Brave Raideen

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Yūsha Raidīn
勇者ライディーン
(Brave Reideen)
Genre Mecha
TV anime
Directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino, Tadao Nagahama
Studio Sunrise, Tohokushinsha
Network TV Asahi
Original run 4 April 197526 March 1976
No. of episodes 50

Brave Reideen (勇者ライディーン - Yūsha Raidīn) is a Super Robot anime series. Produced by Tohokushinsha, Asahi News Agency and Sunrise, it aired on NET (now TV Asahi) from 4 April 1975 to 26 March 1976, with a total of 50 episodes. It has also been loosely translated to Heroic Rydeen.


Contents

[edit] Story

After a slumber of 12 millennia, the Demon Empire returns to seize control of the Earth. Reideen, the giant robot-like protector of the lost continent of Mu, senses the evil presence and awakens within its golden pyramid, revealing to young Japanese boy Akira Hibiki that he is the one descendant of the ancient Mu people who must help Reideen save Earth.

He was assisted by his friends, token girl Mari Sakurano (daughter of a scientist fighting the Demon Empire) and several members of his high school soccer team.

[edit] Production notes

  • The Brave Reideen series is renowned in Japan as the first to include a giant machine of mysterious and mystical origins. Reideen is in fact portrayed as a sentient being. Also, the inclusion of the Mu myth would be imitated in other anime, such as Super Atragon, and more recently in RahXephon. It was also the first anime mecha work of anime director and writer Yoshiyuki Tomino, better known as the creator of Gundam. The latter half was directed by Tadao Nagahama, and may be seen as a predecessor to his famous Romantic Trilogy, consisting of Combattler V, Voltes V and Daimos.
  • This series was the second collaboration between writer/director Yoshiyuki Tomino and artist Yasuhiko Yoshikazu. The first work to feature both men was Wandering Sun (Sasurai no Taiyō) (1971). The two would later team up again for both Mobile Suit Gundam and Gundam F-91.
  • The series is also considered the first super robot anime to reach a large US audience directly. It was shown on the New York Japanese community channel 47 with subtitles produced by Hawaii's Kiku TV. [1]. The series first appeared on US television in June 1976, Sunday nights at 8:00 P.M. on San Francisco, CA's KEMO TV-20. Later in 1976, the series began running on KMUV TV-31 in Sacramento, CA (night and timeslot to be confirmed). The show was also distributed to Japanese-American television stations in Los Angeles and Chicago, and was sponsored by Honolulu-based Marukai Trading Company, who distributed Japanese-produced merchandise to local retailers in localities airing Reideen - according to author August Ragone.
  • In the 1990's the series was remade as Reideen the Superior (超者ライディーン; Chōja Raidīn), directed by Toshifumi Kawase.
  • According to RahXephon director Yutaka Izubuchi, the similarity of designs and powers of the title robots and the basic plots of RahXephon and Reideen are intentional.[2][3]

[edit] Remake

Brave Reideen's remake, Reideen, began airing on March 3rd, 2007.

[edit] Staff

Chief Director for Episode 1-26: Yoshiyuki Tomino

Director for Episode 27-50: Tadao Nagahama

Storyboard: Yoshiyuki Tomino

Original creator: Yoshitake Suzuki

Character Design: Yoshikazu Yasuhiko

Animation director: Yoshikazu Yasuhiko

[edit] Merchandise

The original toy figures of Reideen (renamed "Raydeen") were introduced to the U.S. market as part of the Shogun Warriors during late 1970s under the Mattel brand. Raydeen was one of the robots featured in the licensed comic book based on the toys.

[edit] Remakes

Brave Reideen has been re-created several times.

  • Reideen the Superior (Chōja Reideen) : A remake by Sunrise that aired October 2, 1996June 25, 1997.
  • REIDEEN: A remake from Production I.G. aired in 2007.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Clements, Jonatha. McCarthy Helen. [2006] (2006). The Anime Encyclopedia: Revised & Expanded Edition. Berkeley, CA: Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 978-1-933330-10-5
  2. ^ Broestl, Sean (2006). Anime Expo 2006 - Yutaka Izubuchi Focus Panel. Anime News Network. Retrieved on 11 July, 2006.
  3. ^ Wong, Amos (February 2003). "Interview with Yutaka Izubuchi". Newtype USA 2 (2): 14-15. 

[edit] External links

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