers Devizo's team has formed a rival League of Freedom West; Rex confronts his clone created by Agony, leading to identity and leadership resolutions.
329Sympathy for Black SaturnOctober 5, 2018Saturn mediates a vampire-werewolf war; Courtney turns vampire, while Rex guides Lex toward meditation to control her powers, advancing personal growth and alliances.
3310ComicarnageOctober 5, 2018The League attends Comic-Con, where Rex reunites with '90s teammates; Lex navigates a date, blending pop culture satire with evolving hero-villain interactions.
3411Jungle All the WayOctober 5, 2018On a jungle mission for Agony, Cooch reverts to feral instincts; Saturn attempts leadership, highlighting shifts in team hierarchy and Devizo's reluctant aid.
3512Debbie Does DevizoOctober 5, 2018Devizo's ex-partner Debbie seeks revenge; both Leagues unite to protect him, while Lex grapples with her dual nature, solidifying fragile truces.
3613Run Ranger RunMay 9, 2019A Russian super-soldier challenges Ranger to a boxing match; Ranger overcomes his insecurities, contributing to the mansion's evolving ensemble dynamic.
3714Teacher and the GoofMay 9, 2019Cooch and Liplor host a children's RV show; Robobot conceals a secret project with Devizo, underscoring deepening villain integrations.
3815Back to the IslandMay 9, 2019Revisiting a prior island site, Rex and Devizo battle a supervillain; Saturn and Ranger join a pirate crew, resolving old grudges through joint efforts.
3916Bug HuntMay 9, 2019Lex's insect heritage endangers Storm City; Robobot escapes with her to seek a cure, intensifying the season's focus on her arc and team support.
4017Saturn's SixMay 9, 2019Agony imprisons the League; Saturn assembles a ragtag team including villains to liberate them, while Lex resists her insect transformation, culminating alliances.
4118Bad LexMay 9, 2019Lex's insect side dominates, plotting planetary destruction from a park; the unified heroes track and confront her, resolving the series' central power struggles and cohabitation tensions with a team-evolved finale.

Broadcast and distribution

Original broadcast

SuperMansion premiered on the streaming service Crackle on October 8, 2015, with the first season consisting of 13 episodes released in a pattern that began with the first three episodes dropping simultaneously, followed by one new episode each week thereafter.[66] The series made its television debut on Adult Swim on January 1, 2017, airing the first season weekly on Sunday nights.[67] Adult Swim subsequently broadcast the second season, with its final premiere occurring on March 25, 2018.[68] The second season launched exclusively on Crackle on February 16, 2017, following a weekly release schedule until the finale on April 20, 2017.[69] Season three debuted on Crackle on May 7, 2018, with episodes released in batches: an initial run in May, a resumption on June 11, 2018, and additional episodes starting October 4, 2018, concluding the series' original run by May 9, 2019.[70][71][72] The series streamed exclusively on Crackle in the United States until its broadcast debut on Adult Swim in 2017, with limited global distribution and no major international syndication beyond select markets. In France, SuperMansion had its international television premiere on the channel MCM on April 17, 2019, offering both a French-dubbed version and English audio with subtitles.[73] Following Sony Pictures Television's sale of a majority stake in Crackle to Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment, completed on May 14, 2019, the series was removed from the platform in 2020 as part of content licensing changes.[74]

Home media and streaming

The first season of SuperMansion was released on DVD in the United States on October 11, 2016, by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.[75][4] No Blu-ray editions have been issued for any season. The second season received a DVD release exclusively in Australia on September 12, 2018.[76] No official physical media for the third season has been produced, leading to ongoing discussions among fans about limited access options.[77] Originally streamed on Crackle starting in 2015, SuperMansion was removed from the platform in 2020. As of November 2025, Seasons 1 and 2 are available for streaming on Prime Video and for digital purchase or rental on services including Amazon Video, Apple TV, Vudu, and Google Play.[78][79][77] Season 3 faces more restricted distribution, with no full-season streaming availability in the United States; select episodes, such as the premiere, can be watched for free on Tubi, while the complete season is offered for digital purchase on Amazon Video and Apple TV.[80][81][82] Official YouTube uploads provide occasional clips from Season 3, but no platform hosts the entire season for streaming in the U.S.[83] These accessibility challenges for the final season have been highlighted in viewer communities seeking reliable viewing methods. The series is produced and owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment, which manages its licensing and distribution rights.[20]

Reception

Critical response

The first season of SuperMansion received mixed reviews from critics, earning a 40% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on five reviews, with an average score of 5.8/10.[34] On Metacritic, it holds a score of 59 out of 100, classified as mixed or average from six critics.[84] Critics praised the series for its clever satire of superhero tropes, highlighted by the aging Titanium Rex's struggles to lead a dysfunctional team, which effectively lampooned comic book conventions.[10] Bryan Cranston's voice performance as Titanium Rex was frequently lauded for its commanding presence and comedic timing, bringing gravitas to the lead role amid the ensemble chaos.[85] The stop-motion animation was also commended for its charm and fluid action sequences, evoking a handmade quality that enhanced the show's irreverent tone.[7] However, common criticisms focused on uneven humor that often relied on crude, raunchy gags at the expense of sharper wit, with The Hollywood Reporter describing the series as "more sleazy than super" due to its frequent dives into bad taste.[3] Pacing issues arose in ensemble scenes, where the large cast led to underdeveloped character moments and rushed storytelling, leaving the superhero world feeling underdeveloped.[86] Reviews for seasons 2 and 3 were scarcer, with no aggregate scores on Rotten Tomatoes or Metacritic, but available critiques noted improvements in character arcs and narrative cohesion, allowing for more focused explorations of team dynamics and personal growth.[87] Collider highlighted season 3's shift toward family drama among superheroes and villains, praising the resulting comedy as a fresh angle on the genre.[87]

Legacy

SuperMansion garnered a cult following among enthusiasts of adult animation, particularly those drawn to its irreverent parody of superhero conventions amid the proliferation of live-action blockbusters from Marvel and DC. Fans appreciated the series' blend of stop-motion craftsmanship and satirical edge, which offered a fresh critique of aging heroes and dysfunctional team dynamics in a genre often taken too seriously. This dedicated audience has kept discussions alive in niche online spaces, emphasizing the show's enduring appeal for its clever humor and voice cast.[88][89] The series influenced the landscape of adult stop-motion animation by expanding on the sketch-comedy style popularized by Robot Chicken, its creators' earlier project, and contributing to a broader trend of irreverent, mature superhero narratives in the medium. Often cited in analyses of animation satire, SuperMansion highlighted tropes like reluctant mentorship and villainous incompetence, influencing subsequent works in the genre without achieving widespread acclaim. While it earned Primetime Emmy nominations for Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance in 2016 (for Chris Pine and Keegan-Michael Key), as well as Annie Award nominations, including a 2019 nomination for Outstanding Achievement for Voice Acting in an Animated TV/Broadcast Production (Nick Simotas), the show did not win major honors, underscoring its status as a beloved underdog rather than a mainstream triumph.[90][91] After its third season concluded in 2019, SuperMansion faced accessibility challenges when Crackle was sold by Sony to Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment, leading to its removal from the platform and restricting official streaming options. As of November 2025, no revival announcements or confirmed reboots have emerged, though fan-uploaded clips periodically resurface on YouTube, helping maintain visibility among dedicated viewers. The show's viewership remained modest, with audience demand metrics indicating it hovered below average for TV series on niche platforms like Crackle, yet its loyal fanbase continues to celebrate the distinctive humor that set it apart.[92][93][94]

References

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