I actually remember some of those Filmation toons, such as Blackstar and Ghostbusters. Those were crappy toons...
Then, yes.
But in the mid-late '60s, Filmation redefined Saturday morning TV programming. Filmaton was better than HB, and by 1968, Filmation dominated TV animation. As distasteful as it may be to hear this, introducing SCOOBY DOO in 1969 was one of HB's attempts to compete with Filmation.
Filmation was turning out some great stuff for kids on Saturday morning TV from 1966 - 1969, in partnership with DC Comics. Full of limited/recycled animation, faithful to the comic books, and full of voice-actor enthusiasm, with narraton (and character voice credits) by MTM's Ted Knight:
- SUPERMAN (1966 - 1967), with voice credits by the '41--'43 Fleischer toon cast, who were also the 1940s radio cast... Bud Collyer, Joan Alexander and Jackson Beck, plus SUPERBOY toons with Bob Hastings as the Boy of Steel
- THE AQUAMAN/SUPERMAN HOUR (1967 - 1968); packaging the prior years' SUPERMAN toons, with new AQUAMAN, JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA, FLASH, GREEN LANTERN, HAWKMAN and ATOM toons.
- THE BATMAN/SUPERMAN HOUR (1968 - 1969); repackaging the earlier series, with new BATMAN toons that combined elements of the Adam West series with the pre-Neal Adams comic books.
- THE ARCHIES (1967 - 1969) A faithful comic book adaptation, that jumped on the bubble-gum pop wagon with a studio band that put several top-40 hits on the charts for two years. This and the Cowsills were the inspiration for THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY (1971 - 1974).
(That earthquake you just felt was Shemps#1, absorbing the above-mentioned reality of late '60s pop music culture. If he can manage to side-step a coronary or cerebral hemorrage, please know that you have just witnessed the fuse that will light a new series of MTS posts.)In spite of the music "issues," THE ARCHIES was a fun series for kids.
- When Filmation was on the ropes in early '70s, Paramount and Gene Roddenberry hired it to produce STAR TREK: THE ANIMATED SERIES (1972 - 1974). Overall, excellent scripts combined with terrible animation.
After STAR TREK, I can't think of one decent Filmation product.