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Title: Voltron


Purple Ranger 14 - August 23, 2005 04:44 PM (GMT)
Discuss the popular cartoon that was like an early, animated version of Power Rangers.


Pharrell Williams Revisits The '80s With 'Voltron' Movie
Neptunes member will write music for the feature and produce its soundtrack.
by Gil Kaufman
You already know Pharrell Williams is obsessed with the sounds of the '80s.
Now the Neptunes producer is getting a chance to put his beats where his passion is as the producer of the soundtrack to the big-screen version of the 1980s giant-robot series "Voltron."
Williams, an executive producer on the film, will also score "Voltron: Defender of the Universe," according to The Hollywood Reporter. The movie is being produced by Mark Gordon ("The Day After Tomorrow," "Saving Private Ryan"), based on a story about five maverick pilots who have to travel to the planet Arus to learn how to operate the massive Voltron, which is made up of five smaller robots. The giant robot is Earth's last hope in the fight against the Drule Empire.
"Voltron" is not the only '80s robot flick on the roster. Steven Spielberg is executive producing a live-action version of "Transformers," which will be directed by Michael Bay ("The Island," "Armageddon"). That movie is slated for release on July 4, 2007.
"Voltron" and "Transformers" animated series both debuted in 1984, each spawning a huge toy phenomenon.

Purple Ranger 14 - August 23, 2005 04:45 PM (GMT)
Voltron Zooms To Theaters
Producer Mark Gordon (The Day After Tomorrow) is developing a big-budget feature based on Voltron: Defender of the Universe, a 1980s Japanese animated series about a team of pilots whose individual ships combine to form a giant robot, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
The film will follow the team as they travel to the planet Arus to learn how to operate Voltron, the last hope against the evil Drule Empire that has subjugated Earth and taken control of the universe, the trade paper reported. The film will be produced by New Line Cinema's Mark Costa and Ford Oelman, who secured the rights from Voltron owner World Events. Pharrell Williams, a partner in the producing duo the Neptunes, will score the film and produce the soundtrack.
The Voltron series debuted in 1984, about the same time as Hasbro's Transformers toy line, igniting a morphing robot phenomenon. Voltron has generated $750 million in worldwide licensing and nearly $200 million in toys and merchandising since 1984, the trade paper reported. A Transformers film is also in development at DreamWorks.

Forte.exe - August 24, 2005 11:07 PM (GMT)
voltron movie...isnt that with the vehicle and lion teams? together in the movie?

Purple Ranger 14 - August 25, 2005 07:50 PM (GMT)
I think they are shooting for Live Action.

Forte.exe - August 30, 2005 08:42 AM (GMT)
... it's gonna be like a megazord :D

Purple Ranger 14 - August 30, 2005 06:41 PM (GMT)
Cool.

carebearmel151 - September 10, 2005 11:34 PM (GMT)
OMG!

I can't believe someone actually knows this show.

We have like old videotapes FULL of these cartoons because me and my brother watched them when we were little.

Purple Ranger 14 - September 16, 2005 05:52 PM (GMT)
I used to watch other cartoons besides :Ghostbusters back in the 80s.

Purple Ranger 14 - December 4, 2006 12:14 AM (GMT)
Voltron: Defender of the Universe
Five space explorers band together into a giant robot wielding an invincible weapon in what was 1984's most-watched children's show
Voltron: Defender of the Universe
Collection One: Blue Lion (eps. #1-15)
Anime Works
375 mins.
MSRP: $39.95 English-only DVD
By Tasha Robinson
Given the predictable pattern Voltron: Defender of the Universe fell into once it got up and running, it's easy to forget how innovative the first few episodes were, at least for early-'80s animation. In the first episode, the stars don't even appear onscreen throughout several minutes of introductory conversation, and the titular giant robot appears only in flashbacks, as the story begins a leisurely, expansive arc.
There's an awful lot to like in these opening Voltron episodes ...
Journeying to the friendly planet Arus, a five-man team of "space explorers" arrives just in time to see Arus' cities being razed by the "space pirate" King Zarkon of Planet Doom. Captured by Zarkon and marked for the gladiator pits, the explorers escape, fight their way to a ship, leave Doom and crash on Arus, where they go looking for Voltron, a legendary giant robot "loved by all good people, and feared by evil."
Instead, they find a dilapidated castle inhabited by a weary diplomat, a beautiful princess and a family of pastel-furred "space mice." And they learn the whereabouts of five robot lions that, with the proper keys, can merge to form Voltron. After several trials, they revive the robot and begin thwarting Zarkon's efforts to destroy Arus and the Voltron legacy. In Zarkon's most successful ploy, his pet witch Haggar journeys to Arus and manages to all but kill one of the original five space explorers, but the princess stands in for him, piloting his robot lion and becoming one of the Voltron Force.
From there, the series hits a more predictable episodic pattern. Haggar comes up with a plan to destroy Voltron or the pilots, often by sending someone to infiltrate the castle or set a trap. Ultimately, these plans almost always end with the activation of a giant menacing "ro-beast." If time permits, the pilots attack ineffectively in their lion-ships, then merge their craft into the giant robot Voltron and attack with one or more of their many ineffective weapons. Finally, they whip out their one invincible weapon and defeat their enemy, by speaking the catch phrase that defined kids' programming back in 1984: "Form blazing sword!"
It's all about the nostalgia
Voltron: Defender of the Universe wasn't Japan's first transforming-robot cartoon by a long shot, but it was the first such cartoon to make a splash in America; introduced to the U.S. via Saturday-morning TV in 1984, it rapidly became the most popular show in children's programming, and a wave of ancillary merchandise followed. So did other animated imports, including the "Vehicle Voltron" series, which featured another team of space pilots whose vehicles merged to form a giant robot. For a generation of anime addicts and future animators, Voltron was Fandom Ground Zero, the first glimpse they had into a world of episodic animation that was far richer and more sophisticated than anything American kids' cartoons were trying at the time.
Like so many nostalgia-courting products, Voltron probably plays better in the memory than it does on DVD. The animation is flat, unsophisticated and heavily recycled from one episode to the next. The American voice-over actors (including Peter Cullen, the voice of Optimus Prime on The Transformers and Venger on Dungeons & Dragons) are flat, strident and unnuanced. The whole program shows a notable disregard for continuity, physics and story logic. And the dialogue can be painfully repetitive, especially during the period before Voltron reactivates, during which time the characters feel compelled to describe him often, using the same catch phrases over and over.
But still ... there's an awful lot to like in these opening Voltron episodes, from the slow-burn plot arc to the careful establishment of five iconic characters: Keith (the dashing, blandly perfect leader), Hunk (the big, slowish but good-hearted one), Lance (the "edgy" smartass), Pidge (the brains-over-brawn kid) and Princess Allura (the obligatory girl, and often the team's weakest link, in emotions and skills alike). These five characters became prototypes, often imitated and often shorthanded, in part because they were established so well here, with episodes focusing on each of them in turn. The setting was similarly well established; one of the things Voltron did best was build an entire richly detailed universe, one that remains memorable to this day, at least for those who were around when the magic first happened.
http://www.scifi.com/sfw/anime/sfw13989.html

Wolf Warrior - May 17, 2007 03:04 AM (GMT)
I have one Dvd box set that cotained episodes based on Blue Lion.

Purple Ranger 14 - June 25, 2007 03:46 PM (GMT)
And the others have the other lions. WE KNOW THAT!!!!!!!

Wolf Warrior - December 31, 2007 04:47 AM (GMT)
I know, It is common fan knowledge.

Wolf Warrior - November 6, 2008 02:35 AM (GMT)
Is voltron a japanese tokusatsu too ?

Purple Ranger 14 - November 11, 2008 01:13 AM (GMT)
Anime.

Wolf Warrior - November 11, 2008 03:54 AM (GMT)
Okay. But it reminds me too much of power rangers,

Purple Ranger 14 - December 6, 2010 04:48 AM (GMT)
Moving this thread to Superheroes.




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