![]() ![]() We highly recommend it in case you have a fondness for the character, or liked the 1994 film. ![]() It is unclear whether a third season will be produced anytime soon and while you wait for news on the matter, there are still two whole seasons in case you have not caught up with the Netflix show yet. Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters Trailer That is still speculation based on what seems the logical next step for Hasbro, though, and neither Hasbro nor Netflix has officially announced anything about a renewal for the show, which leaves a release date for season 3 TBD. There does not seem to be much buzz, but we would yet expect Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters season 3 to be out at least by Q4 2020. However, the show has done alright commercially, and now it has a partnership with IDW Publishing involving a comic-book tie-in – so it seems that Stretch Armstrong is here to stay. Originally ordered as a two-season Netflix gig, Stretch Armstrong had drawn only middling critical consensus since its premiere on November 17, 2017. Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters season 2 premiered on September 7, 2018. Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters Season 3: Release Date: When will it premiere? In Hasbro’s new version of the origin story, the show’s ‘Charter City’ gets its own elite squad of supercops known as ‘Flex Fighters’ (a name that is ridiculous and arbitrary, but completely serviceable) when a millionaire philanthropist, Jonathan Rook, enlists Jake Armstrong (Stretch), Nathan Park (Wingspan), and Ricardo Perez (Omni-mass), who all recently obtained their superpowers from a freak accident involving the mystery substance, ‘Flexarium’. As we have stated before, Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters is all about the ‘flex fighters’ bit, with new sidekick characters aplenty. With Netflix’s shadow to lead it on, the new Stretch Armstrong utilizes this by completely reinventing the character, the universe, and its lore from scratch. Hasbro Studio’s home-brewed Stretch Armstrong, above all, presents a great opportunity for the producers to capitalize upon: as a franchised face which had no need to have a consistent backstory in the past, Stretch Armstrong is the perfect blank slate every license-owner would like their IP to be. Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters Plot: What is it about? Most of the cast are expected to return for season 3. Will Wheaton plays Stretch Monster, the chief antagonist the monster form is voiced by Miguel Ferrer (season 1) and David Kaye (season 2). Meanwhile, the rogue gallery includes Jon Heder’s Multi-Farious and Grey Griffin’s dual role as the Freak Sisters. Other than Scott’s Stretch and Yeun’s Wingspan, the main cast includes Kate Mulgrew’s Dr C, Nazneen Contractor’s Blindstrike, and Felicia Day’s Erika. The titular hero Stretch is played by Scott Menville, known for his Robin in WB’s Teen Titans. Thankfully, Netflix’s rendition of Stretch Armstrong is more ‘Stretch Armstrong and friends’, and all of the side-characters get equal screentime as the forerunning protagonist (if not more), allowing for the strong VA cast to really shine. The rest of the cast, including the lead role, are mostly people famous in the VA industry. The biggest face-value (in the literal sense) could be drawn from Wingspan in Netflix’s show, as it is played by Steven Yeun, popular as the face of Glenn in AMC’s The Walking Dead. STRETCH ARMSTRONG TVBut anyhow, the show does have a Netflix-worthy class to boast of, with names well-known and familiar in the current animated (or even non-animated) TV sphere. ![]() As an above-average show at best, it did not have to put much stress on its voice acting, being carried on the sheer Hasbro franchise value as it were. Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters Cast: Who is in it?īy virtue of having the label of Netflix, the show had a reasonably high budget. On television though, the recent Netflix adaptation is all that Stretch Armstrong has got going for it. STRETCH ARMSTRONG LICENSEWaters run deep for various media tie-ins with the Stretch Armstrong license – including a 1994 Disney film and another 2008 film (though the latter was cancelled mid-production). Originally a stretchable gelly action-figure introduced in the mid-’70s, it was almost a cultural relic of the past excavated by Hasbro when they started restocking this design back in 2016. ‘Stretch Armstrong’ is exactly the same kind of example, although the other way around. Case in point: the unnamed hero on the wrappers of Boomer, a superhero reduced to a mascot of a chewing gum product. The idea of superheroes itself today is a much more upbeat offshoot from a doom-and-gloom vigilante. Which brings us to the other axis: branding. Not every superhero production need be MCU/Disney-plus multiverses. ![]()
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