9/25/2019

Stretch Armstrong Games

Stretch Armstrong
TypeAction figure
CompanyKenner, Denys Fisher, and Hasbro
CountryUnited States
Availability1976–1997, 2016–present
MaterialsPlastic, rubber and gel

Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters is an American animated series produced by Hasbro Studios and distributed by Netflix. It is based on the 1970s action figure Stretch Armstrong. The Netflix series features a brand new superhero universe, new characters, new villains, and new lore. He's awesome, he's almost as amazing as the original Amazing Stretch Armstrong. One thing to remember is the same thing to remember from the original Stretch, make sure he is warmed up before playing with him because he won't be as stretchy as he could be otherwise and also he could break because cold corn syrup isn't very forgiving. Stretch Armstrong is a large, gel-filled action figure first introduced in 1976 by Kenner. In 2016, at the New York Toy Fair, Hasbro announced the return of the Stretch Armstrong toy in its original 1976 design. Riya Dashti is a transfer student at the Academy for Future Leadership.Jake Armstrong's unrequited crush, who becomes a friend of both him and Ricardo Perez.Moonlights as Blindstrike, a ninja who helps Dr. Racine Cleo (Dr. C) with her plans to prevent Jonathan Rook from gaining total control of Charter City. Oct 23, 2016  About Stretch Armstrong Stretch Armstrong has been around for over four decades with the first model surfacing the market in the late 1970's. Since then, Armstrong has been a consistent favorite among toy action figures. Jazwares is offering a great opportunity for collectors and fanatics alike to experience Stretch Armstrong in its original.

Stretch Armstrong is a large, gel-filled action figure first introduced in 1976 by Kenner.[1] In 2016, at the New York Toy Fair, Hasbro announced the return of the Stretch Armstrong toy in its original 1976 design.

Stretch Armstrong is made of latex rubber filled with gelled corn syrup, which allows it to retain shape for a short time before shrinking to its original shape.

Stretch Armstrong is an action figure shaped as a short, muscular, man with blond hair wearing black trunks. The doll's most notable feature was that it could be stretched from its original size of about 15 in (0.38 m) to 4 to 5 ft (1.2 to 1.5 m). If a tear did develop, it could be fixed with an adhesive bandage. Information on how to repair Stretch was provided in the toy's instruction booklet that was originally inside his box.

  • 1History
  • 2Adaptations

History[edit]

The Stretch Armstrong toy concept was created by Jesse D. Horowitz,[2] the industrial designer for Kenner’s R&D group. The idea was approved for development by the head of R&D, Jeep (James) Kuhn, vice president of Kenner.

The 'stretch man' idea as it was called was pursued with two different bodies in mind. One was a sumo wrestler and the other was an All-American blond hunk. Horowitz sculpted the models himself instead of hiring a freelancer. The sumo man was too bulky and large, so the All-American body was cast by Kenner's model maker Richard Dobek, and the resultant resin model was taken to a latex doll manufacturer in New Jersey, where the first bodies were dipped.

Originally, springs were thought of as the way to stretch the man. However, they were thought to be too awkward and stiff, too difficult to insert and would likely pierce the skin. Kuhn, a chemical engineer, pursued a liquid sugar idea which eventually proved successful. Tremendous quantities of Karocorn syrup were purchased from an A&P supermarket. The syrup was boiled down to get the proper viscosity. Kuhn and Horowitz flew to Kenner’s headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio, and presented the concept to Bernie Loomis, Kenner's president. He loved it and so a toy icon was born.

The original Stretch Armstrong figure was conceived and developed by Bill Armasmith, and was in production from 1976 until 1980.[citation needed]Denys Fisher manufactured and released the figure in Europe, under license from Kenner.[3] The original 1970s toy commands high prices on the secondary collectors' market, selling for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of US dollars.[citation needed] Through storage and play, the figure could become damaged and rendered useless. There are still original Stretch Armstrongs that have survived the passing of time and are remarkably preserved through sheer luck or being stored at the correct temperature.[citation needed] The figure keeps best at room temperature.[citation needed]

Stretch Armstrong is made of latex rubber filled with gelled corn syrup, which allows it to retain shape for a short time before shrinking to its original shape.[4]

Similar releases[edit]

An estimated 67 different versions from Japan, Germany, Italy, France, Australia, and other countries released Stretch Armstrong variations between 1976 and the 1990s.[5]

  • Stretch X-Ray (1977), had an oversized exposed brain and an alien-looking face with a transparent form that showed its internal organs which were lungs, a intestinal system and what appears to be a heart. This version was re-released.
  • Harbert Sport Mister Muscolo, 1977 Italian version of Stretch Armstrong[6]
  • Lili Ledy El Hombre Elastico, Mexican version of Stretch Armstrong[6]
  • Tsukuda Mr. X, Japanese version of Stretch Armstrong[6]
  • Stretch Monster, a reptilian green nemesis released by Kenner in 1978
  • Harbert Sport Mister Mostro, Italian version of Stretch Monster[6]
  • Tsukuda Stretch Monster, Japanese version[6]
  • Stretch Ollie and Stretch Olivia, male and female octopuses (colored blue and pink, respectively) which had the same face shape but the only difference was their color. Kenner issued both weeks apart but Ollie was more popular.[citation needed] The Denys Fisher UK toy company issued Ollie and Olivia in smaller boxes than their American counterparts, saving on shelf space. The figures are rare to come by now.
  • Denys Fisher Stretch Incredible Hulk (1979) This figure used the original Stretch Armstrong molds and graphics without permission, and was discontinued due to a lawsuit from Kenner in 1980.[3]
  • Mego Elastic Donald Duck (1980)[6]
  • Mego Elastic Mickey Mouse (1980)
  • Mego Elastic Batman[6]
  • Mego Elastic Incredible Hulk (1979)[3][6]
  • Mego Elastic Plastic Man (1979)[6]
  • Kenner Stretch Serpent[6]
  • Cap Toys Fetch Armstrong, Stretch Armstrong's pliable canine counterpart, released in the early 1990s
  • Kenner/Hasbro Super Stretch Mask[6]
  • Cap Toys Stretch Vac-Man
  • ToyQuest Super Morphman
  • Super Impulse Gumby and Pokey Stretch

The last two were filled with a granular solid in place of the viscous liquid found in the other figures. A vacuum pump, which attached to the heads of these figures, removed the air from within, which 'froze' the toy in its stretched position.[4]

Stretch Armstrong was reissued in the 1990s by Cap Toys, with a canine sidekick, 'Fetch Armstrong'.[1][7] The reissue stretch Armstrong had a more comical exaggerated face (a huge genial smile) and had on a vanity T-shirt and shorts. This new reissue figure was introduced in 1993 and 1994 version exist with slightly different art work. He also has an evil brother named Evil X-ray Wretch Armstrong who has a skull face, sports a mohawk, and also stretches. Wretch Armstrong seems to be a redesigned, smaller remake of Stretch X-Ray but in reality looks nothing like the 1970s version. Evil X-ray Wretch Armstrong is only 7 inches tall whereas Stretch X-ray was over 12 inches tall.

Adaptations[edit]

Film[edit]

Super Stretch Armstrong

In 1994, Walt Disney Studios obtained the film rights to the character. Several scripts were written, including an early version family comedy written by Greg Erb, a co-writer at Disney. The script which cast Tim Allen in the role of Stretch Armstrong as a 'kind of single dad who is a research scientist' and is 'stretched too thin' trying to balance his work and family life before he inadvertently accidentally takes one of his experimental serums giving himself 'stretchy powers'. A later version from Screenwriter Michael Kalesniko was created and it was set in San Francisco. It was about a somewhat socially awkward nobody beset with troubles trying to venture out his failing personal life and is genetically modified with stretching abilities after a failed nuclear fusion experiment and must use his newfound abilities to solve the tragedy that has befallen his family. Among the actors who were considered for the role was Danny DeVito, who refused to do the film if the script made any jokes about his height, after which due to lack of time on the rights both ideas from Disney were scrapped and the rights were bought up by Hasbro.[8]

In 2008, Universal Studios signed a deal with Hasbro to create another film based on Stretch Armstrong from a screenplay written by Nicholas Stoller.[9]

Windows 7 password key disk. A Windows password reset disk is only valid for the user account that it was created for. This not only means that you can't create a reset disk for a different user on a different computer, but that you can't use one password reset disk on another account that may be on the same computer. You can, however, use the same floppy disk or flash drive as the password reset disk on any number of user accounts. Each account you want to protect will have to have its own password reset disk.

It was announced from the studios co-chairman Donna Langley that Taylor Lautner would star as Armstrong and that the film would be in 3-D. She stated that 'with Lautner's success energy and athleticism he is a perfect fit to a unlikely hero.' Producer Brian Grazer stated 'Stretch Armstrong is a character I have wanted to see on screen for a long time .. It’s a story about a guy stretching .. the limits of what is possible to become all that he can be.'[10][11]Another script was being made by writer Steve Oedekerk introducing the character in the form of an uptight spy who stumbles across a stretching formula, which he takes and now must adjust to his new found abilities when fighting crime and in his everyday life.

Two years later, after the excitement drummed up by the Studios ideas for the character, Relativity Media announced that they had picked up the film after it was dropped by Universal and set a new release date of April 11, 2014.[12] Planning to make the film more serious than originally intended by Universal, Relativity hired The Manchurian Candidate writer Dean Georgaris to write a new script,[13] dropped Lautner, and hired Breck Eisner to direct.[14]The film origin story was going to introduce an overwhelmed high schooler and the life-or-death consequences he was going to face after undergoing a transformation granting him superhuman abilities. Production was scheduled to start filming on May 15, 2013, in Montreal but by October 2013, both the studio and Hasbro had abandoned the film to work on other projects.[15]

Television[edit]

After four attempted films for Stretch Armstrong, Hasbro Studios made a deal with the video streaming service website Netflix where the property was picked up for a full 26-episode animated series, making it the first deal between the company and the streaming service. This superhero action/comedy animated series will follow an over-scheduled teenager named Jake Armstrong and his two best friends as they go into action after the trio are inadvertently accidentally exposed to an experimental chemical making them flexible and become Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters—a team of stretchable superheroes who must work together and embark on a series of adventures to expand beyond the confines of their lives. The series had its debut on Netflix on November 17, 2017.[16]

The series was developed by Kevin Burke, Victor Cook, and Chris 'Doc' Wyatt; Burke and Wyatt also wrote a tie-in comic book for IDW Publishing.[17] The first 13 episodes of the 26-episode first season were released on Netflix on November 17, 2017.

Comics[edit]

A similar concept with Stretch as a superhero was also shown in a one-off comic produced by Hasbro in 2011 dubbed Unit:E; there, the descendant of Acroyear and a Biotron (both from Micronauts) and Synergy (from Jem; here an alien artificial intelligence) conducted reconnaissance on heroes from Earth and beyond (including characters from G.I. Joe, Transformers, MASK, Battleship Galaxies, Action Man, and even Candy Land) to help fight against Baron Karza (the enemy of the Micronauts).

In September 2017, IDW Publishing announced a new comic book based on the Netflix series Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters for January 2018.[18]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abClark, Eric (2007). The Real Toy Story: Inside the Ruthless Battle for America's Youngest Consumers. Simon & Schuster. pp. 44–45. ISBN0-7432-4765-5.
  2. ^Horowitz, Jesse D. (October 17, 1974). 'Stretch man idea'. Idea Book.
  3. ^ abcCimino, John (Summer 2018). 'The Legends and Lore of the Incredible Hulk, Stretch Armstrong, and the Mego Elastic Superheroes'. RetroFan. TwoMorrows Publishing (1): 9–13.
  4. ^ abKatz, David A. 'Chemistry in the Toy Store'(pdf). chymist.com. Retrieved March 29, 2011.
  5. ^Stretch Armstrong World (retrieved January 23, 2012)
  6. ^ abcdefghijkEstimated Stretches Left in Existence, Stretch Armstrong World (retrieved January 23, 2012)
  7. ^DeBrosse, Jim (September 1, 1995). 'S-T-R-E-T-C-H-ING THE MARKET SHARE'. Dayton Daily News. pp. 1C.
  8. ^'Hollywood's Repeated, Inexplicable Attempts at a 'Stretch Armstrong' Movie'. Mental Floss. October 6, 2015. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  9. ^''Stretch Armstrong' Writer 'Gets' Taylor Lautner Obsession'. MTV. June 11, 2010. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
  10. ^'Stretch Armstrong Movie Gets April 2011 Release Date'. /Film. June 2, 2009. Retrieved February 7, 2010.
  11. ^Russ Fischer (February 5, 2010). 'Universal Casts Taylor Lautner in Stretch Armstrong 3D! Seriously. Read more: Universal Casts Taylor Lautner in Stretch Armstrong 3D. Seriously'. /Film. Retrieved February 6, 2010.
  12. ^Nikki Finke (June 28, 2012). 'Universal Drops Hasbro's Stretch Armstrong Film, Taylor Lautner Out As Star, Relativity Picks Up For April 2014 Release'. Retrieved July 6, 2010.
  13. ^Relativity, Hasbro find 'Stretch' scribe
  14. ^'Breck Eisner Confirmed to Direct Stretch Armstrong'. Comingsoon.com. July 19, 2012. Retrieved July 19, 2012.
  15. ^Relativity Abandons 'Stretch Armstrong' Movie
  16. ^Spangler, Todd. (January 28, 2016). Netflix Orders ‘Stretch Armstrong’ Series From Hasbro Studios. Access on January 28, 2016.
  17. ^McMillan, Graeme (September 7, 2017). 'IDW, Hasbro Partner for Stretch Armstrong Comic Book (Exclusive)'. The Hollywood Reporter. Eldridge Industries.
  18. ^'IDW, Hasbro Partner For 'Stretch Armstrong' Comic Book (Exclusive)'. The Hollywood Reporter. September 7, 2017. Retrieved September 8, 2017.

External links[edit]

  • Stretch Armstrong on IMDb
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stretch_Armstrong&oldid=911535632'
Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters
Armstrong with his companions Omni-Mass (left) and Wingspan (right)
Genre
Based onStretch Armstrong toy line
by Hasbro
Developed by
  • Kevin Burke
Voices of
Theme music composerMichael Tavera
Opening theme'Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters' by Holy White Hounds
Composer(s)The Outfit
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes23 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • Kevin Burke
  • Victor Cook
  • Stephen Davis
  • Chris 'Doc' Wyatt
Producer(s)
Running time22–23 minutes
Production company(s)
  • Hasbro Studios
    Digital eMation (animation service)
Distributor
Release
Original networkNetflix
Original releaseNovember 17, 2017 –
September 7, 2018
External links
Website

Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters is an American animated series produced by Hasbro Studios and distributed by Netflix. It is based on the 1970s action figure Stretch Armstrong. The Netflix series features a brand new superhero universe, new characters, new villains, and new lore. The series was developed by Executive Producers Kevin Burke, Victor Cook, and Chris 'Doc' Wyatt.

Victor Cook also oversaw the series as Supervising Director, Burke and Wyatt as Story Editors.

Burke and Wyatt also wrote a tie-in comic book for IDW Publishing.[1] The first season was released on Netflix on November 17, 2017. The second season was released on September 7, 2018.

  • 2Characters
  • 4Episodes

Plot[edit]

Jake Armstrong, Nathan Park, and Ricardo Perez were three ordinary teenagers living in Charter City until they were doused in a substance known as 'Flexarium' during an accident. Their newfound superpowers garnered the attention of Jonathan Rook, the CEO of Rook Unlimited and benefactor to Charter City himself. Rook offers them their freedom from the authorities over the accident in exchange for enlisting the trio as Charter City's superhero team known as the Flex Fighters. Agreeing on the terms that no one will know their real identities, Jake becomes Stretch, Nathan becomes Wingspan, and Ricardo becomes Omni-Mass.

In their first days as superheroes, the Flex Fighters receive hard training from Malcolm Kane (Rook's second-in-command) while fighting numerous villains including Stretch Monster, who shared a past with Dr. Racine Cleo / Dr. C (Rook's former mentor) and her ninja companion Riya Dashti / Blindstrike (Stretch's classmate and love interest).

In their last mission, the Flex Fighters discover in horror that Jonathan Rook and Stretch Monster are the same person and therefore, he has been their enemy the whole time. Rook intends to use Dr. C's 'HyperFlexarium' formula to create an army of monsters and conquer the world. With the help of Dr. C and Blindstrike, the Flex Fighters escaped from Rook, but he then frames them in public for the rampage he caused over the city.

With the city under Rook's control and its citizens being turned against them, the Flex Fighters decided to join forces with Dr. C and Blindstrike in order to expose Rook's crimes and clear their names.

In season two, now that Rook has fooled all of Charter City into thinking that the Flex Fighters are now bad guys, the Flex Fighters work with Dr. C and Blindstrike to fight Rook's mercenaries while working to clear their name. They must also deal with Malcolm Kane when the Tech Men attack.

Characters[edit]

Heroes[edit]

  • Stretch / Jake Armstrong (voiced by Scott Menville) – Jake Armstrong is an over-scheduled high school student who is exposed to experimental chemicals that gives him super-stretching abilities.
  • Wingspan / Nathan Park (voiced by Steven Yeun) – Nathan Park is a high school student with a large family and is Jake's best friend who is also exposed to the same experimental chemicals, and gains the ability to flatten his body from the neck down to gain gliding suit-like wings.
  • Omni-Mass/ Ricardo Perez (voiced by Ogie Banks) – Ricardo Perez is the new, hotshot kid at Jake and Nathan's high school whom they befriend. Like Jake and Nathan, Ricardo is also exposed to the same experimental chemicals, and gains the ability to change his size and mass.
  • Dr. C / Racine Cleo (voiced by Kate Mulgrew) – Dr. Racine Cleo is a scientist who mentored Jonathan Rook. She faked her disappearance in hopes to stop her former protegé from taking over the world.

Stretch Armstrong Games

  • Blindstrike / Riya Dashti (voiced by Nazneen Contractor) – Riya Dashti is an Iranian-American student and classmate of the Flex Fighters who is secretly a Ninja warrior working with Dr. C. She later reveals her parents worked on the Flexarium formulas before Stretch Monster killed them by sabotaging their plane to crash on the Pearl Islands.
  • Erika Violette (voiced by Felicia Day) – A classmate of the Flex Fighters and Nathan's love interest. She becomes the team's ally after Nathan tells her the truth in 'Dr. Dreamscape' and she follows them in 'Riya's Revenge.' She later gets energy powers and a purple energy form capable of flight in the season 2 finale.

Villains[edit]

  • Stretch Monster / Jonathan Rook (voiced by Wil Wheaton in human form, Miguel Ferrer in monster form in 2017, David Kaye in monster form in 2018) – Jonathan Rook is the CEO of Rook Unlimited and the benefactor behind the Flex Fighters. Unbeknownst to them until the season 1 finale, Rook is secretly Stretch Monster, an elastic creature who is also a benefactor to the criminal kind. Near the end of season 2, Stretch Monster had to work with the Flex Fighters to fight a common foe in the Tech Men.
  • Tech Men - Formerly known as the Epsilon Society, they are an evil organization. At an earlier life, Jonathan Rook wanted to join the Epsilon Society only to change his mind when he didn't want to sacrifice his family and his identity. After the Epsilon Society was disbanded, some of its members came back together as the Tech Men where their cult-like aura had them believing that they are the true handlers of technology.
    • Number One / Malcolm Kane (voiced by Keith David) – Malcolm Kane is the head of security for Rook Unlimited and the former mentor to the Flex Fighters. It is revealed that he is the leader of the Tech Men who was aware of Rook's double life.
      • Number Six (voiced by Luke Arnold) – Vice Commander of the Tech Men.
      • Number Twenty-Four (voiced by Ian Hopps) - A member of the Tech Men who ends up in the hospital in season 1, but is revived in season 2 'Rise of the Tech-Men' by Number Six. Prior to falling comatose, he informs Stretch that he is the only one that can save the city.
  • Multi-Farious / Donald 'Don' Robertson (voiced by Jon Heder) – Dr. Don Robertson is a former employee of Rook Unlimited that became mutated into a granite monster that can multiply at will. He gets cured of his mutation in the interactive special and its canon two-part episode version 'The Breakout' by a serum Rook made in the warehouse where Don and the Flex Fighters first got their powers.
  • Circuit-Stream (voiced by James Arnold Taylor) – An expert computer hacker who can phase through walls and control any electronic equipment. He is accompanied by his pet gecko Brute.
  • The Freak Sisters / Kari and Mary Freak (both voiced by Grey Griffin) – Kari and Mari Freak are a pair of twin sister criminals who wear helmets that give them Flexarium tentacles. They also use Flexarium-based weapons to commit crimes.
  • Smokestack / Jack Kinland (voiced by Clancy Brown) – Jack Kinland is the former lead crime boss in Old Town, serving a life sentence. He becomes a smoke-induced criminal who gained his Flexarium from Stretch Monster. As Smokestack, he can solidify and transform into a cloud of smoke.
  • Mickey Simmons (voiced by Henry Rollins) – Kane's former gang partner and the leader of the Stickshifts. He holds a grudge on him due to leaving and joining with Rook Unlimited.

Stretch Armstrong Games Online

  • Madam Tousant (voiced by Vanessa Marshall) – A gang boss who leads a team of older, yet very powerful women, the Sables.
  • Quick Charge / Sarah Kamen (voiced by Yvette Nicole Brown) – Dr. Sarah Kamen is the former head of Harkness General energy company. She gains electricity powers that she can skate on and tries to put Rook out of business.
  • Mechanica/ Santos (voiced by Tia Carrere) – Officer Santos is a member of Rook's security team who was a victim in the fight in Rook Tower between the Flex Fighters and Stretch Monster. She is converted into a vengeful, deadly cyborg by Rook.
  • Dr. Dreamscape / Jason 'Jay' Michaels (voiced by Michael Ross) – Jay Michaels is a spiritual master with enhanced telepathic abilities that allow him to hypnotize others by trapping them in a sleep state and manipulating their dreams.
  • The Gentleman (voiced by Eric Bauza) – A mysterious mercenary with good manners. He wears a robotic suit that enhances his strength and agility.
  • Anastasia (voiced by Tara Strong) – A hybrid between a flower and an artificial intelligence, created by her creator and 'father', Oleg Savic.

Supporting[edit]

  • Mark Armstrong (voiced by Gary Cole) – Jake's father.
  • Sandy Violette (voiced by Kath Soucie) - Erika's mother.
  • Gabe-Farious / Gabe Bannerman (voiced by Josh Keaton) – Gabe Bannerman is a narcissistic classmate of the Flex Fighters who briefly dated Erika and becomes jealous of Nathan when he begins to date her. In the second season, he is briefly transformed into the new Multi-Farious until Wingspan finds a piece of his true personality and cures him.
  • Miya Kimanyan (voiced by Kelly Hu) – A local news reporter based in Charter City.
Games
  • Kyle 'King Jock' (voiced by Josh Keaton) – Kyle is a classmate of the Flex Fighters and somewhat of a bully.
  • Grace Lidstrom (voiced by Kelly Hu) – An employee of Rook's who manages the Flex Fighter's online presence.
  • Grandpa Park (voiced by Sab Shimono) – Nathan's wise grandfather who came to learn about his grandson's secret. Grandpa Park used to be a working reporter.
  • Isabelle Park (voiced by Stephanie Sheh) – Nathan's younger sister.
  • Officer Reynolds (voiced by Will Friedle) – Kane's sarcastic second-in-command, who leads a special ops team under Rook's employ. He is later promoted to head of security of Rook Unlimited at the end of the second season only to be replaced by Rook's Hyper-Flexarium test subject and confidant.
  • Biomass / Oleg Savic (voiced by Walter Koenig) – Oleg Savic is the Flex Fighters' botany teacher. In the second season, he was temporarily able to transform into a plant monster that was super strong and could control vines as weapons.
  • Malouf (voiced by Eric Bauza) – A short-tempered classmate of the Flex Fighters.
  • Brick and Mortar (voiced by Wayne Knight and Troy Baker respectively) – Two misunderstood scientists. Brick possesses gauntlets that send shock waves while Mortar possesses a gun that sprays a liquid that makes solid objects temporarily malleable. They are later hired by Rook Unlimited.

Production[edit]

Stretch Armstrong was originally released in 1976 by Kenner Products. In 1987, Kenner was acquired by Tonka,[2] which was later acquired together in 1991 by Hasbro. All of rights to Kenner's products were transferred to Hasbro in 2000, when the latter shut down Kenner's office.[3]

There have been several attempts to adapt the property into a television series or film, with the latter, as a live-action film, have failed attempts by Disney (in 1994), Universal (in 2008) and Relativity Media (in 2012).[4] Originally announced and developed as a live-action series starring a teenage version of the 1970s superhero,[5] the idea was eventually retooled as an animated series targeted to children before bringing in Cook as producer, based on his work with The Spectacular Spider-Man TV series.[6] Shortly thereafter, Burke and Wyatt were hired to produce and write. The series was designed to have episodic stories that also serialize into a larger plot over the course of the first season's 26 episodes.[6] The first footage from the series was shown at HasCon on September 10, 2017.[6]

The series is animated by Digital eMation in South Korea.[7]

Episodes[edit]

Season 1[edit]

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
1'Confessions of a Teenage Superhero'Victor CookKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattNovember 17, 2017
In the futuristic Charter City, high school students Jake Armstrong, Nathan Park and Ricardo Perez accidentally break into Rook Unlimited, owned by industrialist and Charter City benefactor Jonathan Rook. The three are dosed with Flexarium, a malleable and powerful material, and gain elastic based superpowers. While fleeing from the authorities, the three take on disgruntled Rook employee Dr. Don Robertson who has transformed into a strange monster dubbed Multi-Farious.
2'Pulled in Every Direction'Victor CookKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattNovember 17, 2017
Rook, impressed with Jake, Nathan and Ricardo's heroics, decides to hire them as Charter City's official superhero team, The Flex Fighters. The team decide to keep their identities secret, even from Rook, as they gain the codenames Stretch, Wingspan and Omni-Mass. Robertson, who escaped their fight from the previous episode, is still on the loose and the Flex Fighters must prove that they can handle the situation, though Malcolm Kane, Rook's head bodyguard and chief of security, doesn't think they are up to the challenge.
3'Ninja and the Ghost'Kevin AltieriKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattNovember 17, 2017
During a demonstration, Blindstrike attacks Rook Unlimited forcing the Flex Fighters to defend the facility. Jake does some investigating and discovers that Blindstrike is in league with Rook's former partner and co-founder Dr. Racine Cleo (Dr. C for short) who was long thought to be dead. Meanwhile, Nathan and Ricardo begin having issues when the latter's jock like attitude gets on the former's nerves.
4'Online Presence'Frank PaurEugene SonNovember 17, 2017
Villain Circuit-Stream plans to hack into Rook's satellite to release everyone's personal information. He gets help from the mysterious Stretch Monster who gives him a serum that gives him technopathic abilities and wrecks havoc across Charter City. The Flex Fighters in the meantime must also deal with their online presence when on the FlexFighterNet, users begin to rate the heroes causing Ricardo to have a huge ego and decides to live stream their current mission.
5'Stretchipedes'Phil WeinsteinRob HoegeeNovember 17, 2017
After a disastrous mission involving the Freak Sisters, Kane gives the Flex Fighters 48 hours to decide who should be the leader creating competition between them. Rook creates new robotic drones called stretchipedes to help out in various situations. The drones prove to be more useful than the heroes, but they soon become unstable and attack the Flex Fighters due to secretly being controlled by Stretch Monster.
6'The Gangs of Old Town'Kevin AltieriJosh HaberNovember 17, 2017
'Smokestack' Jack Kinland is given smoke based powers by Stretch Monster and decides to start a turf war in Old Town, the original Charter City. The Flex Fighters are convinced by Rook to try and be more close with Kane. However, Kane is revealed to have a past connected to Kinland and he finds himself brought back into the fray when his old gang the Stickshifts re-recruit him to help take down Kinland and his new army.
7'Fast Times'Frank PaurBrian HohlfeldNovember 17, 2017
The Flex Fighters face a new threat in the form of Quick Charge, a villain with electricity powers. She is actually Dr. Sarah Kamen and blames Rook for knocking her out of the energy business and plots revenge by destroying his generators. Meanwhile, Jake attempts to ask out his crush Riya Dashti and Nathan and Ricardo discover that the former's grandfather knows that they are actually the Flex Fighters.
8'Lie Sandwich'Victor CookMark HoffmeierNovember 17, 2017
Jake feels guilty about not telling his father about his double life as Stretch. The Flex Fighters are once again pitted against Blindstrike who scans a map of the Pearl Islands, the known location where Dr. C's plane went down and where the formula for her Hyperflexarium is located. However, when Jake misses a parent-teacher conference, he is grounded forcing Nathan and Ricardo to do the mission alone.
9'Singularity Event'Kevin AltieriKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattNovember 17, 2017
While battling minor, misunderstood crooks Mortar and Brick, Jake is sprayed with an unknown substance that makes him lose control of his powers. Rook asks for a sample of the substance to be taken back so that he can make a cure. In the meantime, Jake has Ricardo pick up Riya for the dance and the two end up bonding over mutual interests. Nathan and Erika spend time together after the latter's date turns out to be narcissistic.
10'Crisis at the Cleo'Frank PaurFM De MarcoNovember 17, 2017
While on a school field trip at the Cleo Museum, a group of special op criminals called the Tech Men arrive to steal a valuable mineral called Prolotite. Jake, Ricardo and Nathan find themselves in a difficult situation of trying to save the students without revealing their identities. Eventually, the situation becomes more complicated with the arrival of Blindstrike, whom the Flex Fighters deduce is someone from the school, and Stretch Monster.
11'Secret Ninja Party'Alan CaldwellEric RogersNovember 17, 2017
The Flex Fighters begin to investigate Blindstrike's identity and the possible location of Dr. C. They discover all the villains they've faced under Rook Unlimited and learn from Multi-Farious that they are unwillingly experimented on by Rook. The Flex Fighters track down Stretch Monster who claims to be in the unwilling employ of Dr. C and that he wants to be free of her. While Jake is willing to help their former enemy, Nathan and Ricardo are unsure of the alliance.
12'Endgame'Kevin AltieriTom KrajewskiNovember 17, 2017
In flashback, Stretch Monster drains the brainwaves from a scientist. In the present, Stretch Monster back stabs the Flex Fighters. The team realize that they need to locate the Prolotite to stop him and figure out that Blindstrike's costume is full of Prolotite. After an exhausting battle, they manage to finally defeat and capture him. However, Stretch Monster arrives and kidnaps Blindstrike, forcing the Flex Fighters to chase down their nemesis.
13'The Age of Flexarium'Frank PaurKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattNovember 17, 2017
The Flex Fighters must take down Stretch Monster for good and his Flexarium army. The team also must deal with the fact that Blindstrike is really Riya and that Dr. C has been trying to take down Rook as he is really Stretch Monster. With the Flex Fighters now considered criminals due to Rook's power, they have to decide what their next move is and how to go about with their status besmirched.

Stretch Armstrong Ebay

Season one is followed by the special 'The Breakout'.

Season 2[edit]

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
1'The New Normal'Alan CaldwellJacob SemahnSeptember 7, 2018[8]
The Flex Fighters are considered traitors in Charter City. Now they must work with Blindstrike and Dr. Cleo to battle Rook's cyborg assassin Mechanica (formerly Rook Unlimited Security Officer Santos). They also learn from Dr. C how they really got their powers when Riya was unwittingly a carrier agent of Hyper-Flexarium that infected their class, and that regular Flexarium turned Jake into Stretch, Nathan into Wingspan and Ricardo into Omni-Mass when both formulas interacted.
2'Dreamscape'Kevin AltieriMichael VogelSeptember 7, 2018
A new villain named Dr. Dreamscape gives The Flex Fighters some trouble. In the B-story, Nathan wonders if he should tell his crush, Erika Violette, that he is Wingspan. However, things get worse when Dreamscape takes control over him, and the aftermath leads him to telling Erika, only to have her run away from him.
3'Riya's Revenge'Frank PaurJennifer MuroSeptember 7, 2018
While Riya's exploring some childhood memories and finds data regarding her parents' past as Rook Unlimited Scientists, Rook sends a mystery man nicknamed 'The Gentlemen' after her. Meanwhile, Erika secretly follows the Flex Fighters and learns the truth about them, becoming their newest ally in the process.
4'Rise of the Tech Men'Alan CaldwellZac AtkinsonSeptember 7, 2018
Stretch is stuck fighting an army of Tech Men without any of his partners to help. In the B-Story, Agent Reynolds becomes suspicious about Rook's operations after discovering his growing obsession with capturing the Flex Fighters.
5'Biomass'Kevin AltieriKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattSeptember 7, 2018
A mysterious new enemy named Biomass is stealing experimental plant food from science labs around the city. Meanwhile, Mr. Savic's past finally comes to light when Nathan's grandfather helps the Flex Fighters investigate Biomass and the robberies, soon learning that Biomass and Dr. Savic are the same entity, being manipulated by an even crazier villain named Anastasia.
6'Split Personalities'Frank PaurAdam Jay EpsteinSeptember 7, 2018
While trying to steal some data from Rook, The Flex Fighters have to deal with a new problem.. an accident in Mark Armstrong's lab turns Gabe into the new Multi-Farious! Also, Erika gets hit with some weird goo and develops glowing purple eyes.
7'The Fall of Jonathan Rook'Alan CaldwellPaul TobinSeptember 7, 2018
When the team gets separated, the Tech Men launch their plan to take over Rook Unlimited. In the B-story, a dark secret regarding the Tech Men and Malcolm Kane comes to light.
8'Rook's Story'Kevin AltieriBrandon VioletteSeptember 7, 2018
While Malcolm Kane, revealed to be the Tech Men's leader 'Number One', takes over Rook Tower, Jonathan Rook tells the Flex Fighters and the audience the story of how he became the man he is today including his company, his encounters with the Tech-Men's predecessors, the Epsilon Society, his transformation into Stretch Monster, and the deaths of Riya's parents and the other scientists minus himself and Dr. C.
9'Masters of Order'Frank PaurBrian HohlfeldSeptember 7, 2018
Kane and the Tech Men gradually take over the city with mind control chips, using the same tech as the chips Rook used on the inmates in 'Stretch Armstrong: the Breakout' and its canon TV episode counterpart. Meanwhile, the Flex Fighters are forced to forge an alliance with Rook/Stretch Monster as well as Brick and Mortar.
10'Doomsday Clock'Alan CaldwellKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattSeptember 7, 2018
Picking up where the last episode left off, Kane and the Tech-Men succeed in enslaving the minds of everyone in Charter City, except for Stretch and Agent Reynolds who both came into contact with a Flexarium-based formula making them immune. After freeing Rook, Dr. C, and the other Flex Fighters from Kane's mind control, our heroes must awaken a comatose Erika and her budding energy powers and work together to take down the Tech Men.

Specials[edit]

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
1'The Breakout'Victor CookKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' WyattMarch 13, 2018

Branded fugitives by Jonathan Rook, Jake, Nathan and Ricardo become Stretch, Wingspan and Omni-Mass once more when Dr. Don Robertson/ Multi-Farious rampages the city. The trio soon find out that Smokestack, Circuit-Stream, Quick Charge and the Freak Sisters have escaped from Rook Tower as well. After a brief fight with Multi-Farious, Stretch calms him down and they find out some intel about the breakout before he walks off to think about his next move. Meanwhile, Blindstrike (recently revealed to be Riya Dashti, Jake's crush) incapacitates the Flex Fighters with smoke bombs and leaves them in the underground tunnels before pursuing the Freak Sisters as they attempt to stage a bank robbery. Led by Dr. Racine Cleo/Dr. C, who reveals herself to have tried contacting them earlier, the boys arrive in her lab hidden within the old parts of Charter City underground.

Like Multi-Farious, Dr. C deduces Rook staged a breakout to lure the Flex Fighters out of hiding. She volunteers herself and Blindstrike to handle the escapees and offers the Flex Fighters escape by handing over their uniforms. But the trio refuse, claiming that they could recapture the villains on their own. Dr. C agrees to help them, and the trio start their new campaign by apprehending Smokestack at a nightclub in Old Town where he dance-fights Madame Toussant and her gang. After Omni-Mass's plan to push Smokestack's air form around with a fog machine fails, Stretch turns on the a/c in the disco, causing Smokestack to weaken into an unconscious state, while Omni-Mass disguises his voice and sends Rook Security an anonymous call to pick up Smokestack.

Dr. C informs them that Quick Charge is attacking the power plant, and the trio heads there with a surprise partner: Multi-Farious. After the fight causes the building to flood with electrified water and breaks out into the streets, the Flex Fighters lure Quick Charge back inside, and Multi-Farious' pieces apprehend her, allowing Wingspan to leave another anonymous call to Rook security before the trio deduce an appointment Quick Charge mentioned she had was with Stretch Monster (Rook's monstrous alter-ego), and the trio agree to help Multi-Farious find Rook. After a brief skirmish with Kane and Delta Squad at Rook Tower, the group finds out Rook is hiding at the warehouse where the Flex Fighters got their powers, and Don was accidentally transformed into Multi-Farious. When he is found, Rook confronts them as Stretch Monster and almost ends up flattened by Multi-Farious before Stretch talks him out of it. The group soon learn that Rook had just finished a cure for Don's mutation, so after Stretch Monster manages to slip away, Don drinks the cure and explodes, turning into a stone statue of his human self before the shell breaks and reveals Don Robertson unharmed. He thanks the Flex Fighters for giving him his life back before they leave to help Blindstrike deal with the Freak Sisters at the bank.

After witnessing Blindstrike trap them in an energy cage, Stretch interrogates Kari and Mari Freak after Omni-Mass tries to seduce them and fails. The Freak Sisters reveal that Rook inserted chips into the necks of all the escapees, preventing them from leaving the city with a limited form of mind control (this would later be referenced, as part of the canon parts of the story in 'Masters of Order'). After Blindstrike scans the chips on their necks, Dr. C receives the data and begins construction on a control device to round up Circuit-Stream and Quick Charge. Apparently, the latter escaped before Kane could break out of the tower and arrest her.

The Flex Fighters soon find Circuit-Stream and prepare to fight him just as Quick Charge shows up in response to the use of Dr. C's controller. While Wingspan deals with Circuit-Stream in a stolen crane truck, Stretch and Omni-Mass distract Quick Charge, using her blasts of electric energy and Omni-Mass' fists to knock down the crane truck and electrocute Circuit-Stream until he falls unconscious. The Flex Fighters then engulf the two in a pyramid-shaped energy field, and retreat with Dr. C and Blindstrike in their camouflaged armored airship just as Kane and his Delta Team arrive on the scene. Impressed with their actions, Dr. C agrees to train them just like she trained Blindstrike, and that the five become allies in their crusade against Rook, much to the excitement of Stretch who proclaims 'The Flex Fighters are back!' Meanwhile after watching a live news report, Rook angrily vows to hunt down the Flex Fighters by any means necessary, no matter how long it takes, while his reflection of Stretch Monster shows up in the window as thunder and lightning clash.

Comic book[edit]

Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters
Publication information
PublisherIDW Publishing
ScheduleMonthly
FormatOngoing series
Genre
Publication dateApril– July 2018
No. of issues3
Main character(s)Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters
Creative team
Written byKevin Burke and Chris 'Doc' Wyatt
Artist(s)Nikos Koutsis
Colorist(s)Mike Toris

The first issue of Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters was released February 28, 2018. All three issues serve as one full episode that takes place before the season 1 episode 'Lie Sandwich'.

References[edit]

  1. ^McMillan, Graeme (September 7, 2017). 'IDW, Hasbro Partner for Stretch Armstrong Comic Book (Exclusive)'. The Hollywood Reporter. Eldridge Industries.
  2. ^September 04, 1987 (July 29, 1987). 'Kenner Accepts Tonka Offer'. Articles.latimes.com. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  3. ^Dan (July 28, 2006). 'Hasbro and Jurassic Park: Why Things Changed'. JPToys.com. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  4. ^Finke, Nikki (January 30, 2012). 'Universal Drops Hasbro's Stretch Armstrong Film, Taylor Lautner Out as Star, Relativity Picks Up for April 2014 Release'. Deadline Hollywood.
  5. ^Hooton, Christopher (January 29, 2016). 'Stretch Armstrong Is Coming to Netflix'. The Independent. Independent Print Limited.
  6. ^ abcSchedeen, Jesse (September 1, 2017). 'Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters: How Netflix Is Re-imagining an Iconic Hero'. IGN.
  7. ^'Service Work Portfolio: 2016'. Digital eMation.
  8. ^Yang, Rachel (August 30, 2018). 'What's Coming to Netflix in September 2018'. Yahoo!.

External links[edit]

  • Official website
  • Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters at Hasbro Studios
  • Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters on IMDb
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