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词条 Voltron (1984 TV series)
释义

  1. Development

  2. Premise

  3. Vehicle Voltron

  4. Voice cast

  5. Changes from the Japanese version

     Plot changes  GoLion 

  6. Episodes

  7. Video games

  8. DVD Releases

  9. Reception

  10. References

  11. External links

{{User:RMCD bot/subject notice|1=Voltron: Defender of the Universe|2=Talk:Voltron (1984 TV series)#Requested move 28 March 2019 }}

{{Infobox animanga/Header


| name = Voltron: Defender of the Universe
| image = [https://www.google.com/search?q=voltron&espv=2&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiz6azflO_SAhVF0oMKHWOdCVEQ_AUIBigB&biw=1366&bih=638&safe=active&ssui=on Voltron Picture]
| caption =
| genre = Science fiction, Action Adventure, Mecha, Superhero
}}{{Infobox animanga/Video
| type = tv series
| title = Lion Force Voltron
{{small|(Based on Beast King GoLion)}}
| director = Franklin Cofod
| producer = Ted Koplar, Peter Keefe
| writer = Jameson Brewer
| music = John Petersen
| studio = World Events Productions
Toei Animation (epis. 1–52)
|licensee = NBCUniversal Television Distribution
| network = First-run syndication
| first = {{small|Part I:}}
September 10, 1984
| last =
November 27, 1984
{{small|Part II:}}
October 21, 1985 –
November 18, 1985
| episodes = 72
| episode_list = List of Voltron episodes#Lion Force Voltron
}}{{Infobox animanga/Video
| type = tv series
| title = Vehicle Team Voltron
{{small|(Based on Armored Fleet Dairugger XV)}}
| director = Franklin Cofod
| producer = Ted Koplar, Peter Keefe
| writer = Jameson Brewer
| music = John Petersen
| studio = World Events Productions
Toei Animation
| network = First-run syndication
| first = December 14, 1984
| last = February 18, 1985
| episodes = 52
| episode_list = List of Voltron episodes#Vehicle Team Voltron
}}{{Infobox animanga/Footer}}Voltron: Defender of the Universe is a half-hour animated series produced by World Events Productions from 1984 to 1985.[1]

Development

Ted Koplar assembled a team in Los Angeles to transform Golion into what would become Voltron.[2] Peter Keefe was brought aboard as Executive Producer, with Franklin Cofod as the Director. Since they had no means of translating the Japanese series into English, Keefe and Cofod surmised the plots, commissioned writer Jameson Brewer to write all-new dialogue, edited out the more violent scenes, and remixed the audio into stereo format. The series was an immediate hit in the United States, topping the syndication market for children's programs in the mid-1980s.[1]

The Japanese Future Robot Daltanious series was originally planned to be adapted by World Events Productions as part of Voltron. When requesting master tapes from Toei Animation for translation purposes, the World Events Productions producers requested "[the] ones with the lion." Mistakenly, Toei then proceeded to ship World Events copies of Beast King GoLion, another "combining-robot" cartoon which featured lion-shaped fighting robot starships. Because the World Events producers greatly preferred GoLion to Daltanious, the GoLion episodes were adapted instead, going on to become the most popular portion of the original Voltron run.[2] A third version/series of Voltron based on yet another Japanese series, Lightspeed Electroid Albegas, was also in progress, but it was dropped when World Events Productions joined with Toei to make new GoLion-based shows, due to that show's popularity over the Dairugger run.[3][4]

Premise

The first season is about five pilots who command 5 robot lions which combine to form Voltron.[5] These pilots use these machines to protect the planet Arus from the evil Warlord King Zarkon and witch Haggar who creates Robeasts to terrorize the planet ruled by Princess Allura.[6]

Vehicle Voltron

The second season of the show was called Vehicle Voltron based on Armored Fleet Dairugger XV which spawned also a television special called Fleet of Doom.[7] The premise of season two is the Galaxy Alliance home world's have become overcrowded and search for new planets to colonise. This puts the Alliance in conflict with the Drule empire.[8]

Each team is specialized in gathering data or fighting in their area of expertise.[9] Each squad combines their vehicles into a bigger machine, with each vehicles differing among the three teams. These fighters are:

  • The Aqua Fighter (Sea Team)
  • The Turbo Terrain Fighter (Land Team)
  • The Strato Fighter (Air Team)

Voice cast

{{main|List of Voltron characters}}
  • Jack Angel as King Zarkon
  • Michael Bell as Lance and Sven
  • Peter Cullen as Narrator
  • Neil Ross as Keith and Pidge
  • B.J. Ward as Haggar and Princess Allura
  • Lennie Weinrib as Hunk
  • Tress MacNeille as Queen Merla

Changes from the Japanese version

{{Refimprove section|date=May 2016}}

Though airing in syndication, which offered other anime shows such as Robotech greater freedom to deal with subject matter such as death that were off-limits in most US network children's programming, WEP's adaptation of Voltron was heavily edited to conform to the more conservative standards of children's television in the United States, as well as the standard name change of characters and concepts in GoLion and Dairugger.[10][11]

Plot changes

GoLion

  • In Voltron the show begins with the five pilots sent by the Galaxy Alliance, whose space-exploration mission takes them to a planet devastated by war. In Voltron, the pilots arrive on Arus, and are captured and taken to Planet Doom. They then escape and return to Arus, and become the pilots of the robot lions and Voltron. In GoLion, the initial scenes are actually of Earth; the pilots have returned from their mission (in the then-futuristic year of 1999) to find that the entire population of Earth has been killed in a nuclear war. They are then captured and taken to Planet Galra, where the plot proceeds similarly, only the planet they find the lions on is called Altea.[14] In the Voltron version, some footage of the pilots' arrival on Arus was taken from Armored Fleet Dairugger XV.[12]
  • Scenes of torture and atrocities inflicted by the alien conquerors on their slaves (such as a "contest" where alien soldiers would be rewarded according to how many prisoners they managed to decapitate in a given time) and some shots of corpses were removed.[13]
  • In GoLion, Takashi 'Shiro' Shirogane (Sven in Voltron), the original pilot of Blue Lion, is killed in a battle with Haggar, and his similar-looking younger brother Ryou appears later in the series to join in the fight against Emperor Daibazaal. In Voltron, dialog was inserted to indicate that Sven is merely injured and has been sent away to a hospital planet to recover, and the character of Ryou was rewritten entirely into Sven returning.
  • In GoLion, Hys (Nanny) is fatally shot in the heart while protecting Raible (Coran). This scene was completely removed from Voltron, and later episodes used stock footage from earlier in the series to insert the character into scenes that took place after her original death.[14]
  • In GoLion, a slave girl named Lisa, was a survivor of the nuclear war. Near the end of her debut episode, Tsuyoshi 'Hothead' Seidou (Hunk in Voltron) urges her to wake up and join in the fight against Emperor Daibazaal (King Zarkon in Voltron), however she is too crushed by her dispair to trust even a fellow human (that race being responsible for the destruction of her homeworld, after all) and chooses to step off a cliff the two were standing on, rather than live without her brother. In Voltron, this sequence was removed and it was explained to the audience that this girl, now named Twyla, had been allowed to go home to her own planet (a planet other than Earth).
  • In episode 21 of GoLion, there are implications that Prince Sincline (Prince Lotor in Voltron) sexually abused Princess Amue (Romelle in Voltron) when she was his prisoner. The Voltron dialogues imply that she was tortured instead. [15]

Episodes

{{main|List of Voltron episodes}}

Video games

{{main|Voltron: Defender of the Universe (video game)}}

A 2011 PlayStation game based on the 1984 show was developed.[16][17]

DVD Releases

The show was released on DVD in 2006.[18][19][20][21]

Reception

The show was ranked the 76th best cartoon by IGN.[22]

References

1. ^{{cite news|last=Koppel|first=Niko|title=Peter Keefe, Creator of Cartoon ‘Voltron,’ Dies at 57|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/11/arts/design/11keefe.html?ref=obituaries|accessdate=11 June 2010|newspaper=The New York Times|date=10 June 2010}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/voltron-prepares-to-recapture-the-universe-from-a-small-office-in-st-louis/Content?oid=2495906|title=Voltron prepares to recapture the universe from a small office in St. Louis|first=Nicholas|last=Phillips|website=Riverfront Times|accessdate=22 January 2019}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.mtv.com/news/2432998/confused-about-the-voltron-movie-weve-got-your-answers/|title=Confused About The 'Voltron' Movie? We've Got Your Answers!|first=|last=Mtvmovies|website=MTV News|accessdate=8 January 2019}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.wired.co.uk/article/voltron-returns-netflix-season-2-january-2017|title=Voltron: Legendary Defender season two lands on Netflix in January|first=Matt|last=Kamen|date=7 October 2016|publisher=|accessdate=7 February 2019|via=www.wired.co.uk}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=rubax5GQA7kC&pg=PA112&dq=voltron+anime&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwibwsr7qIHgAhUbA2MBHbkTDk4Q6AEIKjAA#v=onepage&q=voltron+anime&f=false|title=Astro Boy and Anime Come to the Americas: An Insider’s View of the Birth of a Pop Culture Phenomenon|first1=Fred|last1=Ladd|first2=Harvey|last2=Deneroff|date=10 January 2014|publisher=McFarland|accessdate=22 January 2019|via=Google Books}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060512174915/www.voltron.com/lionvoltron.html|title=VOLTRON: The Third Dimension|date=12 May 2006|website=web.archive.org|accessdate=30 January 2019}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.otakuusamagazine.com/vehicle-team-voltron-the-fleet-of-doom/|title=Vehicle Team Voltron / The Fleet of Doom|date=15 February 2010|website=Otaku USA Magazine|accessdate=8 January 2019}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/us/go/261379|title=Vehicle Voltron: The Good and Bad About the Forgotten Series|website=Den of Geek|accessdate=8 January 2019}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080915054925/www.voltron.com/vvoltron.html|title=VEHICLE VOLTRON|date=15 September 2008|website=web.archive.org|accessdate=30 January 2019}}
10. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.cbr.com/dark-secrets-voltron/|title=The 15 Darkest Secrets About Voltron|date=18 March 2018|website=CBR|accessdate=6 January 2019}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.denofgeek.com/us/go/261408|title=Voltron: 10 Hilarious Ways the Original Show Censored Death|website=Den of Geek|accessdate=6 January 2019}}
12. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GeMydsVvED4 |title= Voltron / Go Lion Origin Story|accessdate=2008-08-08 |work= |publisher=YouTube |date=2008-06-02}}
13. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTd9Vl9cqCg |title=Go Lion / Voltron: Phantom Flowers|accessdate=2009-11-08 |work= |publisher=YouTube |date=2008-06-02}}
14. ^{{cite news|title=Voltron | publisher = Anime News Network | date=2002-03-14 | url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/feature/2002-03-14|accessdate=2008-10-20}}
15. ^https://voltronfandomhag.tumblr.com/post/170446803468/getting-your-facts-straight-classic-lotor
16. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2011/02/14/voltron-forms-to-create-new-video-game|title=Voltron Forms to Create New Video Game|first=Hilary|last=Goldstein|date=14 February 2011|publisher=|accessdate=29 January 2019}}
17. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.gamespot.com/reviews/voltron-defender-of-the-universe-review/1900-6347165/|title=Voltron: Defender of the Universe Review|first=Gamespot|last=Staff|date=7 December 2011|publisher=|accessdate=29 January 2019}}
18. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2006/06/28/new-voltron-dvd-details|title=New Voltron DVD Details|first=David|last=McCutcheon|date=28 June 2006|publisher=|accessdate=6 January 2019}}
19. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.madman.com.au/news/madman-releases-vehicle-force-voltron-on-dvd/|title=Madman Releases Vehicle Force Voltron on DVD|publisher=|accessdate=6 January 2019}}
20. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/28905/voltron-defender-of-the-universe-collection-three/|title=Voltron - Defender of the Universe - Collection Three|website=DVD Talk|accessdate=6 January 2019}}
21. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2011/11/03/voltron-the-final-battle-dvd-review|title=Voltron: The Final Battle DVD Review|first=I. G. N.|last=Staff|date=3 November 2011|publisher=|accessdate=30 January 2019}}
22. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.ign.com/lists/top-100-animated-series|title=Top 100 Animated Series - IGN.com|publisher=|accessdate=15 January 2019|via=www.ign.com}}

External links

{{Portalbar|United States|Animation|Anime and manga|Cartoon|Comics|Television in the United States|Video games|1980s|1990s|2000s|2010s}}{{wikiquote|Voltron: Defender of the Universe}}
  • {{IMDb title|id=0086824|title=Voltron: Defender of the Universe}}
  • {{ann|anime|id=1452|title=Voltron}}
  • Voltron at TV.com
{{Voltron}}{{Toonami-anime}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Voltron}}

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