Hasil Selasa (Rabu WIB) Bristol City vs Cardiff 1-1 Birmingham vs N Forest 1-0 QPR vs Shef United 2-3 Coventry vs Portsmouth 1-2 Derby County vs Millwall 1-1.Derby menang adu penalti 5-3 utama.
Robotan | |
ロボタン | |
---|---|
Manga | |
Written by | Kenji Morita |
Magazine | Shōnen Gaho |
Original run | 1966 – 1968 |
Volumes | 2 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Hiroshi Ono |
Produced by | Tsuyoshi Hata (early episodes) Isamu Hagi (later episodes) |
Written by | Tsuyoshi Danjo Takashi Taka Yu Aku |
Music by | Yasushi Kokura |
Studio | Puppe Production A Production Sun Production Nakamura Production |
Original network | Fuji Television |
Original run | October 1st, 1966 – September 27th, 1968 |
Episodes | 104 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Kenji Kodama Hiro Takeuchi Shunji Oga Makoto Morikawa Wataru Mukaishima Kazuhiko Kobayashi Yukio Suzuki Tetsuo Yasumi |
Produced by | Toshio Matsui (Daiko) Shunzo Kato (Tokyo Movie Shinsha) Motoyoshi Tokunaga (Tokyo Movie Shinsha) Michihiko Suwa (Yomiuri Television) |
Written by | Noboru Shiroyama Narumitsu Taguchi Masaaki Sakurai Yoshio Urasawa |
Music by | Reijiro Koroku |
Studio | Telecom Animation Film |
Original network | Yomiuri Television |
Original run | January 6th, 1986 – September 20th, 1986 |
Episodes | 33 |
Robotan (ロボタン) is a Japanese anime and manga series created by Kenji Morita. The series revolves around household robot Robotan, who is created By Kan-chan and lives with an everyday Japanese family as a domestic servant and friend to the children. Like Doraemon, his good intentions don't always work out, with comic consequences. The original series was produced by Daiko Advertising. Production moved to Tokyo Movie Shinsha for the 20th-anniversary color remake New Robotan (1986) under director Masaharu Okuwaki.
- 2Media
- 3Characters
Plot[edit]
Robotan is a robot made by a school boy named Kan-chan, a nerd. He has special abilities like 'Robotan Copter', 'Robotan Punch' etc. His arch Rival is Botchi, a small kid who dislikes Robotan and makes several plans to destroy him or make him a slave, but Robotan destroys all his plans. He has also a little crush on his teacher, Umi. He is very fond of bananas which gives him power. His male mentor Uminoyamais also in love with Umi, at which Robotan is angered.
Media[edit]
Manga[edit]
Written and illustrated by Kenji Morita, the manga began serialization in the Shonen Gaho magazine in 1966. The manga was published simultaneously with the 1966 anime version after Morita was hired by Daiko Advertising to create a series similar to Obake no Q-Taro.[1]
Anime[edit]
1966 anime[edit]
The 1966 anime version of Robotan was produced by Daiko Advertising and the animation was outsourced to four studios, all located in Osaka (which was very uncommon for studios in Tokyo to do at the time). The studios providing the animation were Puppe Production, A Production, Sun Production, and Nakamura Production, all of which would take turns producing the episodes. All the stories were handled at Daiko Advertising, which would then be sent the four studios. The film would then be sent back to Daiko for editing and dubbing work.[2]
The series was aired on Fuji Television from October 4, 1966 to September 27, 1968 for 104 episodes. To this day, it's unknown how many episodes still survive. The films were thrown out by Daiko several years ago and ended up as collectors items which were sold under $100. In 2010, two 35mm black and white negatives with no soundtrack were sold on Yahoo Japan's auction service.[3]
1986 anime[edit]
The 1986 anime color remake was produced by Daiko who contracted Tokyo Movie Shinsha to handle the production of it. It aired on Yomiuri Television from January 6th to September 22nd, 1986 for 33 episodes.[4]
Characters[edit]
- Robotan voiced by Chika Sakamoto
- Kan-chan voiced by Eiko Yamada
- Bocchi voiced by Hiroko Maruyama
- Piiko voiced by Mayumi Tanaka
- Umi voiced by Rica Fukami
- Maririn voiced by Keiko Han
Opening themes[edit]
- I'm Robotan (ボクはロボタン)
- Robotan Samba (ロボタンサンバ)
Voiceovers[edit]
- Chika Sakamoto (Robotan)
- Eiko Yamada (Kan-chan)
- Hiroko Maruyama (Bocchi)
- Keiko Han (Maririn)
- Kenichi Ogata (Hyoroku Amenomori)
References[edit]
- ^Charles Brubaker (August 20, 2014). 'Robotan (1966)'. Cartoon Research. Retrieved September 13, 2014.
- ^Charles Brubaker (August 20, 2014). 'Robotan (1966)'. Cartoon Research. Retrieved September 13, 2014.
- ^Charles Brubaker (August 20, 2014). 'Robotan (1966)'. Cartoon Research. Retrieved September 13, 2014.
- ^Charles Brubaker (August 20, 2014). 'Robotan (1966)'. Cartoon Research. Retrieved September 13, 2014.
External links[edit]
- Robotan (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Robotan&oldid=852761155'
Reideen | |
REIDEEN(ライディーン) (Raidīn) | |
---|---|
Genre | Action, science fiction[1] |
Manga | |
Written by | Yoshitake Suzuki |
Illustrated by | Karasuma Tasuku |
Published by | Kadokawa Shoten |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Magazine | Shōnen Ace |
Original run | November 25, 2006 – July 26, 2007 |
Volumes | 2 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Mitsuru Hongo |
Written by | Masahiro Yokotani Mitsuru Hongo |
Music by | Yoshihiro Ike |
Studio | Production I.G. |
Licensed by | |
Original network | WOWOW |
Original run | March 3, 2007 – September 1, 2007 |
Episodes | 26 |
Reideen (REIDEEN(ライディーン), Raidīn) is a Japaneseanimatedtelevision seriesremake of the 1975 Super Robot anime Brave Raideen. It was produced by Production I.G and directed by Mitsuru Hongo. Which was originally broadcast on the satellite network WOWOW in 2007. Sentai Filmworks has licensed the anime for North American release.[2]
The anime series has been adapted into a manga.
Overview[edit]
![Sarjan husin asli Sarjan husin asli](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125857233/633538485.jpg)
Junki Saiga is a normal high school student with a gift in mathematics. His daily routine is disrupted when his family gets news that his father's remains have been discovered- a noted archaeologist and researcher who had gone missing while exploring a site many years before. Among his remains were notes and artifacts that needed to be identified by the family near a notable triangular mountain in Japan known as 'Japan's pyramid', a place suspected by some to be man-made.
A meteor containing a strange robotic life-form falls from the sky and begins to cause destruction, putting Junki in danger and causing a mysterious bracelet from his father's research to activate and merge him with an ancient robot buried within the pyramid- a robot the runes describe as Reideen. It is now up to Junki and guardian Reideen to fight against this unknown alien threat from the sky.
As the story progresses attacks come from multiple directions: the main aliens, who only want Reideen's power, and will then raze the Earth and move on; a faction within the Vigilance Corps (similar to Japan's Self Defense Force) that wishes to discredit and remove Reideen in favor of Human-built remote-controlled mecha; and Roxell, an alien with horns on his head who used a similar giant named Gadion on his homeworld, only to be defeated by the overseer aliens, and his planet destroyed. Some of these enemies want Reideen with or without Junki as its pilot/power source, while others just want Junki/Reideen out of the way.
Junki grows continually torn between doing what only he can do, in piloting Reideen against the giant beast machines sent to destroy cities and the landscape, and his enemies' attacks toward him while he does not receive any help from the Vigilance Corps nor his friends.
Characters[edit]
The main characters of Reideen From left to right: Terasaki, Hoshikawa, Maedasaki, Saiga Junki, Midorino, Shiori, Saiga Junki's little sister Kuraka and mother.
- Saiga Junki (才賀 淳貴)
- Voiced by: Masataka Azuma
- The protagonist of the story. Junki is tall for his age, and more mature than his classmates, but still has a hard time adjusting to the responsibility of being Reideen's pilot in his dual identity.
- Maedasaki Taro (前田崎 太郎)
- Voiced by: Shinichiro Miki
- A Lieutenant in the Vigilance Corps (aka JSDF), he is fascinated by Out of Place Artifacts, which leads him to Reideen and Junki. Maedasaki monitors and tracks Junki on behalf of the VC, but is genuinely concerned about the boy, and treats him as a person, not a tool. Maedasaki is also an audiophile, and employs Junki part-time after school in their undercover vacuum tube business, the better to keep Junki nearby.
- Kobayakawa Shiori (小早川 栞)
- Voiced by: Yuka Okada
- Junki's childhood friend at school who wants to become more, only to be upstaged by Midorino.
- Midorino Akira (碧乃 玲)
- Voiced by: Saeko Chiba
- A mysterious girl with green eyes. Her home was destroyed in Reideen's first battle, so she moved to Tokyo and just happened to join Junki's and Shiori's class.
- Terasaki Soji (寺崎 宗次)
- Voiced by: Keiji Fujiwara
- A no-nonsense soldier of the Vigilance Corps, with high marks in both hand-to-hand and marksmanship. Terasaki and Hoshikawa are both assigned with Maedasaki to watch over Junki as Reideen's pilot.
- Hoshikawa Hana (星川 花)
- Voiced by: Takako Honda
- Extremely tall for her gender, Hoshikawa is an esper, but not able to completely control her powers of telekinesis, teleportation (of small objects), object reading, and advanced intuition. She relies more on her combat expertise than her powers.
Reideen's Weapons/Equipment[edit]
The giant Reideen appears as a warrior with a hooded head and feather motif. In reality the giant can transform large pieces of itself into other objects to suit his purpose. The following is a list of weapons/equipment wielded by Reideen:
- God Arrow - Reideen can materialize a bow and arrow to shoot enemies.
- God Wand - A magical staff used to find camouflaged colossal beast machines, or split the God Arrow into multiple blasts at target(s).
- God Sword - Used with Junki's boku sword training to destroy the colossal beast machines.
- God Bird - Allows Reideen the ability to fly. A bird head unfolds from Reideen's back, while the arms and legs change to expose ramjet-like engines and streamline the rest of the body. Its bird form can be hardened with a silver coating to pierce through a colossal beast machine's armour. The bird form can fly underwater, but not maneuver well.
- God Marine - A vehicle which allows Reideen to move swiftly underwater, as well as fly.
- God Voice - A pulse of rings which go in every direction; capable of destroying and capturing targets. Also capable of creating a defensive barrier whilst underwater.
- God Wind - An attack which Reideen's front armor glows fiery red; pierces through targets.
- Flash Drive - Allows Reideen to move at a lightning quick speed that gives the illusion of teleportation.
- God Blade - The ultimate sword, a gigantic blade around the size of the moon itself.
Anime[edit]
Sentai Filmworks licensed the series in 2014 and released a subtitled DVD set with the first thirteen episodes on December 16, 2014.[3][4]
# | Title | Original airdate |
---|---|---|
01 | 'Rebirth of a Legend' 'Yomigaeru densetsu' (蘇る伝説) | March 3, 2007 |
02 | 'The Legendary Warrior' 'Densetsu no yūsha' (伝説の勇者) | March 10, 2007 |
03 | 'The Invisible Shadow' 'Mienai kage' (見えない影) | March 17, 2007 |
04 | 'Fighting the Shadow' 'Kage to no tatakai' (影との戦い) | March 24, 2007 |
05 | 'The White Herons Gather' 'Shirasagi atsumaru' (白鷺集まる) | March 31, 2007 |
06 | 'The Bird Which Becomes God' 'Kaminaru tori' (神なる鳥) | April 7, 2007 |
07 | 'Fresh Wind' 'Aratanaru kaze' (新たなる風) | April 14, 2007 |
08 | 'Gale Runs Wild' 'Hayate bōsō' (疾風暴走) | April 21, 2007 |
09 | 'The Person Who Invokes Darkness' 'Yami o yobu mono' (闇を呼ぶ者) | April 28, 2007 |
10 | 'Tear It Up! The Darkness' 'Kirisake! yami o' (切り裂け!闇を) | May 12, 2007 |
11 | 'Gadion' 'Gadion' (ガディオン) | May 19, 2007 |
12 | 'Escape from Outer Space' 'Uchuu Kara no Dasshutsu' (宇宙からの脱出) | May 26, 2007 |
13 | 'Festival' 'Matsuri' (祭) | June 2, 2007 |
14 | 'Deep Sea Challenge' 'Shinkai Kara Chousen' (深海から挑戦) | June 9, 2007 |
15 | 'The Sea's Sleeping Legend' 'Umi ni nemuru densetsu' (海に眠る伝説) | June 16, 2007 |
16 | 'Skies of Madness' 'Kurutta sora' (狂った空) | June 23, 2007 |
17 | 'Assault Within a Storm' 'Arashi no naka no shuugeki' (嵐の中の襲撃) | June 30, 2007 |
18 | 'The Scent of Farewell' 'Sayonara no nioi' (さよならの匂い) | July 7, 2007 |
19 | 'Undesired Power' 'Nazomanu Chikara' (望まぬ力) | July 14, 2007 |
20 | 'Stopped Time' 'Tomatta jikan' (止まった時間) | July 21, 2007 |
21 | 'Strategy Begins to Move' 'Ugokidashita bouryaku' (動き出した謀略) | July 28, 2007 |
22 | 'Awaken and Fight' 'Mezame yo, soshite tatakae' (目覚めよ、そして戦え) | August 4, 2007 |
23 | 'Roxell, Again' 'Rokuseru, futatabi' (ロクセル、再び) | August 11, 2007 |
24 | 'Gadion Stands' 'Gadion, tatsu' (ガディオン、立つ) | August 18, 2007 |
25 | 'Reideen Recaptures' 'Reideen, dakkan' (ライディーン、奪還) | August 25, 2007 |
26 | 'Decisive Battle' 'Kessen' (決戦) | September 1, 2007 |
Music[edit]
- Opening theme
- 'manacles' by Tomiko Van
- Ending theme
- 'Kakeashi no Ikizama' (駆け足の生き様) by Ataru Nakamura
Trivia[edit]
In episode 7 at time 16:30, a scene from the opening sequence of the anime Cromartie High School is recreated with a waist-high view of Junki and the Analysis Section gang strutting in formation down a hallway.
References[edit]
- ^'Reideen Collection 1 DVD'. Right Stuf Inc. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
- ^'Sentai Filmworks Licenses Mecha Action Anime Reideen'. Anime News Network. 2014-08-15.
- ^Beveridge, Chris (August 15, 2014). 'Sentai Filmworks Acquires 'Reideen' Anime License'. Fandom Post.
- ^Beveridge, Chris (January 14, 2015). 'Reideen Collection 1 Anime DVD Review'. Fandom Post.
External links[edit]
- Official Reideen website/ Official trailer(in Japanese)
- Reideen (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Reideen&oldid=933152007'