Biker Mice from Mars (2006 TV series)

Biker Mice from Mars

U. S. Promotional Poster
Genre Animation, science fiction, action
Created by Rick Ungar
Starring Clancy Brown
Dorian Harewood
Jess Harnell
Rob Paulsen
Ian Ziering
Lisa Zane
Jim Ward
Dina Sherman
Theme music composer Will Anderson
Country of origin United Kingdom
United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 28[1] (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Rick Ungar, Ted Bather, Michael Loveland
Producer(s) Criterion Limited
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel CITV
4Kids TV
Kix!
Original run August 26, 2006 – July 26, 2007
Chronology
Preceded by Biker Mice from Mars

Biker Mice from Mars is an animated series, a remake of the show with the same name which aired from 1993–1996. The 2006 version of the show has previews of the show on YouTube.[2] Jim Ward won a 2009 voice-actor Daytime Emmy for his performance as Eyemore in the episode "Manchurian Charley" and as the Crusher in the episode "Here Come The Judge". The series was slated as a mid-season replacement in the 4Kids block on the CW network in fall 2009, but the series did not air. In the UK it was picked up for a second window by CSC Media Group, who scheduled it from April 2, 2010 on the Kix channel. The series features as a show on YouTube. An episode had been launched each Saturday on YouTube since November 2010.

Plot

The mice come to Earth (not by accident this time, unlike the first series). In this series, the lead antagonists are the evil Catatonians, a cat-like race of creatures who desire the greatest prize on Mars, the Regenerator. In the process of obtaining it they destroy it, leaving the Biker Mice (including Stoker – see below) to flee to Earth to build a new one.

Characters

Returning characters

New characters

Episode list

Toys, Video games, DVD and broadcast history

The series was largely influenced by the major toy line that was manufactured by Italian giant, Giochi Preziosi in 2005. GP retained Pangea as developers of the toy line, working in tandem with creator and executive producer, Rick Ungar. Characters, vehicles, and weapons used in the series were first developed by Pangea and turned over to G7 Animation for integration into the series. The team of Ungar, G7, and Pangea collaborated in order to maintain consistency between the intellectual property and the execution of the primary toy range, as the GP licensing monies were utilized to set in motion the series development. [3]

In 2006 Biker Mice From Mars was released, based on its 2006 revival in Finland, Australia and the United Kingdom, for the Nintendo DS and Sony PS2 consoles. The game did not receive major positive ratings, though it sold successfully throughout Scandinavia. It has not yet been released in the United States.

As of 2011, four volumes of Biker Mice from Mars DVDs are available in the UK through Abbey Home Media.[4] Two volumes were released in Australia and New Zealand by Madman Entertainment.[5] Volume one was released in Bulgaria on October 17, 2008. Eight volumes (each with three episodes) have been released, but it does not appear that more DVDs will be released unless demand for the series increases.

Biker Mice from Mars aired in the UK and Ireland in 2006.[6] It aired in the US on 4Kids TV, beginning in summer 2008. It was scheduled to return on CW4kids in fall 2009 but it never returned.

References

External links