Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003 TV series)

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Genre Animated television series
Action/Adventure
Comedy-drama
Superhero fiction
Science fiction
Supernatural fiction
Martial arts
Based on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
by Kevin Eastman
Peter Laird
Developed by Lloyd Goldfine
Voices of Michael Sinterniklaas
Wayne Grayson
Sam Riegel
Greg Abbey
Darren Dunstan
Veronica Taylor
Marc Thompson
Scottie Ray
Scott Williams
Karen Neil
Greg Carey
David Zen Mansley
Theme music composer Norman J. Grossfeld
Russell Velazquez
Composer(s) Ralph Schuckett
Rusty Andrews
John Angier
Mark Breeding
Louis Cortelezzi
Joel Douek
John Petersen
Pete Scaturro
John Siegler
John Van Tongeren
Russel Velazquez
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 7
No. of episodes 156 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Gary Richardson
Frederick U. Fierst
Alfred R. Khan
Norman F. Grossfeld
Tom Kenney
Producer(s) JoEllyn Marlow
Running time 21–23 minutes
Production company(s) Mirage Studios
4Kids Entertainment
Dong Woo Animation
Distributor Viacom Media Networks
Release
Original network Fox Box/4Kids TV (season 16)
The CW4Kids (season 7)
Audio format Dolby Digital 5.1
Original release February 8, 2003 (2003-02-08) – March 27, 2010 (2010-03-27)
Chronology
Preceded by Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987 TV series)
Followed by Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012 TV series)
External links
Website www.ninjaturtles.com/html/tv.htm

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles is an American animated television series, based on the comic book characters of the same name. The series is mainly set in New York City. It first aired on February 8, 2003 and ended on March 27, 2010 in the UK, Ireland, and Australia and August 2, 2005 in the US and Canada. The series marked the revival of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles as a Saturday-morning cartoon on Fox's Fox Box programming block (later known as 4Kids TV).

The 2003 TMNT TV series was produced by 4Kids Entertainment, and Mirage Studios,[1] which co-owned rights to the show,[2] and animated by Dong Woo Animation.[3] The series migrated to The CW4Kids in its final season after 4Kids's contract with Fox ended. Nickelodeon now owns the rights to this and any future Turtles series. Nickelodeon broadcast the series occasionally on their channel and Nicktoons normally during marathons for the TMNT series.

Production

In May 2002, it was announced that 4Kids Entertainment would produce a new animated TMNT TV series for the FoxBox programming block to air on Saturday mornings.[4]

Overview

In the 2003 TV series, the four Turtles' personalities are in some ways different from the 1987 TV series in an attempt to follow the Mirage Comics versions of the characters more closely. All the characters are more complex individuals, and the Turtles have a stronger family bond. The tone is also somewhat more serious with a greater emphasis on action. The show does not feature nearly as much slapstick comedy or heavy puns as its animated predecessor, and the only turtle to use surfer slang is Michelangelo. The 2003 series also features magical powers absent from the earlier incarnation. Leonardo and Raphael often pick fights with each other, Michelangelo is now very obsessed with being cool and famous, and Donatello seems to take his inventions more seriously.

The series covers a large scope of the Turtles' adventures taking them from the sewers, to the streets of New York City (namely April's apartment), to the woodlands of rural New England, to outer space, alternate dimensions, to the future, and ultimately home once more. The first several seasons focus on the Turtles' battles against The Shredder and The Foot as well as the Purple Dragons, while the later seasons branch out to include other antagonists. Thus, making the stories more complex than the series that came before it.

Characters

Turtles

Leonardo fighting the Foot Clan's ninjas in the 2003 TV series.

Allies and friends

Villains and enemies

Aliens

Seasons breakdown

During the show's run, the format was changed several times. The original run of the first four seasons kept the Turtles in their native New York facing The Shredder, The Federation/Triceratons, and Bishop. After the fourth season the show received its first major format change in the "Ninja Tribunal" season.

Ninja Tribunal

The fifth season focused on a new threat presented by another version of the Shredder said to be the original legendary villain Oroku Saki from feudal Japan. The Turtles were then asked by the Ninja Tribunal (a group of warriors who seek to combat this ancient, "Tengu" Shredder) to train alongside several human warriors to become strong enough to battle the Shredder. This involved the Turtles gaining new weapons, learning how to channel their chi into powerful projectiles, and finding their inner animal spirit. This was the last season to use the original character designs, animation, format and concluding the main series storyline.

Fast Forward

The sixth season featured a brand new direction as well as a completely redesigned look and feel. The season focused on the Turtles being transported one hundred years into the future to the year 2105; where they meet and befriend Cody Jones, the great grandson of April and Casey. Cody runs a successful and influential technology company and is its sole heir. The newly formatted show saw a brighter tone than its predecessor, and focused on shorter story lines. Some of the previous shows characters did return, however, including Bishop and Baxter Stockman.

Instead of a Shredder, Sho'Kanabo, an alien from a race of parasites, was constantly trying to infect earth. He eventually is fried by sunlight. Another great change was that though Bishop was still continuing to cheat death, he was now head of a benevolent organization that ensured peace throughout the galaxy.

Back to the Sewer

The seventh season was the last of the show's run. It featured yet another redesign for the entire cast similar to the designs from the film TMNT and brought the Turtles back into present day New York. The season did feature some returning characters from the Fast Forward season. The main villain for the Turtles as they battle in a cybernetic reality is a cybernetic version of the Shredder. It was then followed by the TV special episode Turtles Forever.

Turtles Forever

Turtles Forever is a 2009 TV movie featuring the Turtles following the seventh-season finale. The movie features the character designs from the seventh (Back To The Sewer) season with some minor changes (namely their eyes are entirely white). The story centers around the Turtles encountering their 1987 animated counterparts who were accidentally transported to the 2003 Turtles' dimension. Both sets of Turtles face off against the villains from both series in an attempt to prevent the Utrom Shredder from destroying all of space-time. This eventually leads them to the "Turtle Prime" dimension, wherein they encounter their Mirage Comic counterparts.

Episodes

SeasonEp #First AirdateLast AirdateDigital Release
Season 1 26 February 8, 2003 November 1, 2003 TBD
Season 2 26 November 8, 2003 October 2, 2004 TBD
Season 3 26 October 9, 2004 April 23, 2005 TBD
Season 4 26 September 10, 2005 October 14, 2006 (UK, Ireland, and Australia)
August 2, 2015 (US & Canada)
TBD
Season 5 (The Lost Episodes) 12 March 24, 2007 May 3, 2008 TBD
Season 6 (Fast Forward) 26 July 29, 2006 October 27, 2007 July 29, 2015
Season 7 (Back to the Sewer) 14 September 13, 2008 March 27, 2010 July 7, 2014

Cast

Main cast

Additional voices

Crew

Reception

The series was met with favourable reviews. Currently holding a 7.7/10 on IMDb and an 8.8/10 on TV.com. The praise went towards the storytelling, development, animation and appeal to all ages.

4Kids was known for its controversial history of censoring anime, but the series was in general popular for trying to follow the dark and gritty tone of the original Mirage comics.[5] However, due to 4Kids having to keep their ratings under PG, the series was met with criticism over the last two seasons Fast Forward and Back to the Sewer.

Several of the characters introduced in the series would later appear in subsequent publications of the TMNT franchise. Hun was introduced into the Mirage Comics with the issue Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Vol.2 #56, and also appears as a recurring figure in the IDW comic series and in the 2012 animation series, as does Agent Bishop. Angel, Ch'rell, Darius Dun and the Street Phantoms would also be featured in the IDW comics, and the Triceraton Mozar as a prime antagonist in season 4 of the 2012 series.

See also

References

  1. "4kids To Produce And Launch New Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Series" (PDF). 4kidsentertainment.com. May 7, 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2006. Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  2. "4Kids Entertainment Annual Report 2002(Page 5)" (PDF). March 31, 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 8, 2006. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  3. "TMNT - Dongwoo Animation Official Site". Dongwoo Animation Co. Archived from the original on December 19, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-01.
  4. Leigh Godfrey. "4Kids To Produce New Ninja Turtles". Animation World Network. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
  5. Patrick Coakley (24 September 2014). "Why Does No One Talk About the 2003 Ninja Turtles". Unleasth the Fanboy. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
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