Teen Titans is an American animated superhero comedy drama television series created by Glen Murakami, who developed the series with David Slack and Sam Register. Based on the DC Comics superhero team Teen Titans, it was produced by Warner Bros. Animation, and DC Comics (for season 5). The show premiered on Cartoon Network on July 19, 2003; its first two seasons also aired on Kids' WB. Initially, only four seasons were planned, but the popularity of the series led to Cartoon Network ordering a fifth season. The final half-hour episode of the show, "Things Change", aired on January 16, 2006; it was later followed by a TV movie, Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo, that premiered on September 15 the same year, serving as the series finale. A 15-minute episode titled "The Lost Episode" was released as part of an online promotional campaign by Post Consumer Brands in January 2005.
During its run, the series was nominated for three Annie Awards and one Motion Picture Sound Editors Award. Spin-off media included comics, DVD releases, video games, music albums, and collectible toys. In 2013, the show spawned a spin-off, titled Teen Titans Go!, which received a theatrical film that was released on July 27, 2018, titled Teen Titans Go! To the Movies. In 2019, a crossover film with Teen Titans Go! was released, titled Teen Titans Go! vs. Teen Titans. It features the first appearance of the original series characters after 13 years.
The series was first shown on Boomerang from February 2, 2009, replacing Voltron: Defender of the Universe until October 31, 2010. It returned to Boomerang's line-up on October 3, 2011, and left the schedule again on June 1, 2014.
Premise
280px|thumb|right|The Teen Titans from left to right:<br />[[Cyborg (DC Comics)|Cyborg, Robin, Beast Boy, Starfire, and Raven]]
Teen Titans is based primarily on stories by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez from the 1980s, featuring characters, storylines, and concepts introduced during the run, and incorporating a similar group of members. The five main members of the eponymous team in the series are Robin (Scott Menville), the intelligent and capable leader of the Teen Titans; Starfire (Hynden Walch), a quirky, curious alien princess from the planet Tamaran; Cyborg (Khary Payton), a cyborg armed with extraordinary strength and technological prowess; Raven (Tara Strong), a stoic girl from the parallel world Azarath who draws upon dark energy and psionic abilities; and Beast Boy (Greg Cipes), a good-natured joker who can transform into various animals. They are situated in Titans Tower, a large T-shaped building featuring living quarters, a command center, and a variety of training facilities on an island just offshore from the West Coast metropolis of Jump City. The team deals with all manner of criminal activity and threats to the city, while dealing with their own struggles with adolescence, their mutual friendships, and their limitations.
The first season focuses on the Teen Titans' introduction to the mysterious supervillain Slade (Ron Perlman), who seeks to turn Robin into his apprentice. The second season is an adaptation of "The Judas Contract" storyline where new hero Terra (Ashley Johnson) joins the team while secretly plotting against them with Slade. The third season depicts Cyborg's conflict with H.I.V.E. and their leader Brother Blood (John DiMaggio), prompting Cyborg to form the superhero team Titans East with Aqualad (Wil Wheaton), Speedy (Mike Erwin), Bumblebee (T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh), and Más y Menos (Freddy Rodriguez). In the fourth season, Raven finds herself unwillingly involved in a plot that threatens the existence of the world when her demon father Trigon (Kevin Michael Richardson) seeks to enslave the Earth. For the fifth season, the Teen Titans join forces with several other heroes to combat the Brotherhood of Evil, Beast Boy's longtime adversaries, and their army of villains.
Episodes
Cast and characters
Main
- Greg Cipes as Beast Boy
- Scott Menville as Robin
- Khary Payton as Cyborg
- Tara Strong as Raven
- Hynden Walch as Starfire
Secret identities
<!-- Please refer to the discussion about secret identities on the talk page before editing this section. Also, if anything is to be added, please cite your source. -->
Unlike most other superhero television series, the Teen Titans characters maintain their superhero identities at all times, with any hints at the concept of an alter ego or secret identity rarely explored.
The secret identity of Robin, an alias assumed by multiple characters in the comics, is never explicitly revealed in the series, but several hints are provided to suggest he is Dick Grayson, the original Robin and founding member of the Teen Titans:
- Robin's alternate dimensional counterpart Larry in the episode "Fractured" is named Nosyarg Kcid—Dick Grayson spelled backwards.
- Robin's future counterpart in the episode "How Long Is Forever?" has taken on the identity of Nightwing, Grayson's second superhero alias.
- The main romance in the show is Robin's relationship with Starfire, whom Grayson would romance in the comics.
- A glimpse into Robin's consciousness by Raven in the episode "Haunted" shows the memory of two acrobats falling from a trapeze, a reference to the death of Grayson's acrobat parents being the catalyst for him becoming Robin.
- Further connections to the Batman mythos include two references in the episode "The Apprentice", when Robin responds to a suggestion by the villain Slade that he "might be like a father to [him]" with "I already have a father" (which transitions to a shot of flying bats) and a fight scene on the rooftop of Wayne Enterprises.
The Teen Titans Go! episode "Permanent Record" would satirize the mystery of Robin's identity by explicitly giving his name as "Robin v.3: Tim Drake" (the third Robin), with "Dick Grayson" and "Jason Todd" (the second Robin) being written over. Subsequent episodes, however, establish him as Dick Grayson through vague flashbacks to his boyhood at Haley Circus.
In the comics, Starfire and Raven are the real names of their respective characters. While the show does not specify this with the latter, the former acknowledges "Starfire" as the English translation of her name in the season 5 episode "Go!" and her native name, Koriand'r, is used in the season 3 episode "Betrothed". The comic versions of these characters, however, also use the civilian aliases Kory Anders and Rachel Roth, which are not used on the show.
The policy of not mentioning the characters' secret identities would be broken in the season 5 premiere "Homecoming" when Elasti-Girl refers to Beast Boy by his real name, Garfield. Cyborg's real name in the comics, Victor Stone, is referenced in the season 3 premiere "Deception" when he uses "Stone" as an undercover alias, although the series does not identify this as his real name.
Production
Soundtrack
The series is known for featuring both an English and Japanese version of its title theme song, created by Andy Sturmer and performed by Japanese band Puffy AmiYumi. The title theme used in the regions where the show was broadcast varied; some would play only one version, while Japan - and the English language video editions - would use both, according to the respective episode's plot theme: the English lyrics for more serious stories, and the Japanese version for more comedic tones.
The first-season episode "Mad Mod" also featured another song by Puffy AmiYumi, "K2G". Several days after this initial posting, the fifth season was announced to be the last.
As early as August 2006, there were reports that Teen Titans would undergo a possible rebranding, with producer Glen Murakami citing the 1995 hiatus of Batman: The Animated Series, which was retooled in 1997 as The New Batman Adventures. According to Hoegee, this had been suggested by Sam Register, producer of the series, after he and producer David Slack had left the show, leaving Murakami and story editor and writer Amy Wolfram to develop and put together a pitch for the rebrand that would have expanded the team with the characters introduced in the fifth season, and bring in a brand new villain who had ties to some classic Titans villains from the comics. When they had sent the pitch in, it was ultimately declined. Slack stated that he was given different reasons for not renewing the show; either the ratings dropped after the "scary" season 4, or Mattel wanted the show dead because Bandai had the show's toy deal. Mattel was named as "master toy licensee" in 2006 by Cartoon Network.
After the series finale, Warner Bros. Animation released a feature film titled Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo. The film premiered at San Diego Comic-Con and was shown on Cartoon Network first on September 15, 2006, and releasing on DVD on February 6, 2007.
In April 2021, ComicBookMovie.com founder Nate Best reported acquiring pitch documents for the rebrand and shared details in an exclusive article. According to Best, the rebrand would have been titled New Teen Titans, and would have featured a rotating cast rather than focusing on the original five members. Some of these proposed teamups included:
- Robin, Speedy, Aqualad, and Kid Flash (a tribute to the original Titans from the comic book)
- Kid Flash, Más y Menos
- Wildebeest, Jericho, and Gnarrk
- Hot Spot, Killowat, and Red Star
- Raven, Starfire, Kole, Argent, Bumblebee, and Pantha (in a story titled "Truth or Dare")
The show was slated to introduce new villains, notably one named "Athena" who had the Midas touch and was accompanied by an ever-changing roster of superpowered suiters as well as a posse of robot girls, and other groups of teenagers as throwbacks to previous villains such as Mad Mod and Control Freak. The pitch documents included information on a holiday episode, as well as a plotline in which Herald would unknowingly create a rift in "Dimension X", allowing a microscopic, self-replicating creature to travel to Earth. According to series artist Derrick J. Wyatt, this would have tied back to the unnamed creature from the series finale "Things Change". Series artist Brianne Drouhard has also stated doing visual development on a character that was not mentioned in the reporting.
Crossover with Teen Titans Go!
A mid-credits scene from Teen Titans Go! To the Movies featured the 2003 Titans' return, in which Robin states they have "found a way back".
In 2019, Warner Bros. released a crossover film featuring the Titans from both shows, titled Teen Titans Go! vs. Teen Titans. The film premiered at San Diego Comic-Con on July 21, followed by a digital release on September 24 and a DVD and Blu-ray release on October 15. The events of the film take place during the fifth season of Teen Titans Go!.
Legacy
The series was revisited as a series of shorts in 2012 for the DC Nation programming block on Cartoon Network. Dubbed New Teen Titans, the shorts began airing on September 11. The shorts featured the Titans in chibi form, with the principal cast members of the original series returning.
Ciro Nieli, one of the show's directors, would go on to create Disney's Super Robot Monkey Team Hyperforce Go!, another superhero action show with a large anime influence, but premiered in 2004 on Jetix, and featured Beast Boy's voice actor Greg Cipes as the voice of Chiro, the show's main protagonist. Sam Register also made his own show in 2004 with Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi on Cartoon Network, which was based on the pop duo who did the theme song, and also had an anime influence, but was created more to be a slapstick comedy in the veins of Looney Tunes and the various cartoon films of Tex Avery.
Teen Titans Go! was announced as a spin-off, featuring many of the same voices, but is not significantly related in terms of story to both the Teen Titans series and the New Teen Titans shorts. The series premiered on April 23, 2013.
Richardson, Payton, Strong, Cipes, and Walch reprised their respective character roles as Trigon, Cyborg, Raven, Beast Boy, Starfire, and Blackfire in DC Super Hero Girls.
Payton reprised his role as Cyborg in Lego DC Comics: Batman Be-Leaguered, Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League vs. Bizarro League, Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League – Attack of the Legion of Doom, Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League – Cosmic Clash, Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League – Gotham City Breakout along with Cipes, Walch, and Menville (although he played the Damian Wayne Robin), Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: The Flash, and Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Aquaman – Rage of Atlantis. He has also reprised his role as Cyborg in Justice League Action.
Several character details from Teen Titans, like Raven's standard incantation Azarath Metrion Zinthos and Beast Boy's super-werewolf form from the episode "The Beast Within", were incorporated into the animated film Justice League vs. Teen Titans.
Impact on DC continuity
Teen Titans has never been established to be a part of the larger DC Animated Universe or The Batman animated series. Series producer Bruce Timm said the series would not cross over with Justice League Unlimited. Despite this, the series was alluded to in the Static Shock episode "Hard as Nails", where Static asked Batman where Robin was, to which Batman responded, "With the Titans...You'll meet them some day". The character Speedy, who first appeared in the episode "Winner Take All", later appeared in Justice League Unlimited with the same costume design and voice actor (Mike Erwin). Kid Flash was voiced by Michael Rosenbaum in his appearances in the show, who was the same actor who voiced the Flash in Justice League Unlimited; both characters are the Wally West incarnations. The follow-up series, Teen Titans Go!, has featured several appearances by Batman, but they have all been non-speaking appearances. Both Batman and Alfred Pennyworth appear in DC Nation's New Teen Titans "Red X Unmasked". In the season 2 episode of Teen Titans Go!, "Let's Get Serious", Aqualad (voiced by Khary Payton), Superboy, and Miss Martian of the Young Justice team appear.
Much like the DC Animated Universe (as well as X-Men: Evolution and Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends), the series has affected the comics that initially inspired it, including: Beast Boy adopting the series' purple and black outfit during DC's "52" storyline and later appearing with the pointed ears and fanged teeth originated by the series, future Cyborg having the same armor pattern of his animated counterpart in the Titans Tomorrow storyline, Raven adapting her animated counterpart's costume design in the "One Year Later" storyline, the characters Más y Menos making appearances in 52 and the Final Crisis limited series, the character Joto was renamed "Hot Spot" during 52 to match his animated counterpart, and the villain Cinderblock appearing in a fight with the comic incarnation of the Titans. Red X is later included in the mainstream comic publications through the two-issue teaser comic Future State: Teen Titans and its follow-up series, Teen Titans Academy.
Reception
Early into the series' run, executive producer and Cartoon Network and Warner Bros. Animation vice president Sam Register responded to criticism regarding the style of the show with a statement slightly contradicting Murakami's statement about wanting Robin to "be cool" with his metal-tipped boots:
While the series' creators initially stated that younger children were the intended audience for the series, Teen Titans Go! writer J. Torres notes that the progression and deeper themes of the show widened the appeal to a much broader audience:
In 2009, Teen Titans was named the 83rd best animated series by IGN.
TVLine lists the theme song from the series among the best animated series themes of all time.
Awards and nominations
;2005 Annie Awards
- Outstanding Storyboarding in an Animated Television Production (Nominated)
;2004 Annie Awards
- Outstanding Music in an Animated Television Production (Nominated)
- Outstanding Storyboarding in an Animated Television Production (Nominated)
;2004 Motion Picture Sound Editors Awards:
- Best Sound Editing in Television Animation (Nominated)
Broadcast
- : Cartoon Network & Boomerang
- : Cartoon Network UK, Toonami UK & CITV
- : Cartoon Network Australia, 9Network & 9Go!
- : Cartoon Network Nigeria, Africa Magic & Africa Magic World
- : Cartoon Network South Africa, Toonami South Africa, Mzansi Magic, Mzansi Wethu, One Magic & SABC 1
In other media
Home media
From September 28, 2004, to September 20, 2005, Warner Brothers released three volumes (the entire first season and the first six-season two episodes) of the series, but cancelled other volumes. From February 7, 2006, to July 22, 2008, Warner released complete season releases on two-disc sets. Warner Bros. Home Entertainment released the complete series box set on the seven-disc set on October 2, 2018, and on Blu-ray on December 3, 2019.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
|-
! colspan="3" rowspan="2" | Season
! rowspan="2" | Episodes
! Release date
|-
! Region 1
|-
! style="background:#B11030" | || 1
| 2003
| 13
| style="text-align: left" | Volume 1: Divide and Conquer: September 28, 2004<br />Episode(s): "Final Exam" – "Nevermore"<hr>Volume 2: Switched: April 12, 2005<br />Episode(s): "Switched" – "Car Trouble"<hr>The Complete First Season: February 7, 2006; October 2, 2018 (complete series re-release); January 23, 2018; December 3, 2019 (Blu-ray release)
|-
! style="background:#FFD700" | || 2
| 2004
| 13
| style="text-align: left" | Volume 3: Fear Itself: September 20, 2005<br />Episode(s): "How Long Is Forever?" – "Date with Destiny"<hr>The Complete Second Season: September 12, 2006; October 2, 2018 (complete series re-release); December 3, 2019 (Blu-ray release)
|-
! style="background:#00BFFF" | || 3
| 2004–05
| 13
| style="text-align: left" | April 10, 2007; October 2, 2018 (complete series re-release)<br />December 3, 2019 (Blu-ray release)
|-
! style="background:#9400D3" | || 4
| 2005
| 13
| style="text-align: left" | November 20, 2007; October 2, 2018 (complete series re-release)<br />December 3, 2019 (Blu-ray release)
|-
! style="background:#CCDB39" | || 5
| 2005–06
| 13
| style="text-align: left" | July 8, 2008; October 2, 2018 (complete series re-release)<br />December 3, 2019 (Blu-ray release)
|-
! style="background:#5DE8AE" | || rowspan="2" | Specials
| rowspan="2" | 2006–07
| rowspan="2" | 2
| rowspan="2" style="text-align: left" | Trouble in Tokyo + "The Lost Episode": February 6, 2007; December 3, 2019 (Blu-ray release)
|-
! style="background:#EEE8AA" |
|}
Comics
From 2004 to 2008, DC Comics published a comic book series based on Teen Titans called Teen Titans Go!. The series was written by J. Torres and Todd Nauck, and illustrated by Larry Stucker. While the comic's stories stand independently, its issues were done so as not to contradict events established in the animated series' episodes. Often, Teen Titans Go! also referenced episodes of the show, as well as expanding on parts of the series.
In July 2024, DC Comics published a comic book series named Primer: Clashing Colors that features this iteration of the Teen Titans. It is written by Thomas Krajewski and Jennifer Muro, and illustrated by Gretel Lusky. The comic focuses on Ashley Rayburn putting her powers to the test in order to be put on the team with the rest of the main cast.
Toys
Bandai released a line of action figures based on the Teen Titans animated series. The line included 1.5 inch "Comic Book Hero" mini figures, 3.5 inch action figures (including "Teen Titans Launch Tower Playset", "Teen Titans Command Center", "Battling Machines", "T-Vehicles", "T-Sub Deluxe Vehicles"), 5 inch action figures, 6.5 inch plush Super-D Toys, and 10 inch figures. Amongst the characters included in the line were the main members of the Teen Titans, Titans East, and various allies and villains.
Video games
Teen Titans is a video game released on October 16, 2005 for the Game Boy Advance. It was the first video game adaptation based on the animated television series. The plot of the game followed Brother Blood having stolen copies of the Titans' DNA to create a clone army. Playable characters featured the main cast, Robin, Raven, Beast Boy, Starfire, and Cyborg. A console version of the game and a sequel titled Teen Titans 2 was released in 2006.
Films
Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo, is made-for-television film that aired on Cartoon Network on September 15, 2006 as the series finale, When a high-tech ninja called Saico-Tek goes on a spree of destruction in Jump City with color coordinated glaives that explode, the Teen Titans stop him from destroying everything until Robin captures him. Using a translation program Robin discovers that Saico-Tek expresses fear of failing his master, Brushogun, who is based in Japan. He then triggers a fire sprinkler, causing him to dissolve into black goo. Subsequently the Titans head to Tokyo, Japan to search for Brushogun.
Teen Titans Go! vs. Teen Titans, released on July 21, 2019, features the main cast of Teen Titans along with the one of Teen Titans Go! in a crossover where both versions must fight villains from their respective worlds.
Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths – Part Three, released on July 16, 2024, contains a cameo where Titans Tower from the animated series can be momentarily seen.
See also
- Justice League (TV series)
- Justice League Unlimited
- Young Justice (TV series)
Notes
References
External links
- Official DC Comics site
- Teen Titans at The World's Finest
- David Slack interviews: Season 1, Season 2, Season 3, Season 4, Season 5
