Ben 10 (TV series)

Ben 10

Logo
Format Animated Series, Science fiction, Action, Adventure
Created by Duncan Rouleau
Joe Casey
Joe Kelly
Steven T. Seagle
Voices of Tara Strong
Paul Eiding
Meagan Smith
Steven Jay Blum
Dee Bradley Baker
Jim Ward
Richard Steven Horvitz
Richard McGonagle
Fred Tatasciore
Dwight Schultz
Charlie Schlatter
Tom Kane
Richard Green
Michael Dorn
Rob Paulsen
Theme music composer Andy Sturmer
Opening theme "Ben 10"
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 4
No. of episodes 52 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Sam Register
Brian A. Miller
Jennifer Pelphrey
Producer(s) Donna Smith
Editor(s) Thomas Pugsley
Greg Klein
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) Cartoon Network Studios
Broadcast
Original channel Cartoon Network
Picture format SDTV 480i (2005-2009)
HDTV 720p (2009–present)
Original run December 27, 2005 (2005-12-27) – April 15, 2008 (2008-04-15)
Chronology
Followed by Ben 10: Alien Force
External links
Website

Ben 10 is an American animated series created by "Man of Action" (a group consisting of Duncan Rouleau, Joe Casey, Joe Kelly, and Steven T. Seagle), and produced by Cartoon Network Studios. The series is about a boy who gets a watch-like alien device called the "Omnitrix" (the prefix omni- means all). Attached to his wrist, this allows him to transform into various alien creatures.

It is the first series in the Ben 10 franchise. The pilot episode aired on December 27, 2005, as part of a sneak peek of Cartoon Network's Saturday morning lineup. The second episode was shown as a special on Cartoon Network's Fridays on January 13, 2006. The final regular episode aired on April 15, 2008. The theme song for the series was written by Andy Sturmer and sung by Moxy.[1] In April 2008, Ben 10 was succeeded by Ben 10: Alien Force, which itself was succeeded in April 2010 by Ben 10: Ultimate Alien.

Contents

Plot

When 10-year-old Ben Tennyson, his cousin Gwen, and their grandfather Max are on their summer camping trip, Ben finds an alien pod on the ground. When he examines it he finds a mysterious watch-like device called the Omnitrix. The device permanently attaches itself to his wrist giving him the ability to transform into a variety of alien life-forms each with its own unique powers. Ben soon realizes that he has a responsibility to use his abilities to help others. Along with Gwen and Grandpa Max, Ben embarks on a summer-long adventure to fight evil both extraterrestrial and terrestrial.

Episodes

Main characters

There are four primary characters in addition to the many aliens that Ben can shift into as well as enemies.

Main villains

The Omnitrix

The Omnitrix was originally created by a Galvan (Grey Matter's species) named Azmuth. The Omnitrix was intended to allow beings to experience life as other species in order to bring understanding and foster peace in the universe.

In the first form that Ben found, the Omnitrix looked like a wristwatch, primarily black and gray in color, with a gray (or black) dial in the middle (like a watch face) and had a green hourglass shape on it (actually the intergalactic "peace" symbol, also on Plumber's Badges and Azmuth's home world). However, many beings, like Vilgax, have seen the Omnitrix's abilities as something that could be used as a powerful weapon.

But according to Xylene, the Omnitrix was originally intended for Max, but since she was in battle she sent it to the forest by mistake. When Ben found it his DNA was close enough to Max's that it mistook him for Max and locked itself on his wrist.

Active mode

The default mode for the Omnitrix which means it can be used and that it has recharged. Actual usage time is unknown (between ten and twenty minutes, most commonly ten), and can time out at inopportune moments; it seems to time out faster the more it's taxed by activities such as fighting. However, if regular transformation is tampered with, Ben can't turn back (Ditto, for example, isn't allowed to revert when Ben's Ditto clones were not all merged together, nor does it allow Ben to transform multiple times).

The Omnitrix also possesses a Master Control, activated by inserting a certain code into the Omnitrix. Once the Master Control is unlocked, the user can remain in an alien form indefinitely and is able to switch between alien forms at will just by thinking it, speaking the name of the alien given by the user, or operating the Omnitrix which can still be found on the body when activated.

Time out mode

When the Omnitrix times out it beeps and flashes, converts the user back to normal, and takes around 10 minutes to recharge – though it may take more time if tampered with. Its main purpose is said to be to keep the original personality of certain aliens from overwhelming the user (such as happened with Ghostfreak).

The Omnitrix is powered by a special self-renewable power supply that will long outlive Ben. The Omnitrix has, on occasion, instantly recharged to protect its user from direct physical threat. This was shown when Ben was about to be killed by Kevin and then when Ghostfreak, who had escaped the Omnitrix at the time, tried to possess Ben. Both times, despite just timing out moments earlier, the Omnitrix recharges instantly when Ben's life is put in direct threat. However, this may possibly be a safety mechanism where the Omnitrix taps into an emergency reserve of energy, as the Omnitrix almost immediately timed out mere moments later. This feature was apparently switched off after the recalibration. The Omnitrix has been known to "malfunction", such as unexpectedly timing out, recharging instantly, changing into a different alien than was selected, however, these might be safeguards programmed to protect against someone stealing it.

It was confirmed by Dwayne McDuffie that the Omnitrix times out not to recharge its energy, but to prevent damage to Ben.

Capture mode

When a new DNA sample has been unlocked for future use (it identifies the DNA against the database, then unlocks that code on the Omnitrix), or when the Omnitrix actually captures new DNA that is not already present on it.

Self-destruct mode

When in self-destruct mode (SDM), the Omnitrix counts down until it explodes. When in SDM for a few days, the Omnitrix charges up enough energy to cause an energy ripple that will destroy the entire universe, also in the original series while the Omnitrix was in SDM it sent out bursts of energy that threw Ben through the air.

Other features

List of Ben's aliens

List of Ben 10,000's aliens

He is set to appear sometime in Ultimate Alien.

Principal voice actors

Additional voices

Crew

TV films

Three Ben 10 films have been released at different times during 2007 and 2008. The first is a regular animated feature called Secret of the Omnitrix, in which the Omnitrix is accidentally set to self-destruct and Ben must track down its creator to stop it. A trailer of the film was released with the film Billy & Mandy: Wrath of the Spider Queen, and it aired August 10, 2007. Michael Ouweleen described the film's villain, which was actually Vilgax, as "like Darth Vader without the sense of humor."[2] A different version of Secrets of the Omnitrix, which introduced a different alien (Eye Guy) to the one in the original (Heatblast), aired on September 1, 2007. A third version (in which XLR8 was featured) aired on October 20, 2007. It was stated during the premiere of Alien Force that Secret of the Omnitrix was intended to be the chronological finale of Ben 10, even though it was broadcast long before the last episode, which was not canon.

The second is a live-action film titled Ben 10: Race Against Time[3] which aired November 21, 2007. The plot presumably takes place before "Goodbye and Good Riddance", it revolves around Ben, Gwen and Grandpa Max returning to their hometown of Bellwood and attempting to adjust to being "normal" again. Unfortunately, their lives are once again disrupted by a mysterious alien known as Eon, who has an unexpected connection to the Omnitrix. It premiered on Cartoon Network on November 21, 2007. The film was directed by Alex Winter.[4] Winter stated at the 2007 upfront presentation that he wanted "this thing to look like X-Men", an epic adventure that will be "more cinematic than cartoony" and appeal to all ages. Production on the film finished in October[2] and premiered November 21, 2007. Ben 10: Alien Swarm a sequel to Race Against Time premiered November 25, 2009.

A new computer animated 3D movie titled Ben 10: Destroy Aliens will be released in 2012 and will focus on a 10-year-old Ben returning to school after the summer.[5][6]

Sequel series

Ben 10: Alien Force is the sequel to the show set five years after the original series. As an indirect result, this series is darker in tone compared to its predecessor. The series premiered on Cartoon Network on April 18, 2008 and ended on March 26, 2010. It has since been premiered in Canada, on Teletoon.[7] A video game of the show is now out for the Nintendo DS, Wii, PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable.[8]

Another sequel series, Ben 10: Ultimate Alien, premiered on April 23, 2010 and takes place 3–4 weeks after the finale of Alien Force.[9]

Protector of Earth

This is the first Ben 10 video game, released in Autumn 2007.

Following the success of the Ben 10 animated TV series and films, various Ben 10 merchandise has been released for general sale. These items include Ben 10 books, action figures, card games such as Top Trumps, toys, video games - notably Ben 10: Protector of Earth, bedding, and footwear.

FusionFall

Ben 10 appears in Cartoon Network's online MMO FusionFall. The character design for Ben Tennyson was changed when the original Ben 10 series ended and was replaced by Ben 10: Alien Force. In the game, he serves as a "Player Guide" offering guide-based missions and special items that can only be used with certain guides.

See also

Cartoon Network portal
Animation portal
United States portal
Television portal

References

External links