Robot Wars | |
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The Robot Wars logo, as used in the title sequence. |
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Format | Game show |
Presented by | Jeremy Clarkson (1998) Craig Charles (1998 - 2004) |
Starring | Philippa Forrester (1998 - 2000, 2002 - 2003) Julia Reed (2000 - 2002) Jayne Middlemiss (2003 - 2004) |
Narrated by | Jonathan Pearce |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 7 (Original series) 2 (Extreme series) |
No. of episodes | 108 (Original series) 30 (Extreme series) |
Production | |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 30 minutes (1998-1999) 45 minutes (1999-2003) 60 minutes (2003-2004) |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | BBC Two (1998-2003) Five (2003-2004) |
Picture format | PAL (576i) |
Original run | 20 February 1998 - 28 March 2004 (Original series) – 26 October 2001 - 3 October 2003 (Extreme series) |
Robot Wars is a British game show modelled on a US-based competition of the same name. It was broadcast on BBC Two from 1998 until 2003, with its final series broadcast on Five in 2003 and 2004. Additional series were filmed for specific sectors of the global market, including two series of Robot Wars Extreme Warriors with U.S. competitors for the TNN network (hosted by Mick Foley and Rebecca Grant), and two of Dutch Robot Wars for distribution in the Netherlands. The fourth series of the UK Robot Wars was brought to the United States on TNN as Robot Wars: Grand Champions in 2002, and hosted by Joanie Laurer.[1] In 2003, the roboteers themselves formed The Fighting Robot Association and with their associated event organisers, carry on participating in competitions for new audiences.
The series involved teams of amateur and professional roboteers who made their own robots to fight against each other in both friendly and tournament matches. As well as fighting each other, they had to avoid the "House Robots", which were not bound by the same weight or weapon limits as the contestants.
Contents |
Robot Wars was the brainchild of Marc Thorpe, a designer working for the LucasToys division of Lucasfilm.[2] In 1992, Thorpe had the initial idea for robot combat sport after unsuccessfully attempting to create a radio controlled vacuum cleaner.[3] In 1994, Marc Thorpe created Robot Wars and held the first competition at the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco. Approximately one month prior to the event, Thorpe formed a partnership with New York based record company Sm:)e Communications, later Profile Records, who provided additional funding.[2]
Between 1995 and 1997, three further Robot Wars events took place in America and, in 1995, Profile Records partnered with production company Mentorn to produce and televise a Robot Wars event in the UK. Mentorn acquired the worldwide television rights from Profile in 1995 after Tom Gutteridge (the head of Mentorn) had seen an amateur tape of a San Francisco event.
Gutteridge and one of his producers Steve Carsey created a television format based on the Robot Wars concept. They produced a live event opposite BBC Television Centre in Wood Lane, Shepherds Bush, London and hired Derek Foxwell to build 3 combat robots to take on three American robots. The Controller of BBC2, Michael Jackson, attended the event, which was not filmed, and he promised to commission a series. However, it wasn't until 1998 that a subsequent Controller of BBC2, Mark Thompson, fulfilled Jackson's promise and actually commissioned 6 episodes. Gutteridge and Carsey were producers and Foxwell was the technical supervisor and senior technical consultant. He drafted the rules and regulations and was in charge of the pit area and the technical team, which scrutineered the robots, got them on and off stage and helped the contestants prepare and repair their robots. Irvine, initially a member of the technical team, served as one of the judges.
Profile sought no input or consent from Thorpe before doing this, and this aggravated the already troubled relationship between Thorpe and Profile Records and indirectly spurred legal disagreements surrounding the ownership of the Robot Wars concept. The legal proceedings surrounding these would last until February 6, 2002.[3] Mentorn used Thorpe as a Consultant on the series, however, and the initial series of Robot Wars in the UK was broadcast over six weeks in February and March 1998. It was an immediate hit, with more than 2 million viewers, and a further 27 episodes were commissioned by the BBC that year. 155 episodes were produced in total, and the show was seen in 26 countries. Two series were produced in the US for the TNN (now Spike and Adult Swim) network, and a version was also shown on Nickelodeon. Series were also produced in many European countries. Although the series had various directors and producers, all were produced in the UK by Mentorn, and executive produced by Tom Gutteridge and Steve Carsey. The initial series were staged in various film studios around London. But the stage and pit area became too large to fit into any of the conventional studios, so filming was later moved to an aircraft hangar at RAF Newton.
The first series of Robot Wars was presented by Jeremy Clarkson and co-hosted by Philippa Forrester.[4] In keeping with his edgy persona established on Top Gear, Clarkson frequently made tongue-in-cheek jokes about competitors and their robots, such as remarking that a contestant robot called "Scarab" looked like "cheese on toast".[5] Clarkson left Robot Wars after the first series and was replaced with Craig Charles.[6] Charles, well known as playing the character Dave Lister in the science fiction themed situation comedy Red Dwarf,[7] was seen as taking the programme and its contestants more seriously than Clarkson, and was more enthusiastic while presenting it.[5] Charles would close each episode with a four line poem ending with the words " Robot Wars".[4] Charles presented Robot Wars until its demise in 2004.
In comparison to Charles' background in science fiction, Philippa Forrester was best known as co-host of the science and technology programme Tomorrow's World.[8] Her role on Robot Wars was as the pit reporter[9] who would speak to contestants about their robots before and after battles. Forrester was pit reporter for six of the show's nine series; Julia Reed took the role for Series 4 and Extreme 1 since Forrester was unable to participate in the programme due to pregnancy, and when the programme moved to Five for the seventh series was replaced with Jayne Middlemiss.[6]
The 1994 Robot Wars in San Francisco, California featured three different 'games' for each of three robot weight classes:
Weight classes for this first event were:
The competition format remained much the same through 1997. Additional safety regulations were implemented each year, match length was trimmed to 5 minutes, a 'featherweight' weight class was added, and weight allowances crept upward; by 1997 the heavyweight maximum was 170 pounds.
The 1997 judging criteria removed pinning an opponent for 30 seconds as an automatic win and required such immobilization techniques to be limited to one minute. The 1997 judging criteria also removed 'audience applause' for selection of a winner when a match ended with both robots still mobile. Robots were judged by a panel based on a scoring system of damage, style, aggression, and control.
The format for the first and second televised U.K. Robot Wars differed radically from the earlier U.S. events. In each heat, a group of six robots would compete through a series of three challenges:
In the First Wars, the six heat champions met in a single melee fight to determine the overall winner. The Second Wars had two semifinal shows, each with six heat finalists reprising the heats with a Gauntlet and a Trial, with the last place finisher in each eliminated. The remaining four finalists paired off and fought head-to head in 'The Arena' with the two victorious robots moving on to a final arena battle to determine the champion and the two defeated robots fighting a separate arena battle for 3rd and 4th place.
The Third Wars eliminated 'The Gauntlet' and 'The Trial" from the main tournament, concentrating on 'The Arena'. This format continued throughout the remainder of the Wars — a main knockout tournament with special contests as side attractions. The side events included Tag Team, Annihilator, Rebellion, and regional championship events.
A robot could lose a match in several ways:
The arena and mechanical hazards for the early non-televised Robot Wars in the U.S. (1994 through 1997) were rudimentary. The arena itself was a 30 by 54 foot rectangle with an asphalt surface. The 1994 arena was defined only by 2-foot high plywood walls—there was no bulletproof plastic enclosure. The following year saw the addition of braced 1/4" thick clear plastic panels extending four feet upward from the plywood panels to enhance audience protection. By 1997 the arena walls had grown to eight feet plus two feet of netting at the top.
Early hazards included a wide ram that could push a robot away from the side railing, nets on hinged arms that could descend to entangle robots that ventured too close, large horizontal pivoting arms to swat passing robots, and a bowling ball pendulum swinging across the arena.
The arena was completely re-done for the televised UK Robot Wars. The arena was approximately 32 feet by 48 feet and was enclosed in a huge clear plastic box 20 feet high. There were assorted hazards in the arena that changed from one series the next:
In early 2004 the Robot Wars arena was purchased from the television production firm who produce the show (Mentorn) by a company called Robot Arenas Ltd based in the UK. They are an organisation set up by a past competitor of Robot Wars to continue the sport of robot combat in the UK.
The Robot Wars arena -valued originally at £11,000- was sold for scrap in 2005 for £250 by the new owners of RAF Newton where the arena was housed. A suit filed against RAF Newton by Robot Arenas Ltd found that RAF Newton had acted reasonably in the matter and owed no compensation to Robot Arenas Ltd.[10]
In 2002, the Nickelodeon American television network created Nickelodeon Robot Wars where kids operated combat robots provided by American teams.
UK Championship results | ||||
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Series | Winner | Grand Finalists | ||
The First Wars | Roadblock | Bodyhammer, Cunning Plan, Recyclopse, Robot The Bruce, T.R.A.C.I.E. | ||
Series | Winner | Runner-up | Third Place | Fourth Place |
The Second Wars | Panic Attack | Cassius | Roadblock | Killertron |
The Third Wars | Chaos 2 | Hypno-Disc | Firestorm | Steg-O-Saw-Us |
The Fourth Wars | Chaos 2 | Pussycat | Stinger | Hypno-Disc |
The Fifth Wars | Razer | Bigger Brother | Firestorm | Hypno-Disc |
The Sixth Wars | Tornado | Razer | Firestorm | Terrorhurtz |
The Seventh Wars | Typhoon 2 | Storm 2 | Tornado | X-Terminator |
World Championship results | ||||
Championship | Winner | Runner-up | Semi-Finalists | |
The First World Championship | Razer (England) | Behemoth (England) | 101 (England) | Diotoir (Ireland) |
The Second World Championship | Razer (UK) | Drillzilla (USA) | Manta (USA) | Tornado (UK) |
The Third World Championship | Storm 2 (UK) | Supernova (Sri Lanka) | Crushtacean (South Africa) | Tough As Nails (Netherlands) |
The competing robots are listed in Category:Robot Wars competitors.
The Robot Wars arena was also patrolled by the house robots, created as part of the television format. The house robots were a huge success, and particularly popular with younger viewers. Scale models of the house robots were sold as toys, and in 2002 these became the number one boys' toy in the UK. The original house robots were designed and constructed by BBC Visual Effects and did not have to conform to the same rules as contestant robots; for example, they were allowed to be considerably heavier, and were allowed weaponry prohibited in the competitor robots.
Series One
In series one there were four house robots:
Series Two
The original four house robots were joined by,
Series Three
No new house robots were introduced, but there were changes for all six of the existing house robots.
Series Four
One new robot joined the team.
Most of the original house robots were fine-tuned, most noticeably Sir Killalot and Sgt. Bash, who both had their pincers enlarged and made stronger than before.
In the special "Southern Annihilator" contest, Razer managed to destroy Matilda. At the end of the episode a message was displayed reading "R.I.P. (Rust in Piece) Matilda: Destroyed in Action" followed by "...or was she?". She was then seen coming into the arena heavily bandaged.
Series Five and Extreme Series One
No new house robots were introduced, but two robots were changed:
Series Six
Two new house robots were added:
Series Seven The last series to be filmed, a final House Robot was added.
Other
There were pullback toys of all the house robots, with the exception of Cassius Chrome. There were also pullback toys of competitors Razer, Chaos 2, Firestorm, Wheely Big Cheese, Panic Attack, Hypno-Disc, X terminator, Stinger, Pussycat (before 2002), Tornado and Dantomkia (both made 2003). Each robot came with an accessory. There were remote controlled toys of Shunt, Matilda, Sir Killalot, Sgt. Bash , Tornado and Growler. There were pitstop toys of House Robots Matilda and Sgt. Bash, and competitors Hypno-disc and Panic Attack. Minibots were made of the house robots at the time of series 5 and competitors Razer, Chaos 2, Panic Attack, Hypno-Disc, Pussycat, X-Terminator, Suicidal Tendencies, Mega Morg, Wild Thing, Dominator 2, Plunderbird 5, Tornado, Firestorm, Wheeley Big Cheese and Gemini (which is a clusterbot, but both halves were joined together). The Minibots also came with their own arena, with the pit, floor flipper and drop zone.
All but the first and fifth series of UK Robot Wars had at least one 'special' episode outside of the main competition. Series Four had by far the most specials, all aired over Christmas, which were the Northern and Southern Annihilators, A Tag Team Terror Contest, a War of Independence and a Celebrity Special featuring Shauna Lowry, Chris Eubank, Anthea Turner and Wendy Turner, 5ive, Natalie Cassidy, Shane Lynch, Vic Reeves and Adam Woodyatt (the winner).
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
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1 | 20 February 1998 | 27 March 1998 | 6 |
2 | 6 November 1998 | 26 February 1999 | 15 |
3 | 3 December 1999 | 21 April 2000 | 19 |
4 | 22 September 2000 | 23 February 2001 | 19 |
5 | 24 May 2002 | 1 November 2002 | 15 |
6 | 8 November 2002 | 7 March 2003 | 15 |
7 | 2 November 2003 | 7 March 2004 | 19 |
Series | Start date | End date | Episodes |
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1 | 26 October 2001 | 8 February 2002 | 15 |
2 | 9 May 2003 | 3 October 2003 | 15 |
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