Return of Ultraman

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The Return of Ultraman
The Return of Ultraman title card
Format Tokusatsu
Created by Tsuburaya Productions
Starring Jiro Dan
Jun Negami
Country of origin Japan
No. of episodes 51
Production
Running time 30 mins
Broadcast
Original channel Tokyo Broadcasting System
Picture format 480i (SDTV),

720p

Original run April 21, 1971March 31, 1972

Return of Ultraman (帰ってきたウルトラマン Kaettekita Urutoraman?, roughly meaning "Ultraman Has Returned") is a tokusatsu SF/kaiju/superhero TV series, and is the 4th Ultra Series.

Eiji Tsuburaya originally intended for the Ultra Series to end with the 1967 series Ultraseven, but Ultraman was too famous a character to keep down. After Eiji's passing in 1970, his son Hajime Tsuburaya (who took over Tsuburaya Productions until his death in 1973) revived the Ultra Series with Return of Ultraman.

Featured in this show is a new Ultraman named "New Ultraman" (新ウルトラマン Shin Urutoraman?), or just "Kaettekita Ultraman" (帰ってきたウルトラマン?), like the show's title. In the late 70s-early 80s, however, he was renamed "Ultraman Jack" (ウルトラマンジャック Urutoraman Jakku?) for licensing, after Tsuburaya and Bandai (which had just bought the Ultraman toy license in Japan) held a contest for children to pick a new name for this Ultraman. Although he is called "Ultraman Jack" for licensing in and out of Japan, he is still sometimes referred to as "New Ultraman"/"Kaettekita Ultraman", especially by some fans (and also in some official sources).

Also of note is that this is quite possibly one of the few Ultraman/Ultras that requires no tool (like the Beta Capsule) to transform with. Hideki Gô, the human host for New Ultraman, just raises his hands to transform at will when New Ultraman signals him to do so (or sometimes against his will in a very desperate situation!).

For the first time, the late Ishiro Honda, best known for his work on the Godzilla movies and other classic Toho tokusatsu, works on the Ultra Series, and has directed some of the episodes of this series, including the first episode (titled "All Monsters Attack" (怪獣総進撃 Kaijū Sōshingeki?), which is the same as the Japanese title for the film All Monsters Attack).

Contents

[edit] Story

This series is a follow up to the original Ultraman and Ultraseven. The first episode begins with a fight between two giant monsters Takkong and Zazahn in Tokyo. Amid the monster destruction, young race-car driver Hideki Goh is killed while trying to rescue a little boy and a dog from the falling rubble. His valiant sacrifice is noted by everyone, even his friends and the new defence force MAT (Monster Attack Team), but an unseen being also takes notice. Looking over him is "New Ultraman (Ultraman Jack)", who is so touched by his heroics that he decides to bring him back to life by combining his own life-force with Hideki's, thus bringing him back to life (just like the original Ultraman did to Shin Hayata), much to everyone's astonishment. MAT asks him to join the team, which he does, especially since, in this frightening new "Age of Monsters", the earth will need a saviour.

In times of crisis, Hideki Goh will raise his right arm, and by his force of will, he transforms into Ultraman Jack to fight the monsters.

Ultraman Jack is also the only Ultraman to suffer many types of humiliation, from being ripped off his Color Timer to decapitation.

[edit] Later Events

In 1986, Ultraman Jack and the Ultra Brothers chase Yapool to Earth, in which they conceal the monster under the ocean near Kobe city. In progress, the Ultra Brothers lose their powers and thus forced to live as human beings. Hideki Goh, in particular, returns to car-racing industry and works as a racing instructor. He appears to own a racing academy.

20 years later, in 2006, Goh and the other brothers transform as Ultramen for the first time in order to help Ultraman Mebius. Eventually, the Ultra Brothers regain their powers and thus, return to normal thanks to Zoffy and Ultraman Taro.

[edit] Ultraman Jack Statistics

  • Height
    40 meters
  • Weight
    35,000 tons
  • Human Form
    Hideki Goh
  • Transformation Item
    None, using Force of Will

[edit] Ultraman Jack's Skill

  • Specium Ray
    Plus Style, similliar to original Ultraman Specium Ray
  • Ultra Slash
    Similliar to Ultraman's Ultra Saw Disc
  • Ultra Bracelet
    A multipurpose weapon that could transform into many weapon according to Jack's will. Here is the list of Ultra Bracelet's transformed weapons:
    • Ultra Spark
    • Ultra Lance
    • Ultra Defender
    • Ultra Cross
  • Cinerama Shot
    Jack's L-style weapon.
  • Fog Beam

[edit] Highlights

  • Episode 18
    "Enter Ultraseven." Ultraseven made a guest appearance. He and the original Ultraman made appearances in other episodes, especially Episode 38, "When the Ultra Star Shines." In that episode, both Susumu Kurobe and Koji Moritsugu reprise their roles as Shin Hayata and Dan Moroboshi (the alter-egos of Ultraman and Ultraseven, respectively). (For more on "When the Ultra Star Shines," skip two notes down.)
  • Episode 34
    "The Forgiven Life", (about a mad scientist who engineered a rampaging giant lizard/plant monster) was written by then 16-year old Shinichiro Kobayashi, who later wrote a similar story that became the basis for Godzilla vs. Biollante (1989), upon his story winning First Place in Toho's Godzilla Story Finals Contest (a big fan event at the time). Furthermore, the hit rock ballad "Flower, Sun, Rain" (Hana, Taiyô, Ame), by famed Japanese rock band Pyg, was played in the episode's climax.
  • Episodes 37 and 38
    ("Ultraman Dies at Sunset" and "When the Ultra Star Shines," respectively), a two-parter, are considered among the best and most classic episodes in this series, as well as the entire Ultra Series, although some Japanese fans also considered this two-parter to be the "final episodes" of Return of Ultraman, which has thus jumped the shark. This story arc features one the more intelligent alien foes, Knuckle-seijin, who traps Ultraman Jack to his untimely "death" at the hands of his bodyguard monster, Black King. As he is about to be executed, Ultraman and Ultraseven appear to rescue him. Furthermore, regular characters Ken Sakata and his sister Aki are both killed in this episode.

[edit] See also