Starzinger
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| Starzinger | |
|---|---|
| SF西遊記 スタージンガー (Esu Efu Saiyuki Sutājingā) |
|
| Genre | Science Fiction |
| TV anime | |
| Director | Yugo Serikawa |
| Studio | Toei Animation |
| Network | |
| Original run | April 2, 1978 – August 24, 1979 |
| Episodes | 73 |
| Animated film | |
| Director | Yugo Serikawa |
| Studio | Toei Animation |
| Released | March 17, 1979 |
| Runtime | - |
| Manga | |
| Author | Leiji Matsumoto |
| Publisher | |
| Original run | ? – ? |
| Volumes | 3 |
Science Fiction Saiyuki Starzinger (SF西遊記スタージンガー Esu Efu Saiyuki Sutājingā?) was an anime series aired in Japan from 1978 to 1979. It translates literally to "Science Fiction Journey to the West Starzinger". In the US it is referred to as Spaceketeers and is part of Jim Terry's Force Five series. In the UK, it is referred to as Sci-Bots.
Contents |
[edit] Story
The story revolves around the Princess of the Moon, Aurora and her three cyborg companions (Kugo, Djorgo, Haka) who must travel to the Great King planet and restore the Galaxy Energy. The universe is becoming more and more unbalanced as the Queen of the great Planet grows older. Their adventure includes battling the starmen who are transformed from the unbalanced minerals and planets.
[edit] Concept
Starzinger is essentially a Sci-fi space opera retelling of the Journey to the West from the Ming Dynasty. The Sci-fi twists were designed by Leiji Matsumoto based on the Terebi Magazine manga [1].
[edit] Staff
Director: Yugo Seirkawa, Kozo Morishita, Kazumi Fukushima
Creator: Leiji Matsumoto
Screenwriter: Tatsuo Tamura, Michiru Umadori, Sukehiro Tomita
Design: Masaki Suda
Animator: Masaki Suda, Satoshi Kamimiya
Music: Shunsuke Kikuchi
[edit] Characters
| Japanese Name | English Name | Spanish Name | Voiced by | Power | Vehicle | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Princess Aurora (オーロラ姫 Orora Hime?) | Aurora | Princesa Aurora | Kazuko Sugiyama | Telepathy and psychic abilities, can channel Galaxy energy | The only human among the main four characters. She is the last of the Moon people. Based on Xuanzang. | |
| Jan Kugo (ジャン・クーゴ?) | Jesse Dart | Galáctico | Hiroya Ishimaru | Wield Astro-lance that change size, shoot laser | Starcrow | The monkey demon. Has bad temper. Based on Sun Wukong. |
| Sir Djorgo (サー・ジョーゴ Sa Jogo?) | Arimos | Giorgio | Kei Tomiyama | Wield Laser-trident with freeze abilities | Starcopper/Sea Wasp | The water demon. The most intelligent of the three. When in doubt he asks his portable computer. Based on Sha Wujing. |
| Don Haka (ドン・ハッカ?) | Porkos | Glotín | Kousei Tomita | Swing mace that turns into a flail, shoots rocket from his feet. | Starbood/Space Hog | The Pig-demon, cheerful, hungry and the comedian. Based on Zhu Bajie. |
| Prof. Kitty | Empress | Eiko Masuyama | Based on Guanyin | |||
| Assistant Prof.Dodge | Prof.Schnitzel | Jouji Yanami | An intelligent Professor, He made Kugo into the cyborg he is | |||
| Prince Gaima | Keiichi Noda | |||||
| Gingin Man | Kenichi Ogata | |||||
| Beramis | Noriko Ohara | |||||
| Captain | Satomi Majima | |||||
| King (キングギューマ kinku gyuma?) | Takashi Tanaka | Based on Bull Demon King. | ||||
| Queen | Yumi Nakatani, Nana Yamaguchi |
[edit] Adaptations
The movie was aired in March 1979 by reusing footages from the first segment of the series. It was more or less a summary.
The last 9 episode of the actual series was rebranded as "SF Saiyuki Starzinger II", though when shown outside Japan it is treated as one continuous series. It was never intended to be anything more than remarketing the last few episodes, since it was aired immediately after the first 64 episodes were shown in June 1979. The 65th episode began instantly in July 1979 with all the galactic energy restored in the storyline.
[edit] Internationalization
Starzinger was aired in early 1980s in Latin America with the name of "El Galáctico", as part of the four-series show "El Festival de los Robots" which translate to "Festival of Robots". The other shows were "Steel Jeeg", "Gaiking", and "Magne Robo Gakeen".
In North America, it was aired as "Spaceketeers" as part of the package show Force Five. As the "Journey to the West story" is not well known in the region, the characters were renamed to reference the Three Musketeers. To also fit into the Force Five time slot, the show had to be edit-squeezed into 26 episodes. The US version puts them on a mission to the Dekos Star System which contained evil powers changing peaceful creatures to evil mutants. It should be noted that the Force Five version not only just produced 26 episodes, but this English Version of the series never reached their conclusion.
24 episodes of the original 73, was also given out in Scandinavia (mainly in Sweden) under the original name Starzinger.
List of what episodes were cut out can be found at: Warfists Starzinger site in the episode section
[edit] Screenshots
[edit] Trivia
- It was aired every week Sunday 7:00pm to 7:30pm.
[edit] References
- ^ Clements, Jonathan. McCarthy Helen. [2006] (2006). The Anime Encyclopedia: Revised & Expanded Edition. Berkeley, CA: Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 978-1-933330-10-5
[edit] External links
- Official Page of Starzinger I
- Starzinger fansite
- Starzinger Fanclub
- Review of Sci-bots UK version of Spaceketeers

