After his parents are murdered and his legs crippled, Tony Valdez uses their technology and becomes a skateboarding superhero.After his parents are murdered and his legs crippled, Tony Valdez uses their technology and becomes a skateboarding superhero.After his parents are murdered and his legs crippled, Tony Valdez uses their technology and becomes a skateboarding superhero.
Wilmer Valderrama
- Tony Valdez
- (voice)
- โฆ
Kathleen Barr
- Sammi
- (voice)
Mary Elizabeth McGlynn
- Valeria
- (voice)
- โฆ
Scott McNeil
- Dogg
- (voice)
Cusse Mankuma
- Z-Man
- (voice)
Sam Vincent
- Reuben
- (voice)
John Novak
- George Valdez
- (voice)
Alessandro Juliani
- Chato
- (voice)
France Perras
- Fragg
- (voice)
Stan Lee
- Grandfather
- (voice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
Sammi: I combined your parents' research with mine. So those pin pricks you felt, they're computer probes dispersing nanobots into your bloodstream that are designed to knit torn tissue and broken bones.
Tony Valdez: Robots? Uh, somebody stop her. She's putting robots in me.
- ConnectionsReferences The Wizard of Oz (1939)
- SoundtracksEnergized
Performed by Davie Allan and the Arrows
Written by Davie Allan
Arrow Dynamic Music / BMI
Featured review
The most 80s superhero movie of the 00s?
Take the visuals of shows like M. A. S. K., the original TMNT, GI Joe, etc... Add in that Stan Lee sprinkle with a traumatic hero origin story (that he gets over super fast except when he can play for the sympathy vote ๐) but without the huge backstory, reboots and recasts of the X-Men and you get Condor.
Is it high art? Absolutely not. Is it an outstanding representation of the genre that will draw in fans from far and wide? Nope. But what it *is* is a fun, nostalgic, cartoon film that you can just switch off and watch. It's not trying to be something it's not.
And the fact that the main characters all seem to be Central/South American descent or Pacific Islanders was a nice touch. The last time I remember seeing that sort of representation in cartoons was Captain Planet or Mysterious Cities of Gold (which I haven't seen in years and I'm sure had sooo many problems if we look at it today...)
5/10 for the story as it's literally the stereotype of the hero creation arc. But it gets extra bonus points for the nostalgia (and because I have a huge crush on Wilmer Valderama! ๐)
Is it high art? Absolutely not. Is it an outstanding representation of the genre that will draw in fans from far and wide? Nope. But what it *is* is a fun, nostalgic, cartoon film that you can just switch off and watch. It's not trying to be something it's not.
And the fact that the main characters all seem to be Central/South American descent or Pacific Islanders was a nice touch. The last time I remember seeing that sort of representation in cartoons was Captain Planet or Mysterious Cities of Gold (which I haven't seen in years and I'm sure had sooo many problems if we look at it today...)
5/10 for the story as it's literally the stereotype of the hero creation arc. But it gets extra bonus points for the nostalgia (and because I have a huge crush on Wilmer Valderama! ๐)
helpfulโข00
- efan78
- Jan 19, 2024
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Stan Lee Presents: The Condor
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 14 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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