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Battle of the Planets, Vol. 1 dvd movie.
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Battle of the Planets, Vol. 1
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Battle of the Planets, Vol. 1 List Price: $19.95


Features
 Animated
 Color
 Dolby
 DVD-Video
 Full Screen
 Original recording remastered
 NTSC

In Theaters : 18 September, 1978
DVD Release : 23 October, 2001
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Battle of the Planets, Vol. 1 description
One of the early shows that helped to build an audience for anime in America, Battle of the Planets began in Japan as Science Ninja Team Gatchaman in 1972-74. For its 1978 U.S. release, the 105 episodes were cut to 85. Much of the violence was excised and new animation, featuring the R2-D2-esque robot 7-Zark-7 and his robo-pooch 1-Rover-1, was created to bridge the gaps. Turner Broadcasting acquired the property in 1986 and recut it into 85 different episodes. The resulting G-Force included more violence, yet it wasn't shown in its entirety in the U.S. until it aired on the Cartoon Network in 1995. This release includes all three versions, enabling viewers to compare and contrast.

In episode 1, five highly trained teenagers--incongruously clad in bird suits--tackle a giant biomorphic enemy vessel. The group executes the commands of their brilliant scientist-leader in the virtually identical Gatchaman and G-Force. When they take on the bad guys, the punches, kicks, and yo-yo weapons connect forcefully; to escape, they convert their ship, the God-Phoenix, to "Firebird Mode," an avian cloud of glowing plasma. In Battle, the quintet takes orders from the dithering, Hanna-Barbera-style Zark. The hand-to-hand combat is heavily censored and the heroes somehow turn themselves into a "Fiery Phoenix." It's campy and silly, rather than exciting. Unrated; suitable for ages 10 up. --Charles Solomon

Battle of the Planets, Vol. 1 Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ Most Anime is Not Meant for Kids
When I came across these episodes in my public library, I was excited to relive my childhood. I loved BotP and had a big crush on Jason when I was a kid (it didn't matter that he was a cartoon character). I watched the BotP episodes and then watched the Gatchaman episodes. Wow, there was a difference! But most anime produced then and now weren't created for kids, but for young adults and adults. Robotech and Sailor Moon were both sanitized for their violent and sexual content as well before making their US debut. I loved the Gatchaman episodes better and I was glad to view them before, now I will end up buying those episodes. I also had a problem with the English audio track for the G-Force episode. Don't people check these things before packaging them? What happened to quality control? I would have scored it higher, if I hadn't seen the original and the G-Force audio wasn't bad. I couldn't give it 2 stars because I've seen Eagle Riders.
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