Saturday, March 10, 2018
Rider Warriors ('90s Outsiders)
Shin Kazamatsuri/Kamen Rider Shin
I'm a huge fan of Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue. I was one of its only supporters for years. It's not a perfect movie, but I loved what it tried to do. It was the first tokusatsu work aimed completely at the adult fans. It wanted to be a more realistic take on the classic Ishinomori Rider; it was darker, meaner, more serious, more violent, it brought the horror back to the character.
Being a "prologue" and a mystery, we don't get to spend much time with Shin as a character. He's already a guinea-pig, he's already investigating the news clippings he's connecting to his dreams. We're not given a chance to really know him, he's already on the go, he's already all-business. It's a very tense character and locked down performance by Shin Ishikawa. (Years after the movie, the dude changed his stage name to Shin! That's dedication.) So, critics of the movie find Shin bland or too stiff. But he's really in line with the style the movie's going for. There's literally only ONE lighthearted moment in the movie, and even then Shin's just kind of distant, because he heard the news playing in the background.
But Shin, as a character, has it REALLY bad, even by Kamen Rider standards. He's lied to by pretty much everyone. He volunteers to be a lab guinea pig, trusting his dad, but his dad doesn't try too hard to protect him from the sinister organization backing his research. (Not until it's too late.) Not only is Shin turned into a monster by the renegade nutball scientist Onizuka, but he might be a HOMICIDAL monster. How different is that? Unsure what to do, unsure what he's capable of doing, he's caught between the sinister organization, the CIA agents after him, and the loved ones who let him down. His pregnant girlfriend is murdered, their baby another possible monster. It would have been pretty neat to get a follow up story to see what a new adventure brought Shin, but his tale alienated too many people.
Did the movie push it too far? Maybe. But, damn, don't you miss when Toei was willing to take a risk and gamble on a project like this? All of their shows are the same now.
I got major shit at HJU one time when I said the Heisei Riders wouldn't exist without this movie. "OMG, Shin was a bomb, how could that be true?!?!?!?" I still stand by that. It went for the dramatic approach, it dispensed with fanciful villains and toys and went for a mainstream-sounding song rather than the traditional theme. (No "Fight, Shin Kamen Rider! Warrior of green, fighting for justice! Fight, Shin! Protect the world with your greenness!")
Masaru Asou/Kamen Rider ZO
Kou Domon's great casting for a Rider. The dude looks like he stepped out of a '70s show. And ZO's a slick looking movie, but action is its top priority, so he didn't have much to work with and Asou wasn't much of a character. He's a student who was in the wrong place at the wrong time trusting the wrong, nutty sonuvabitch. Spends the movie looking for Akomaru, who the movie mistakenly places most focus on.
My brother loves ZO and has the manga, and I remember there being a subplot about Masaru having a relationship with Naomi Morinaga's character. I don't know if that was ever planned, scripted or even shot, but it would have gone a long way towards giving Masaru SOMETHING else to stand out...and it would make the title tune "Love Can't Be Stopped" actually make sense.
Prince Dex of Edenoi/Kamen Rider Saban
Just fuckin' with ya.
Kouji Segawa/Kamen Rider J
Yuuta Mochizuki is cool. Many have noted how he resembles Hiroshi Fujioka. It's a no-brainer for him to play a Rider, he's a great choice. But despite having more screen-time devoted to only him, Segawa's even more forgettable than Asou! We know literally nothing about him and the movie is so strangely silent -- there's about four lines in the whole 45 minute run time, and three of them are "Kana-chan!"
He's a cameraman. That's it. (Funny -- that's about all we know about Hayato Ichimonji, but Takeshi Sasaki imbues him with such life that he makes Hayato memorable.) Segawa apparently is a nature photographer, and he gets immediately killed by Fog and is revived by underground hippies just because he's the only cast member of the movie. Because he's a nature watcher, that means he must love nature, so these underground dwellers decide he's the best pick for the J Power, and it all turns into some snoozy green message. Pretty much EVERY toku hero is a greeny -- even Gai Yuuki! -- so...that doesn't help Segawa stand out, either.
We're introduced to him as he's camping and that's where the whole dang movie takes place. It really looks like Koji and the little girl he's with (and spends the movie trying to rescue) are the only two people in this strange, mountainous planet where the Fog have landed, mistaking it for Earth. (ZO had such style to it, but J doesn't have any of that. I remember, back in the day, people joking that it was like the movie was quickly filmed without permits out in public places. And you know what? It does seem that way. It's probably Amemiya's least visually impressive movie.)
The most interesting thing is that Koji is actually killed, a deader-than-dead corpse when he gets changed and resurrected as a Rider. (I guess we know what the J really stands for, huh?) The movie could have done more with that, because that was a Rider first.
Toshihide Wakamatsu really dodged a jumbo-sized bullet when he didn't get the part. Poor Mochizuki. But, in a way, it makes sense for it to be him -- if the Fog landed on Earth in the time of dinosaurs and feasted on them, who better than the leader of the Dinosaur Sentai to get revenge?
Friday, March 2, 2018
Rider Warriors (Version Showa)
I thought I'd do main Riders, like how I covered the Reds...and then every other Sentai color, mentor, sixth and extra. I only plan on doing the main Riders! I do not intend to do a post covering the likes of all 200 Ryuki assholes or the 31 Kabuto losers and so on. These posts also double as basically What Shougo Thinks Makes a Kamen Rider. Here we go...
Takeshi Hongou/Kamen Rider
The King of Kamen Rider. Fujioka is Hongou, Hongou is Fujioka. He takes the role seriously and it shows -- it cost him! Doing as many of his stunts as possible, he was injured so badly he had to leave the show! (I always wondered about the extent of his injuries; I have a feeling they were worse than was let on. Notice the way, in those early episodes, Fujioka drives his motorcycle like a maniac, WITHOUT a helmet! Once Hayato is brought in and once Fujioka returns? ALWAYS a helmet.)
We never really got to see Hongou's potential. What those early episodes were about, where they were headed was lost once the show scrambled to get around Fujioka's injury. And by the time he returns, the show's set in its comfort zone -- it doesn't come close to approximating or even trying to get back to its early tone or storytelling. It's such a shame.
But Hongou immediately has all of the qualities required in a classic Rider. He's the guy who had a bright future that was taken away by the villains. He was mutilated, he loses his sense of belonging in this world. But he tries. He tries to remain human, tries to stay close with his friends, and tries to end the monstrous fiends who did this to him, who perpetuate so much pain. And the odds are overwhelming. He's the only one who can do what he does and Shocker is not only worldwide, but filled with an astounding number of freaks with similar ability to his. Hongou's not an asshole or anti-social, he's just a loner who feels like he's been given the boot by life. He's on the outside looking in and unsure -- and scared -- of all of the abilities he now has and doesn't understand. He doesn't want to risk anyone unnecessarily. He's tragic. That's a crucial element to a Kamen Rider. A Kamen Rider is meant to be sorrowful.
It's great that the production chose to bring Fujioka back when they could have easily told him to piss off, but it's sad that they didn't have the confidence or faith in the audience to make up for that lost time and pick up where they were forced to end off. (What happened to Ruriko!?!? I basically imagined she joined Hongou on many adventures and was like Madeline Swann in Spectre, just reaching a point one mission where she's like "I just can't do this anymore!")
Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider
Hayato's fun and pretty underrated. As much as I'm a "purist" of Ishinomori's Rider, and love those early Hongou episodes, and think they're the quintessential Rider episodes, I actually favor Hayato over Hongou just for how much heavy lifting the awesome Takeshi Sasaki does. Hongou doesn't come back the same Hongou to the same show, so I feel like that old Hongou -- the "real" one -- his story was cut off, is incomplete.
But Sasaki hits the ground running; you have no idea he's a replacement. After following fill-in Taki and understandably minimal stock-footage of Fujioka for a few episodes, he immediately is recognizable as the new lead hero. He's confident, he's funny. That's the big difference. His Ichimonji doesn't seem like he's as burdened by his alteration or his constant fight with Shocker. He hates them. He can get seriously pissed off at their actions. He's not exactly nonchalant, but he can be playful at times in his dealings with Shocker. He can find fun in the moment. (One favorite bit of mine is, as he and Taki are putting on Shocker grunt uniforms they just stole to infiltrate one of their places, he shoots Taki this wild, Michael Keaton-like grin, one that's saying "The crazy shit we get ourselves into, eh?") I wouldn't say he's "goofier" than Hongou, as he's been described, but definitely not as gloomy. Not as tragic. Hongou is Sean Connery. Ichimonji is Roger Moore. Both have their merits, and the lighter take is certainly something viewers wanted at the time, and is something that kept the property thriving. After Fujioka was injured, it was a huge gamble if the show was going to survive. They chanced bringing in a new guy, it managed to work, so I can understand why the production just wanted to take it easy and play it kind of safe and just give the people the adventurous show they wanted.
While Hongou is more of a brooder who doesn't feel he belongs and goes it alone, Hayato realizes his friends are his strength. There's a kind of air of mystery about Hayato, and one thing that's interesting is whenever he saves the day and people are rejoicing, he doesn't stick around for long, like he doesn't allow himself -- or feel he can -- enjoy the happiness. Especially not when there's other people he can be saving out there, and so many people who have been sacrificed. It gives the character his own layer of tragedy; that's another crucial ingredient to a classic Ishinomori-styled Rider, is how tragic they are. They're crapped on, they've had everything taken from them, but they go on, alone, outnumbered, with the odds against them. They're not in it for attention or to go down in history; their struggles are secret, their opponents secret. (I always said Kamen Rider's not a bug for nothin' -- he's one little guy in over his head, ready to be stepped on.)
Hayato is just a good superhero. When watching superhero stuff, sometimes you can't help but wonder what superhero you'd want to rely on in real life. You'd want somebody really dependable, somebody who had confidence and you have confidence in, somebody you know would really save your ass. Superman, Wonder Woman -- they're reliable. I love Batman, he's my favorite superhero, but? I don't think I'd be comfortable counting on him, he's got issues. And I wouldn't be comfortable with someone flippant like The Flash or Green Lantern always having to charge his ring. I love the X-Men, but they're all a mess. Spider-man's just a kid. The Hulk is the most unstable hero ever. So, Superman and Wonder Woman are really the best and only. But I feel Hayato Ichimonji is up there. If he says he'll be there, if he says he'll take care of it, if he says he's going to dismantle an enemy plot, you know he'll do it or die trying. If Shocker takes his eyesight, takes his legs, he's still going to go after them. If you come to him with a crazy story, he's going to believe you. Sasaki plays Hayato with such conviction. And while it's the production getting a little softer, Hayato is shown saving way more people than Hongou; earlier in the show, a character was pretty much dead if they were attacked by Shocker or (especially) turned into a monster, but the show softens and Hayato is shown to successfully help people heal or revert their transformation, but it adds even more to his heroic victories.
To call him "Rider 2" makes you think he's inferior. But for a big portion of the show he's just "Kamen Rider." I think it's time we start calling him just "Kamen Rider" again.
And I know it shouldn't, but Sasaki's real life problems also helped me appreciate him and his contribution to the franchise more.
Shirou Kazami/Kamen Rider V3
It was always hard for me to judge Kazami since I saw V3 after Miyauchi's more larger than life roles in JAKQ and Zubat beforehand. But here's one of the things that Igadevil pointed out to me that I kept in mind when I once rewatched V3: what sets Kazami apart from not only Miyauchi's big persona and later colorful heroes, but his Showa contemporaries, is the revenge angle. Kazami begins the series VERY angry, very isolated. That's an interesting take on a Rider protagonist. It's just unfortunate that '70s TV didn't allow room to explore that more. It's remembered when it needs to be, but otherwise it's business as usual for Kamen Rider. But, even without being one of his larger than life characters, even in his first go at tokusatsu, Hiroshi Miyauchi himself is such a presence and can carry so much on his own.
Jouji Yuuki/Riderman
Jouji brings a sense of continuity to the final episodes, and another interesting take -- he's a dedicated Destron member who's basically bought the hype and was fooled into believing them to be something they never had any intention of being. Even after they try to execute him, he believes in Destron, blaming his betrayal on only a couple of rotten apples. He believes that V3 is evil, and this is the true birth of a Rider vs Rider concept.
Actor Akira Yamaguchi is just a good actor, I always enjoy seeing him pop up in shows, and has a real world-weary, sullen and gloomy expression to him that's perfect for a Kamen Rider, but especially works as a Rider who's such a misguided, confused and sympathetic poor soul.
Keisuke Jin/Kamen Rider X
Ryou Hayami makes this character better than it's written. Keisuke has a lot going for him -- I like how he's quiet, contemplative, thoughtful -- but the show kind of forgets that and gets by on Hayami's abilities alone for big chunks. I like the first several episodes, they play a bit like a Kamen Rider film noir; Keisuke returns home, his dad (one of the biggest asshole fathers in toku, which specializes in asshole fathers) gets him mixed up in a terrible situation and he has to contend with his girlfriend possibly being with the villains. He loses his dad, who was his guidance after being surgically altered, so he's on his own figuring out his strange powers. X's first episodes, thematically, also come closest to those initial episodes of the first series.
The show decides to quickly resolve these storylines in favor of bringing in rival character Apollo Geist. (I'm not the biggest fan of Apollo Geist, but I know a lot of people love the character. He's a cool idea, marred by bad casting, IMO, and he's not as interesting as the more personal and direct drama Keisuke was undergoing.) The noir-y feel dies with Keisuke's girlfriend and the show becomes a standard toku.
One thing I always found interesting about Keisuke -- and I don't know if it was written or something Hayami decided on -- is that he'll pray when he finds a dead victim. Keisuke's spiritual, that's an interesting touch.
Daisuke "Amazon" Yamamoto/Kamen Rider Amazon
Amazon's just kind of boring, as a character and as a show. He's the jungle guy who can't speak for a huge chunk of his (24 episode long!) series, but the show never uses that to make him seem as alienated or even as possibly dangerous as he should be. Nope, by episode two, he's made friends with a kid and everyone is A-OK. The show being so short and rushed, his progression into being more civilized doesn't quite work the way the show wants it to. The show and Amazon's growth is truncated, so we're left with one weird son of a bitch of a show and Rider.
Shigeru Jou/Kamen Rider Stronger
This is the kind of character you'd expect Miyauchi to play, but Shigeru Araki's great, anyway. He's a good actor on his own, but it's eerie how he looks kind of like a combination of nearly every Rider actor before him -- he looks a bit like Fujioka, but there's a strong Miyauchiness to him. It's eerie, but fitting of the "last" Rider, which wanted to evoke all of its predecessors.
We don't get a ton of info or motivation for Jou -- he undergoes the cyborg operation under false pretenses to get revenge for a friend -- but he's just a true comic-book, larger than life personality that just wants to kick some bad guy ass. People like to compare Tendou to him, but that's wrong. Jou's boastful and arrogant to bad guys, sure. Tendou's an ass to EVERYONE. (Everyone except his sister, who worships him, and Hiyori, who's similarly an ass to everyone.)
Yuriko Misaki/Tackle
She counts, dammit. I love Riderman, but if he counts as a Kamen Rider, Tackle counts even more. (Riderman's only surgical alteration is his arm! Yuriko undergoes the full thing, same as Shigeru!) Yuriko's a great addition to the show, a fresh change of pace. She's funny, she's likable, she tries her damnedest to help Shigeru. And while she's leagues above the Tachibana Racing Girls, the show and the times were just too afraid to let her do too much, certainly never anything that would outdo Stronger. Still, she shouldn't be underestimated or overlooked. She's important. Her character dies tragically trying to save the day. She's not considered a Rider out of pure sexism. (Every other Rider has died and returned. I guess Shocker puts their powerful turbines in the testicles, because you only get to be an immortal Rider if you have a dong.)
But she's awesome, she's fun, she has a great rapport with Shigeru. She's lively and kick-ass, he's an entertaining and large personality -- together, they're kinda like the toku Steed and Peel.
And, again, knowing that actress Kyoko Okada died so young -- and now that Stronger actor Shigeru Araki has passed, as well -- it casts a sad shadow over the show and character(s).
I think it's time to finally just start calling her Kamen Rider Tackle. It's only sexism that blocks it.
Hiroshi Tsukuba/Kamen Rider (Skyrider)
Honestly? This guy has one of the largest episode counts, but I couldn't really tell you anything about him. His character's lacking and actor Hiroaki Murakami is really uncompelling. The ONE interesting thing I thought the show was heading towards -- that Hiroshi was the son of the Neo-Shocker villain played by that hammy dude from Goggle V -- ended up being a fake-out, so...*shrug*
Kazuya Oki/Kamen Rider Super 1
Against my better judgment, I enjoy Super 1. I think it's goofy fun. It's not really Kamen Rider-y, it's kind of a proto-Metal Hero, but I find it entertaining. Kazuya's...not the most memorable character, and actor Shunsuke Takasugi is not the strongest actor, so the character isn't able to slide by on his strength. (Since I brought up the Metal Heroes, look at Retsu Ichijoji. If he didn't have someone of Kenji Ohba's level playing him, would he be memorable as he's written?)
The show was more fun when it had the whole martial arts surroundings, and Kazuya and Takasugi came off better in that part of the show. Too bad the villains of those earlier episodes aren't as memorable as their replacements, the Jin Dogma, so the better episodes would at least have better villains.
Ryou Murasame/Kamen Rider ZX
Shun Sugata's awesome. He's a more bad-ass Rider than what this special deserved. Because it's just...I don't understand this special. It's introducing a new Rider, but is mostly a clip show, and treats the new footage detailing the origin of the new Rider like an already existing show to make part of the clip show and...bah. It's an underwhelming mess. Sugata gives Murasame a rage beyond the script; he makes Ryou's anger seem explosive, dangerous. Sugata REALLY needed something closer in tone to Shin Kamen Rider. I would have liked to seen more of ZX, but this underwhelming special basically put the nail in the coffin of the style of Rider they wanted ZX to be.
Koutarou Minami/Kamen Rider Black
Koutarou truly was a new hero, a new legend. Even though ZX aired just a few years before him, that production looked like it came from the mid-70s. Black was hip, Black was fresh, Black was modern. And so was Koutarou. At the time the youngest Rider, the angriest, the one who's had so much taken from him, and continued to have things taken from him throughout the show. Black wasn't going to shy away from Koutarou's pain and brush it aside, it was going to be an ongoing issue for him to overcome.
Koutarou hits a lot of the familiar beats from the '70s series, but we get them done in new ways, suited for our young Rider. The big new angle for Koutarou is the tragedy of how he was cut down while so young, but also that he was just an average guy. '70s Riders were either scholars or scientists or wizards in every sport. Koutarou was a kid. He was on his own. Golgom had a strong hold over ordinary society, so he was massively in over his head. But he had to fight. He needed to fight. (Another interesting thing is that Koutarou would need to become enraged to transform. I thought that was an interesting touch for our younger, ordinary hero.) Another thing that greatly helped add to this sense of danger was that Black was the first show to be truly free of any of its predecessors -- he wasn't going to have Rider 1 or 2 come and bail him out. It was one of RX's MANY, MANY mistakes to bring them in and ruin that.
Tetsuo Kurata is awesome, and it's really hard to believe that this was his first acting gig, and that he basically stumbled into auditioning for the role. He makes the most of the role and creates a modern hero worthy of the title. In my opinion, Kamen Rider Black comes closest to best capturing Ishinomori's Kamen Rider concept.
Koutarou Minami/Kamen Rider (Black) RX
Make no mistake, this is a different Koutarou than the one in RX.
I just always think of Black's finale. Him standing in the rain after killing his brother. His sitting in the shop abandoned by his sisters. It's dark, it's bleak, but he rides off into daylight. Maybe he'll find some happiness in the future...
How the hell he ended up living with that sitcom family, I have no idea. Now, I could understand Koutarou trying to carve out some happiness for himself. Maybe he really enjoys the Saharas' company, maybe they even feel like family to him. He finds love with Reiko. I could picture him TRYING his damnedest to lead a new life, forget his past and his mutation. Koutarou's much goofier in this show. Maybe some of that is happiness, but a lot of it is him putting on this kind of Clark Kent dork act for the sake of his loved ones.
Whereas the '70s Riders were loners who devoted their lives to wiping out Shocker/Destron/etc., in all of its forms, Koutarou accomplished destroying Golgom. He didn't need to ride the world for the rest of his life, he had a chance to find some happiness. He does, but then he's faced with a new threat and brought into a new battle against his will. And rather than run away from the life he's built since the events of Black, rather than distance himself from those he loves, he stays. He puts up a front, feigns some goofiness here and there, but he keeps them close. And even that's not good enough. The Sahara parents are killed at the end of the series. This is all doubly tragic for this character.
But the show is just not made well. It leans far too heavily into comedy and fantasy and sci-fi and all of this stuff that's just so out of place for Kamen Rider, especially a character like Koutarou, especially when it's building off of something with the same world as Black's. (It's no coincidence that the franchise died after this show. Creative sloppiness. Creative cockiness. Creative greed.) This is what really bugs me about RX...it had all of this interesting stuff to explore, but chose to ignore it in favor of just being big and light and funny. The ingredients were there, but they never had any intention of making it a true and honest sequel to Black. So, you're left to fill in a lot of these gaps and make the leap; the show's not interested in exploring Koutarou keeping up this Kent routine, it's just an excuse for Koutarou to be silly or be easier to put into silly situations. It could have worked with better writing, but doesn't. Last time I tried to watch RX -- and I didn't make it far -- Koutarou was even acting like a goofball when he was alone, so you can't even blame all of his goofiness on being a cover. So he just feels like a completely different character instead.
You know what? Maybe I should just start looking at this show as Koutarou, after the events of Black, began taking massive doses of anti-depressants.
Thursday, February 15, 2018
Spandex: it's a privilege, not a right.
I've seen a lot of people on Twitter talk about what they think are the worst Sentai designs -- it's a lazy topic, but one that's kind of been popular lately. I wanted to throw in my two cents, but at my own leisure and not have to run it through English-to-Prince at Google Translate that Twitter requires you to use. ("Y U h8 DenGman?") So, here we go, in chronological order.
Goranger
I ain't gonna lie -- it took me a very long time to get used to these suits. And it's not like I was prejudiced against '70s designs or designs from the pre-Bioman shows. I remember having Sentai retrospective books when I was a kid and loving the way Battle Fever and Denjiman looked. (Yes, even as a kid I was a weirdo who liked the Battle Fever designs.) Come to think of it, I must have had books from that period where Goranger and JAKQ were not included as Super Sentai, because I don't really remember seeing them. Huh...
Anyway, I always thought the Goranger look was a little off-putting, with the HUMONGOUS helmets, that make them look like bobbleheads, and the strange, protruding visor designs. There's also little things I question like the way Blue, Yellow and Green have black boots and gloves instead of white like Red and Pink -- it makes them stick out and it clashes to me. The chest design being broken up to indicate what number they are on the team -- like Pink having four stripes and Green having five -- makes them seem a little busy. I like the shades of color they used. They're not exactly my favorite suits, but they're the first, what can you say? But you know what helps? The way the suit actors carry themselves. Despite having a weird design, they still manage to look cool in the show, thanks to the suit actors. (Niibori, most especially. Of course.) You can find a lot of still photos where they just look really cool, despite the design's shortcomings.
JAKQ
I used to be too puzzled by the seemingly random card-based designs -- I guess having card-related cover names for these spies was supposed to sound cool -- but, anyway, I like the core four's suits. The orange capes are kinda weird, and something about the design makes the suit actors look short, but I think they look cool and are far more pleasant to the eye than Goranger's suits. Big One's a sore thumb. Look how plain that suit is! I get why he's white, as in he possesses all of the other JAKQ members' powers, so it's kind of like all of the colors going into him = white. But it's just a weird mix to have a suit that's 85% white, and the rest rainbow. Speaking of which -- they just needed to have the balls to put Heart Queen's pink on his suit. They use yellow instead, I guess thinking pink would have been too girly to put on him. Well, guess what? You still have fans calling him the GLAAD Ranger. Joke's on you, JAKQ.
Battle Fever J
I've always loved these suits. I can get why they're not everyone's thing, but I don't understand why there's such hatred for them. Four out of five "Worst Sentai Suits" lists will include BFJ. They're unique, they look appropriately comic book-y, they work in the flag designs and world elements well. (It makes far more sense for these guys -- secret agents of the world -- to be wearing flags than JAKQ being cards.)
Denjiman
Another team who always finds themselves on Worst Suits lists. I don't mind the Denjiman suits. I remember having a Super Sentai compilation book when I was a kid, and seeing the photos of Denjiman and thinking they looked cool -- I especially liked their helmets, with all of that neat mechanical stuff in the forehead. The suits are a little plain, but they try to pay homage to Goranger without getting as crazy as those suits -- the white stripes on each member's chest denoting their rank on the team.
Sunvulcan
I've always liked their helmets. Suits aren't bad, I just never understood why they have the V theme when it's a three man team. (Sunvulcan being the "third" Super Sentai, hence the "San-vulcan" pun and everything.)
Goggle V
These guys...ain't pretty. Their suits make them look like Pilgrims, their helmets look squished, giving their "face" a kind of unhappy or what I usually refer to as constipated look. Between their suit designs, crazy gym weapons and ugly poses, Goggle V was kind of daring you to like them. These suits are truly generic -- when MMPR was at the height of its popularity, there were a TON of cheap knock-off toys, and most of them all looked like Goggle V. THAT's how generic they are.
Dynaman
Ditching the cloth suits results in better action scenes, and also helps with certain designs. Like, I think a lot of people's problem with Denjiman isn't really the design, but just how baggy their cloth suits make the design look. Look at all of the teams up until Dynaman and Dynaman just looks slim and shiny and colorful and cool. People like to make fun of their baseball uniform look, but be honest -- you saw these suits hundreds of times and never realized they were baseball uniforms until you read that tidbit from the show's production history.
Bioman
Honestly, I've always gone back and forth on these suits, but have always leaned towards the "I don't like them" side. I love the electronic junk in their forehead, but I think that's what led to what I DON'T like about the helmets, which is the top head is humongous and the rest of the face looks squished. Look how tiny the chin and lips are. Look at the Bioman helmet and try to picture a human face, it's all out of proportion. How'd the stunt guys even see out of them when that forehead pushes the visor down to the nostril area?
Anything bad people say about the Changeman suits should go towards the Bioman suits instead. Bioman don't just have sports bras, they have, like, cropped sports bras. And then they have all of those pieces of flair on their cropped sports bras. And then they have the white on their legs, giving the male suits boxer shorts and the females a bikini. And there's something about the colored necks that throws things off.
Another weird thing about the Bioman suits is how they get lighter halfway through the show. They're better looking early on -- Green Two's forest green versus the pea-soup green he wears later on.
Sad thing is, whenever there's drawings of the Bioman suits -- in comics or in promotional material or on merchandise -- they look pretty damn awesome, like real futuristic superheroes. If only that could have come across that way in live action.
Changeman
Who do you think you're talking to? It would be very sad to me if I didn't like the Changeman designs, considering how much I worship everything else about the show. But I love 'em, I think they're lean and clean, with a good use of colors; they each have little things that don't necessarily match up with the other members, but they still all go together, forming one coherent team design. There's no mistaking that they're all on the same team. (I could picture another team trying to be matchy-matchy; instead of just the guys having the yellow coloring, they'd all have it; all of the animal symbols on the helmet would be the same color; Mermaid and Phoenix would be made more generic by taking away what makes them stand apart from the guys and making them solid, instead of the interesting choice of inverting the colors.)
The big complaint is the "wife beater," but...really? The Bioman design has something very similar, but is cluttered with a design, so I guess people never realize it, because nobody ever talks about it. The "wife beater" is most likely a holdover from Changeman's original design, which looked more like leotards and athletic wear -- the '80s loved basing things off of sports and exercise -- but, to me, I just kind of look at it as being a military uniform vest. "But it's a tiny vest then! It doesn't reach to the belt!" Well, that's a designer's choice. That would be too much white and then they're just look generic or like abandoned designs. (Or would TRULY be wife-beaters if they covered the entire torso.)
I just think they look cool, man. I've looked through a lot of Sentai books -- pretty much any photo you find of Changeman, they just look cool.
Flashman
Basically a cooler, better version of the Bioman suits. I've always liked the use of black, it really helps make the suits pop and not be so plain. I always thought these suits were just so sleek and well made and I think they really hold up.
Maskman
Maskman's suits have been accused of being generic, but I disagree with that. I especially love their helmets, which have a lot going on, but is restrained so they're not cluttered or busy. The white lines on the helmet are a nice touch, and they have the electronic forehead the way Bioman does, but are done in a smaller, improved way. The suits have just the right amount of white and color breaking up the white, so they're not as plain as a Denjiman. I think they're just really cool, subdued designs. Maskman was kinda attempting to be a little more grounded, and these suits fit that idea. They're subtle.
Liveman
The best animal helmets of the franchise. They're so damn cool and creative. Every subsequent animal team rips off of what Liveman did, and none of them come close. Even Bison and Sai's helmets are cool, when the later-joining heroes never usually match with the team or have the same creative quality.
Much has been made about their all white legs, but it never really bothered me or stood out. The length of the boot's colors, the colored gem in the belt -- the whole suit design just flows so well that the all-white legs was never an issue for me. And like I've said on Twitter and got crap for -- I have to wonder if the white legs are a nod to Daisuke Shima's biker punk past, since the bosozoku favor those baggy white pants. The white arms of the Liveman suits look sleeveless, too, like a vest. Honestly? I was watching a Yokohama Ginbae concert where they all had the white baggy pants and sleeveless leather vests and for some reason the Liveman designs jumped into my head. And Daisuke Shima wasn't even with them at that concert to perform his song with them, so I didn't have Liveman on the mind!
Turboranger
I like the helmets more than their suits, but never saw the problem with their suits. There's something about the design that makes the suit actors look a little chunky, but it's not a bad design, IMO. I also think the Turboranger helmets are the best of the car-themed helmets. They're unmistakably vehicle-based, but it's subtle. Subtly is something designers forget, and subtle does not equal generic.
The weirdest thing about these designs, if you ask me? That they were Toei's choice for the tenth anniversary. I don't know how you look at Battle Fever and Turbo's predecessors and decide the best way to celebrate is cars, but...maybe that's me.
Fiveman
I hate myself for liking these suits. The V-theme is in your face, but works here, the silver V being a cool centerpiece. The helmets are on the plain side, but I like how they have simple icons indicating the school subject each member teaches. I feel like nowadays they'd go overboard in obviousness, like having Red be in a karate gi or Pink being a giant calculator or something like that. Black would be fighting with a giant calligraphy brush.
Jetman
I basically only like the helmets of these designs. And even then I have a problem! I don't care for how they did the bird eyes on the helmet. Some people might think the undies is a cool nod to a traditional superhero look, but they just look weird here, and so does the design coming off the shoulders. I don't get why Jetman, which was supposed to be the end of an era and targeting older fans, had such questionable, unimaginative, kiddie designs all around. The heroes, the horrendous villain and monster designs. Damn. You have Keita Amemiya, make HIM the designer. (He only did Veronica's design.)
Zyuranger
I wasn't one of those kids who was into dinosaurs. I don't know why dinosaurs are supposed to be such a mind-blowing thing for kids, why kids like 'em so much. So dinosaur heroes don't appeal to me, and the Zyuranger just don't look cool. I have an attachment to their suits based off my dark, dirty history as an MMPR fan, but that's it. I don't like the diamonds on the chest. I don't like lips on the helmets, so those teams always have an instant strike against them. Dragon Ranger's all right, I think the shield helps.
Dairanger
Cool and stylish suits that do a good job incorporating the mythological animals, but also at conveying the Chinese theme without looking silly or cliched. Kiba Ranger's a bit of a let-down in that I don't think he goes with the others well, but is a cool enough design on his own. (Maybe I just have a thing against Kiba Ranger for not only being the obnoxious Kou, but for dredging up memories of Tommy and the fact that when White Ranger came along, MMPR started going down the tubes.)
Kakuranger
Does for ninjas what Dairanger's suits did for kung-fu fighters. Just very cool, very sleek suits. Very understated, almost simple -- appropriate, considering they're stealthy ninjas -- and somehow without being generic. The Bandai designer earned their paycheck this year.
Ohranger
Never liked these things. Even when I was a kid into PR, when they switched to Zeo/Oh is when I stopped watching. Coincidence? I remember standing in the toy aisle, looking at the Zeo toys and just being like "In the words of the immortal J.W. Pepper, 'You's is ugly.'"
The creepy colored lips. The laziness of just slapping a shape on the front of the helmet and calling it a day. (The Playstation control faces, as the Japanese fans have called them.) The bib. The gaudy gold. They were meant to look royal and Egyptian, but they don't. But in a curious unintentional throwback to Goranger, the suit actors carry themselves well -- they move with such force and power -- and the action scenes are awesome, so you can almost forget the designs.
Carranger
It had to be tempting to go with stupid designs for the franchise's first all-out comedy, but they surprisingly didn't. The Carranger designs get the job done. They go hog-wild with the car theme, without being stupid or overkill.
Megaranger
Megaranger was meant to be a kind of throwback to the sci-fi and scientific- and tech-themed Sentai shows of the '80s, and these designs are meant to be a modern update of the suits found in those shows. I get the most '80s vibes from the helmets, which are like a less detailed Maskman to me. The suits are OK, but I never really liked the Kraft Cheese Singles around their neck, or colored squares across the chest (Mega Silver's suspiciously Yugande-like green grids looked cooler).
Gingaman
Honestly, it took me a while to warm up to these suits, but I just really like them now. I always thought the helmets were cool, but for a while I had a problem with the torso. (No, not because of the Charlie Brown stripes. Can we retire that? People have been making that joke since 1998. It's a tribal look.) People talk about Liveman's bare legs, but Gingaman has it worse with the bare torso. It really seems a bit like "OK, we'll come up with something unique later. Let's hit the pachinko joints!" And then they forgot until the last minute, the sketch was uncolored, and they were like "Yeah, just squiggle, and there! Finished! Whoo-hoo, let's hit the bar!"
Bull Black's design, though, is inexcusable. I HATE that design. The bananas on his helmet don't help.
GoGoFive
Just as Gingaman was mocked for the Charlie Brown look, these suits were mocked for looking like peppermints. These designs are a bit simplistic, but not forgettable or lame. I think it was basically trying to keep with the show's attempt at a more grounded, realistic feel. They didn't have outlandish or loud designs, they were just simple. Colorful. The main distinction between each member being the visor, which bears the outline of the badge representing their field of work. And don't forget GoGoFive's cool through-the-visor concept, where we get a chance to see the actors in-suit, and the protective breathing mask they're meant to wear within. (The actors of this show logged more in-suit time than any of the actors in any other toku.)
I always thought the GoGoFive outfits should have made the white on the suits retroreflective, like a rescuer's uniform, but maybe that wouldn't have made much difference.
Timeranger
I like the helmets (mostly because of the black that lights up), and the suits are nice and shiny, but they just seemed a little too plain to me. Repeating the visor's pendulum design directly below on the chest? That's it? Kinda lazy. And I'll never understand Yasuko Kobayashi's love for the double Red -- Time Fire looking like a frowning Time Red just makes no sense to me.
Gaoranger
Pretty offensive suits, in my opinion. Not the best animal helmets, the animal emblems are ugly (look at that belt buckle, ugh!), all topped off by the Miss America sash. (JAKQ and Ninninger made sashes work; Gaoranger does not.) Continuing the tradition of having an anniversary series with bizarre and/or ugly design choices.
Hurricaneger
I've always gone back and forth on these designs. I like the suit portion, especially the gray arms with the netting. I like a couple of their helmets (not the way they open, though). The Gouraiger are cool looking with their darker coloring and the use of black, and the franchise's first of only a couple times at using an insect theme. Maybe it's just the show they're attached to that keeps me from liking them. As it is, there's just indifference.
Abaranger
Not being fond of the dinosaur theme, I really rolled my eyes in '03 when Abaranger news was hitting. But these designs just kept it clean and simple and, as far as the core three are concerned, barely dinosaur seeming to me. And as simple as it was, I really liked Abare Mode. (Abare Max was pretty cool looking, too, and one of the best looking power-ups, IMO.) I guess Abaranger's setting just helped more, the parallel Dino Earth where dinosaurs thrived. Makes more sense than the mess that is Zyuranger or the idiocy that is Kyoryuger.
Dekaranger
These designs never won me over, but I don't quite hate them. It's a neat idea to have the helmet with the badge and the sirens and stuff, but the visors seem like they're just lifted from previous Sentai designs -- mostly Megaranger -- and the mouthpieces are HUGE and odd looking. (On the up-side, at least they don't have lips.) They look like generic '50s B-Movie aliens to me. The giant number on the front, giving the suit one black arm is another strange choice, IMO. I think SWAT Mode looks best.
Magiranger
These suits are like if Jetman boinked Ohranger. They're just unappealing to me. Simplistic visor... I think it was a mistake to make the heroines' legs white, when the guys' are colored. It doesn't really flow. Magi Shine is one of the most hideous designs in toku history. Huge, ugly, stupid looking...glittery. And Magiranger's Legend Mode brings the Magiranger to Shine's level of ugly.
Boukenger
Probably my least favorite Sentai designs. If there's a show whose suits I hate, I'll at least reach a point where I either just get used to the design or will, at the very least, like the helmet or something. Not these uglies. They're just hideous from top to bottom.
You name it, it sucks. The protruding visor. The poorly conceived headlight helmets. The odd mouth shape, with the grates on 'em. The ugly silver junk on their shoulders and wrists. The white straight down the middle, like they're being pulled apart or something. The Quiznos logo on their chest. And let us not forget the hideous design and color scheme of Bouken Silver, one of the biggest eyesores toku has seen.
And Boukenger doesn't stop there! I find ALL of their designs to be ugly as shit. Their weapons, their base, their uniforms, their mecha. Especially their mecha, which looks like a bunch of junk randomly picked up by a magnet.
Gekiranger
I initially thought the main three's designs were kinda plain, and that the helmets looked like they were from a Chinese Sentai knockoff or a local hero or something, but the suits grew on me once I saw them in action. They ARE plain, but I think the idea was to just keep things simple. They saved the bells and whistles for Violet and Chopper, both who have pretty creative and original looks.
Go-onger
Ugh. I like a couple of their helmets, like Blue and Black's, and Go-on Wings' look is all right, but the Go-on suits are the first (of several) that actually looks like they were designed by a kid. Just stupid looking, putting anything on there they could think of. "Cars! Vroom, vroom -- they're going to have tires! And seatbelts that look like suspenders! Oh, and maybe throw in some random animals, too! Yeah, that'd be boss!"
Shinkenger
Although not at all what I always envisioned a samurai Sentai to look like, I like these suits. They're bold, they're clean, I love the use of black where white's usually used. I have to say, though, I wonder what these helmets look like if you were born and raised in Japan. Is it as stupid as an American hero with "FIRE!" written on his face would be? Because the kanji visors aren't all that stylized -- they could have done them in a way that was more subtle, like you had to look or unfocus to make out the word.
Shinken Gold sucks, though. Between the squished looking helmet, the gold tinfoil paired with blue, and Jiro Okamoto's paunch, he throws off the team's tight, stylish look.
Goseiger
I still find these pretty weird designs for them to go with; it's kind of surprising they went with these in this day and age. I pretty much assume Toei felt a little bold here; it was the strange but promising time when there wasn't a Power Rangers to contend with. (Disney lost interest; Saban had yet to get it back.) I always thought Power Rangers hindered a lot of what Sentai could do, in not only content, but in design, as well.
So, with freedom, Toei goes a little nuts and gives you these weird designs. People like to say they're retro or a throwback, but they're just too much. I like the helmets, but the suits themselves...you got those weird matador looking jackets, the priest collar -- with the plain white legs, they look like a pervert flasher wearing a jacket, but no pants. The heroines' skirts really needed to be their color, too. Like I said: pantsless.
Gokaiger
They pretty much just took a play out of the Shinkenger book here, going for bold and cool, using black once again. I wasn't thrilled to hear about the pirate motif, but they incorporate it here nicely.
Go-busters
I've long wanted Sentai to push itself in new design directions. Beginning with Ryuki, Kamen Rider took a Sentai-y approach, distinguishing each Rider with their own color. I thought Sentai could have a similar leather-y look like that. I always thought a Blue SWAT look for a Sentai team would be awesome. There's a lot of room to play, but again: I always suspected Power Rangers required them to stick to the familiar.
With Go-busters, Toei intended to "reboot" the franchise. We all know they failed, but at least we got some fresh suit designs out of it. I think the Go-busters suits are pretty cool and sharp, the use of silver and black a nice change of pace, giving them a subdued and appropriately low-key spy look. My big problem with them is forcing the animal motif onto the designs, though -- it just doesn't fit, they needed to just come up with an original design. They don't want to commit to the lazy animal theme, so it's just kinda bare and throws things off.
Kyoryuger
The show itself is so loud and obnoxious, it only makes sense for their suits to be loud and obnoxious, as well. These things...they just threw everything at 'em, not giving a shit if it worked at all. They take the worst part of every previous bad design -- Gao's sash, Deka's weird mouthplates, Bouken's random metallic junk, etc. -- and combine them all into being the Supreme Ugly Design. (Supreme Ugly Design should have been the name of Red's Carnival form, which brings the ugliness of the past decade's mecha to a human design.)
ToQger
If Kyoryuger had too much of a bad thing going for it, ToQger has too little of a bad thing. They look like the Sentai pajamas for kids. (Just because the ToQger were kids doesn't mean their suits had to be cheap and lazy and UNIMAGINATIVE.) How did these things pass inspection? How did the numerous people at Toei and Bandai, upon seeing these suits, not have my immediate and initial reaction of laughter? (Really: I laughed at the suits when I first saw them. And then shook my head in shame.)
Ninninger
Nice looking suits -- well, at least the main five. Too bad the show wrapped around them is so mind-numbingly dumb -- mind-dumbing. Star Ninger is stupider than shit, though, he really matched the show.
Zyuohger
ToQger 2.0
Kyuranger
Nice and creative, with some truly impressive craftsmanship to bring them to life. Bonus points for the awesome idea of the starry visors. Too bad I can't stand the show they're in. (And there's one suit I really dislike: Yellow's and his stupid needle-nose visor.)
Lupinranger + Patranger
Lupinranger are the bastard sons of the Timeranger and Patranger look like local heroes, or from a fake Sentai like the Tomica Heroes or like the lame stuff the square cops of Demolition Man wore. Also, there's omething about the Patranger suits that makes them all look very short and very fat.
Wednesday, January 24, 2018
Jetman's Excellent Adventures & Series Wrap-up
TOEI TV HERO ZUKAN VOL. 2 -- CHOJIN SENTAI JETMAN
Toei released this in late '93, almost two full years after the series concluded. I have no idea why. (Promote VHS releases? Really no idea.) It's an hour-long clip show, basically, but it's shocking that they got Kotaro Tanaka and Rika Kishida to film new scenes as Mr. and Mrs. Tendo. (Looks like the new segments are filmed on video, though.) It's also shocking that Inoue wrote this thing and oversaw it.
The new bits are nice; some vegetables from Raita's farm are delivered to the Tendos along with a letter announcing Satsuki's pregnancy. This gets Ryu and Kaori to reminisce about their Jetman experience, kicking off the mostly clip show which highlights every Jetman move, weapon, mecha move, weapon, villain, EACH INDIVIDUAL MONSTER OF THE WEEK and the key story points of the series. This thing covers everything.
The flashbacks are interrupted by the cries of a baby -- Ryu and Kaori's infant, Gai. Thus ends this special, with Ryu and Kaori taking lil' Gai out in his stroller.
Overall, not much to say about this thing. The new material here is very, very brief, but I think an interesting and nice epilogue or coda to the series. Until Gokaiger, anyway.
CHOJIN SENTAI JETMAN: TOKI O KAKETE
As far as I know, Inoue had no involvement with it (hence some of the inconsistencies, like the Tendous having a baby girl and not a boy). Publications like Toei Hero Max, when they had a big Jetman retrospective, would mention the manga, but highlight Inoue's novelizations more. So, I ignored this thing for all this time, because I wasn't really interested if Inoue didn't have a say. To me, it's basically glorified fan-fiction...
And that's exactly how it ends up reading. (I caved and read this bastard for these posts.) Too much of it is callbacks and references and cute little nods that are meant to be what I refer to as fan-nip. Everything is a little too cutesy and on the nose. Ryu and Kaori have a daughter (the manga creator admits to ignoring Inoue's Toei Hero Zukan) named AYA, you know, after Aya Odagiri. Raita and Satsuki are expecting a son they plan to name Gai. Radeige's spirit returns to possess Toranza's paralyzed body. Gai's replacement, Jeff, is an amazing Gary Stu who saves the day again and again and goes on to become everybody's favorite. When things look bleak, the characters are bailed out by the ghosts of Gai and Rie. The Neo-Jetman even make appearances.
It all just tries so hard to make you go "Yay! So-and-so is back! Hey, that's a reference! Hey! I remember that from the show!" So, it's basically as bad as any piece of entertainment from Hollywood from the past decade. It's like J.J. Abrams wrote this sucker.
Speaking of writers, I have to wonder if Naruhisa Arakawa worked on this. Radeige kidnaps infant Aya, forces her to grow and makes her his "daughter" who fights by his side. There's always been comparisons between Jetman and Abaranger, and this really reminded me of the way Dezumozoria uses Mahoro's infant to grow and act as his offspring and messenger.
The drawings are lazy and impossible to decipher at times. The story makes the mistake of sidelining Kaori, leaving her at home to play the role of worried wife. Seriously, I'd expect it if this was a live-action movie made 10 years after the fact and Rika Kishida was busy or retired or something, but it's a damn comic -- why isn't she given anything to do, why isn't she still on the team?! I mean, Lil' Aya is kidnapped and she's just going to do nothing?
The only thing that really got me to read this was finding that Toranza was involved. Like I said previously, I think it would have been awesome if Gokaiger had picked up this thread and brought Toranza back. Radeige's spirit -- since he was shown to be into sorcery, since he did threaten to curse people -- possessing Toranza's body is one of the manga's better ideas. (Imagine if Gokaiger had used this comic as a source: it would mean Hirose playing Radeige!) It unfortunately leads to nothing but predictable turns, like trying to recreate the "what's my muthafuckin' name" bit from the show, which they should have left alone.
As for Gai's replacement? Ugh. They want Jeff Kenzaki (Kenjacky!) to be cool -- he's a rock 'n roller, man! From America, FUCK, YEAH! -- but at the same time, he's depicted as being a bit of a goofball, totally fanboying over Ako. (Who, remember, is an idol now.) I guess maybe Ako could be more power-pop, someone like Nanase Aikawa (who for some inexplicable reason once had a bosozoku following) -- that fits her character more -- and less what you really think of when you hear "idol," but, still...the point stands that Jeff's not cool, he's not funny. He also dies about 200 times in this story but manages to keep coming back, because he's the totally awesomer replacement of the awesome Gai, and don't you forget it! Everybody pretty much dies over and over again but inexplicably returns, because they now possess the power of being cartoons, so the action has to go over-the-top and everybody has to get impaled on something at least once. Stupid.
It was long and dull and, in the end, pointless. I'd like to cut it slack since, as I said, a Sentai follow-up was something new, but it was just a wasted opportunity. It feels like they did it for the sake of doing it and not out of a genuine attempt to follow-up on a show people really loved and wanted more of. I'm just going to go back to ignoring this thing.
GOKAIGER 28
Inoue returns to Sentai after an eleven-year absence with an episode that not only resurrects his most popular character, but is also an unsubtle critique of Gokaiger's characters and premise.
This episode's significant. A lot of what Gokaiger did goes really unappreciated; it was ambitious. This episode landed on Jetman's 20th anniversary. Nobody -- NOBODY -- in 1991/1992 would have ever expected to see a Sentai show that brought back old characters, and certainly nobody would have expected to ever see Gai Yuuki again. He died. It was a controversial ending, but one that you know the showmakers stuck by. It was thrilling to see even just the opening credits of this episode, seeing the names "Yuuki Gai - Wakamatsu Toshihide." It's a bold and ambitious episode that the other anniversary shows were either too safe (Mebius), too disrespectful (Decade) or too unceremonious (Gaoranger, Boukenger) to ever even consider attempting.
Nobody would have ever imagined that one day we'd see an adventure where Gai Yuuki comes down from Heaven to protect his old teammates and guide the latest Sentai team. He instantly one-ups each of the Gokaiger -- not Luka, really, which is interesting. She knows what he's up to. It's a little reminiscent of the way Toranza showed up and anonymously one-upped each guy on the Jetman team. I love that Gai criticizes the modern-era Reds.
I love that his whole purpose for this ghostly journey is to prevent the Gokaiger from disturbing the other Jetman members. It highlights Gokaiger's premise; the Gokaiger tend to be pushy, acting as if they're owed the Great Powers. One can imagine the rude or disruptive ways they'd approach one of the Jetman, a team with a tragic past that should be handled delicately. (It also makes you wonder if fighting alongside Black Condor in the Great Legend War opened old wounds between the Jetman team; another case supporting my old claim that Toei missed out on having cool comics or novels further detailing the old heroes' participation in the Legendary War. It could have been Sentai's version of Kamen Rider Spirits.)
Most of the other Sentai Legends awarded the Gokaiger their team's Great Power by being won over by an action of the Gokaiger, but here Gai makes the Gokaiger learn a lesson on their own before he deems them worthy. His role here's like a quirky martial-arts master who uses unconventional methods to steer his students, to the student's frustration.
It also seems to be the first episode in which Marvelous displays fear and doesn't have the answers, Inoue bringing some of his usual taste for showing a hero's flaws. Marvelous up until that point had been over-confident, so it was nice to see him in a different way.
The villain of the week Inoue creates, a bounty hunter, suffers from a weak design, but I like that he, too, makes a comment on basically how sucky the Zangyaku villains are. (Because they are. They've always been the worst part of Gokaiger.) Living only for combat and cash, the bounty hunter challenges each Zangyaku member to a challenge, which none of them accept. He scoffs. Point made. (The bounty hunter is voiced by Tomokazu Sugita -- Kiva's Kivat III, bringing another Inoue connection.)
It's also the rare Gokaiger episode that let the past hero transform, and here they actually got back the original Black Condor suit-actor, Naoki Oofuji, which is awesome.
All in all, a strong episode which is a balm on Jetman's own finale, addressing the loss of this fan favorite character and the impact it had on his surviving friends, giving the scenario its moment to let you take it in and spend one last moment with Gai. (The Jetman finale reserving his death for the final scene doesn't leave time to let it sink in and have it make in impact on you OR the characters.) Put simply: the episode gives you CLOSURE that the series lacked.
_____
And that wraps that up! How did I feel about Jetman this go-around? Well, it helped to rewatch it in the same year as a show as soulless and vapid and pointless and plotless and villain-less and mindless and stake-free and such silly fluff as Kyuranger. (Jetman's about something. Man, remember when tokusatsu was ABOUT stuff?!?! Not just bad attempts at lulz and shilling shitty gimmicks?) The beginning of this rewatch was a bit of a rocky start, because I just kept thinking of all my fanboy wishes and recasts and hang-ups I've always thought would improve the show. Once I tried to let that go and just enjoy the show for what it is, I was able to sail more smoothly.
Of the three performers I've always had an issue with... I still stand by my casting of Hiroshi Watari as Red. While Tanaka does manage to have good moments, for the most part he's still weak and doesn't tap into the full range of the character. As for Raita, we needed someone FAR more good-natured and likable than Tomihisa Naruse. (Jou Onodera? I don't know, I haven't cast my ideal Raita yet.) Daisuke Tachi...he'll improve later on, by the time Toranza shows up, so I don't know if Hirose brought out the best in his co-stars, but for the most part, Tachi's just going through the motions or will be too forcibly over-the-top for the way Radeige was written, and clashes with the style of the show. It seems to me like he's very much in the mindset of "Uh-oh, this is a kid's show. I can't be scary!" So he plays what's meant to be such a vicious, atrocious character -- a malevolent monster who thinks he's a god -- like it's Dick Dastardly. When I think of the subtlety a Kenichi Endo or the menace a Shunsuke Kudo or the layers Jun Yoshida could have brought to the role...! Tachi just didn't work out as what Inoue wanted Radeige to be.
(Never thought I'd come through this rewatch liking Tanaka more than those other two.)
There's so much that I do love about Jetman, and I think it could have been one of the best pieces of superhero fiction if there were changes in certain areas, but there IS still so much I love about it. In terms of the writing, Toshiki Inoue brought his unique style and gave us a Sentai show that went further, pushed boundaries and was pretty special. It's a show with a legacy. And it's important to remember that, it's something a lot of fans have forgotten. They've taken for granted the doors Jetman opened. (Hirohisa Soda made it possible; he paved the road, built the vehicle and dropped Jetman off at the door, which Jetman then kicked down.)
Like, I can't imagine Toei being bold enough to do what they did with those initial Heisei Rider shows if the Jetman approach hadn't been so successful. (And it's no coincidence that Inoue was a big architect of the Heisei Rider shows. For all of his stumbling in his later career, he always wanted these shows to be more character driven, more dramatic and more unique than the mere toy commercial or disposable kids fluff they were often perceived as. Too bad that the people in charge now are those very same dismissive trolls Inoue rebelled against, and have actually turned these shows into mindless toy commercials. Bad commercials at that.)
Monday, January 22, 2018
Jetman 51
EPISODE 51
The entire A-Part is a mecha battle! Nooooooooooooooooo! I really don't like the finales that devote so much time to mecha battles. And with a show like Jetman, the final fight needed to be smaller and personal. Mecha battles are always just so easy to tune out, so impersonal. And I hate when head villains are basically reduced to monsters of the week, which is basically what happens here.
The funny thing is just how fast the Jetman burn through their mecha. Jet Icarus is losing arms, Jet Garuda's getting a hole punched into it. When things look desperate, Odagiri -- in the cockpit of Great Icarus with the team -- calls out Tetra Boy. Shuh! Like that's going to do anything. Why's this show so gung-ho for Tetra Boy?!?! Only...Tetra Boy manages to land a blow on Ragem's back, which has been the only thing in battle to hurt it. So...Bandai gets its way. They've finally made Tetra Boy do something as important as they seem to think he is. That's messed up. Tetra Boy! C'mon! The "Boy" mechas are a joke! Oh, well, at least Tetra Boy gets his arms pulled off. Inoue and his thing against arms...
Ragem's back wound is the one nice, personal detail of this battle. It's the wound Rie gave Radeige. Rie didn't die for nothing. Ryu sees this as an opportunity to kill Radeige, he takes Jet Garuda on his own to restrain him, ordering the others in Jet Icarus to stab through Radeige/Ragem, which will also put him at risk. I always wondered if Ryu was just ready to heroically sacrifice himself here or if there was a part of him motivated by the idea of taking this as a way to rejoin Rie. Radeige/Ragem is a weasel to the end, latching on to the Jet Garuda as he collapses and explodes in death. Ryu transforms at the last minute. Victory is won. Or is it? Radeige's last words are that his soul will forever haunt the Jetman. And that's kind of made me take a different view of what happens...
In the B-Part. Jetman wanted to be a different show, and it was certainly different to dedicate the entire second half to non-action -- all character stuff, all denouement, the glimpse of their lives after the battle. This just wasn't the way things were done at the time, but again is something that's been made more common thanks to Jetman doing it first. (I'm not going to credit Jetman with everything; I don't think Jetman would exist or would have been allowed the freedom to do things like this if it wasn't for what Hirohisa Soda accomplished with the franchise in the '80s, pushing Sentai further and further, appealing to viewers of all ages.)
Kaori's getting married. It's saved as a big reveal who Kaori is marrying, I guess it's meant as a shock that it's Ryu. (It wasn't a given that the shed scene in the previous episode was the first step in making them a couple.) It might feel fast, but there IS supposed to be a three-year time jump. That's easy to forget in these 20 minute episodes, especially these last couple that are trying to cover so much ground.
And I'd like to use this time to point out that KOTARO TANAKA AND RIKA KISHIDA DID NOT GET MARRIED IN REAL LIFE. It's a rumor that only exists in the English-speaking fandom. Go Google it in Google Japan. I'll wait. Zero results, right? That's because the Japanese version of this rumor is that he married Sayuri Uchida, which is also false.
Anyway, Raita's been reunited with Satsuki, and they're a couple, in a nice callback to episode 9; he's still hard at work in his fields. Ako's become an idol. Seriously?! C'mon! I don't see Ako being an idol at all. I think they should have brought back her chorus pal Kyoko (from episode 15) and made HER an idol, with Ako as her manager. I could easily imagine Ako being a big-mouthed manager who knew how to navigate the murky world of showbiz and would put people in their place with her attitude. They're all at the wedding, even Odagiri. Everyone notices Gai's absence. (You know who else is absent? Kaori's butler! Where'd the hell he disappear to in this series? It's really weird he wouldn't be at her wedding, considering how close he was to her.)
Anyway, we all know what happens with Gai here. It's pretty much the number one thing associated with Jetman. Gai's running late to the wedding, stopping off to buy flowers. He makes the mistake of stopping a purse snatcher and is fatally stabbed. I've covered this turn of events many, many times. You know I'm not a fan of it, for many reasons. First -- REMEMBER WHEN THE JETMAN HAD BIRDONIC POWERS OUT OF SUIT?!?! Yeah, why should you when the writers don't. Gai once punched a goon down an alleyway. He crushed his sax while playing it. Ako used the abilities to make money at gym class, jumping heights that would make a kaizo ningen worry. But a little switchblade is going to fatally wound Gai? HAHAHAHAHAHAHHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA. That blade should have curled up, like when Moe tries to stab Curly in the noggin in an old Three Stooges short.
I've long tried to rationalize why Inoue felt like he had to kill Gai. To match the way his counterpart ends up in Gatchaman? To contrast the way a reformed thug like Gai gets killed by the type of person he could have ended up being, if not for Jetman and the friends he made? To show that the world still has plenty of earthly threats for our heroes, even after they've devoted time and blood fighting supervillains?
In all of the times I've watched this show, I never paid attention to Radeige's final words. Is it because they just seem like generic villain taunts? Is it because it comes at the end of a mecha-fest that makes me sleepy? "My soul will forever haunt you." And then it hit me: maybe Gai's senseless death is part of a curse placed on the team by Radeige. There's the irony in the type of person who kills Gai. The fact that it will ruin what should be the happiest day of Ryu and Kaori's lives. (And Gai was enjoying himself, too.) That Gai made so much progress, benefited so much from the Jetman, truly making friends -- and he's taken from them in such a fast, cruel way, on such a day, a day that seems to be reuniting them for the first time since their victory against Vyram. (And, hey, Radeige is meant to be a vampire, and we saw him in episode 28 practicing occult rituals. I've also always wondered if the white mask covering his left eye is meant to evoke the Phantom of the Opera. All meaning: Radeige's meant to be supernatural character out of gothic horror.)
That, to me, would make sense in terms of what a despicable, soulless, cruel, conniving monster Radeige was supposed to be, and it would also take away some of the sting of what I've always seen as characters behaving stupidly. Like...I've always thought "Geez, why doesn't Gai just get his dumb ass to a hospital? I'm sure his friends would rather he survive than die at their reception." But if this was part of Radeige's curse, then his making it to the wedding is kind of a victory over Radeige's final revenge. He gets to see his friends one last time, let them know what they mean to him and that he loves them, thanks them, and is genuinely happy for them and at peace with himself for maybe the first time in his life. Maybe Radeige's Curse intended he die on the street, looking like he avoided the wedding out of spite or residual jealousy, driving a wedge into the team once more. But Gai beat it.
It's still a downer, and a tryhard way to end your show for the sake of a shock, but I thought the idea of Radeige haunting them was interesting to think about. (In all of my years in the fandom talking about Jetman, I don't think I've seen anyone bring this theory up. So it's mine! And in the event I'm forgetting something, I'll require time-stamped, photographic evidence to prove otherwise! It's mine, I tell ya!)
The wedding is packed with JAC people; I typically spot Shoji Hachisuka (Blue Swallow), Hirofumi Ishigaki (Yellow Owl), Hiroshi Maeda (Red Hawk sub) and Chie Tanabe (Kaori and Ako stunt-double). (And this is after Gai is murdered by Naoki "Black Condor" Oofuji.) The biggest part is given to Kazuo Niibori as the priest marrying Ryu and Kaori. Jetman is Niibori's swan song (sorry) as Red, so it's nice he's given a role that gets him some notice. The show is again breaking ground by having an actual wedding between heroes. I always saw Niibori's retirement as a performer as the same kind of End of Era feel that Jetman has as a whole. (I often joke that he got out when the going was good, since some crazy Reds are around the corner. While I know Niibori likes playing comedic roles, I still can't picture him as, say, Red Racer.)
One really nice touch that I've always liked is Rie's role in this episode. It's been the only time I've liked Kokoro wa Tamago -- that intro is good, anyway. Ryu just glances into the distance and Rie appears. She smiles, nodding in approval as the intro to Kokoro wa Tamago begins and she fades. It kicks off the nostalgic clipdown ED credits, which end with a newly recreated version of the eyecatch, which is pretty cool. (And leaves you on a happier note since Gai's there.)
But that's not all of Jetman! My next post covers their further adventures and a wrap-up.
Saturday, January 20, 2018
Jetman 50
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This is actually Tomihisa Naruse, Sayuri Uchida, Kotaro Tanaka, Rika Kishida and Toshihide Wakamatsu in suit. |
EPISODE 50
A standout episode, which when you see the Maria two-parter sandwiched between it and Toranza's final episode, makes you realize how lesser those episodes feel.
A heartbroken and lost Ryu decides to act alone and seek out Radeige, wanting to kill him even if it costs him his own life. Radeige, I suppose, is supposed to be mourning Maria, as well -- he sits on his throne, holding a flower which he turns into a never-ending rain of petals, before hearing and answering Red Hawk's challenge.
Grey, I take it to mean is also heartbroken over losing Maria, and decides to seek a duel to the death with rival Gai -- the human version of Grey, really, a man passionate about music, alcohol and women, who both end up finding their hearts over the course of the series. They share some of the same qualities, so it's great that the various writers picked up on Grey and Gai's rivalry and helped lead it to this conclusion.
Amemiya returns to direct the final two episodes, so we get some interesting shots (the already mentioned rain of petals; the aerial crane shot of when Grey dies) and contributions. When Amemiya's directed episodes of the series, you can spot his attention to detail. Mecha battles will have more elaborate models and shots; battles will have interesting and unique angles. Here, in Black Condor's final fight with Grey, we get the debut of the hero's broken helmet, which many shows go on to copy.
While Gai's off fighting Grey, the others seek out Ryu before he gets himself killed. Ryu abandoning his team, deciding to settle things on his own is so unlike their usually dependable leader, who's always been there for them, so it's nice to see the others come to rally around him and save HIM. Taking a page from the Gai Playbook, Kaori takes a dangerous hit for Ryu's sake. He manages to set aside his hunger for revenge long enough to get her to safety...LEAVING AKO AND RAITA TO FIGHT RADEIGE! That's crazy! Ako and Raita!
Ryu gets Kaori to an abandoned shed in a scene that's filmed really nicely, but...I've always had a problem with it. This is the scene where Kaori's meant to finally get Ryu over Rie and begin to see her. It should be such a stirring and powerful scene where so many threads of the show's storylines join and tie up, but...the writing lets me down. Rika Kishida does a great job here; Ryu's still kind of blinded by rage, so he's still and quiet, so Kotaro Tanaka's not doing anything to tank it, either. It's the writing...
Kaori's truly sad to see Ryu sink to such a low. And she tells him that Rie would be sad to see him like that, and that breaks through to him. She tells him that Ryu, fighting on his own for revenge, isn't the person and hero that Rie fell in love with, and that all five of them need to work together or they won't win. She then brings up Rie's final words to Ryu in the last episode, in which Rie begged Ryu to forget her and wipe away any trace of her from his heart.
This scene is filmed well, with Kaori beginning Rie's quote, while the camera pans across a sullen Ryu, looking downward, and it becomes Rie to finish her line. I think what bugs me so much about this scene is that it's Kaori speaking to Ryu just as much as Rie; what she describes as what Rie feels is how Kaori feels. Rie's last words to Ryu are very similar to Kaori's exact words from way back in episode 22 -- after being shown Rie's grave, she shows up the next day and thoughtlessly vowed she'd rid Ryu's heart of the memory of Rie. That was such a low, petty point for Kaori, just so very callous, and I don't like that Rie's actual final words are so similar, and that Kaori's using them here to make her point.
And I feel like the lines being so close is intentional. There's meant to be a lot of different layers to this scene. Kaori is in the position of the team that was meant for Rie; her words echo Rie's. He's beginning to let Rie go and see Kaori, the scene ending with him embracing the image of Rie before he snaps to and realizes it's Kaori. I love the filming of this scene, the idea behind it, the emotions behind it, the way the scene begins. But I think they just needed to change Rie's final words, I think it was a mistake. To me, it ends up playing like Kaori being a little manipulative, and that's not what it's supposed to be at all. She's laying it all out for Ryu and telling him that they need him in the here and now, SHE needs him in the here and now, as the hero and good guy he's always been. And that makes him snap out of it.
Ryu and Kaori return to Ako and Raita, who are still battling Radeige while those two have been off chatting. Having defeated Grey, Gai joins them, and we get one last epic transformation sequence. (When they pose in this scene, it's actually the actors in-suit. There's often such a big deal made about that scene in Dairanger, with the actors doing their roll call out of suit. It's awesome -- it was one of my Toku Moments of Awesometicity on YouTube -- and subsequent shows aped it to lesser effect. Dairanger is credited with doing the first out of suit roll call, but Jetman basically did it first, it's just that the actors are actually in suit here.) We get a brief little fight with Radeige, set to the opening theme, in which the Jetman join together as a fire bird in attack. Radeige reveals his super-duper monster form, Ragem, going giant and leaving us on a cliffhanger that's kind of a bummer, because all signs point to a mecha-heavy finale. Uh-oh.
Random note: When Grey dies, he just loses power and shuts off. No disintegrating, no explosion. I feel like Skynet might find him.
Thursday, January 18, 2018
Jetman 48-49
EPISODES 48 & 49
If, in early 1991, you had polled 50 Jetman fans and asked them where they thought the Maria story would end up, not a single one of them -- not even if you were asking Toshiki Inoue himself -- would ever guess "B-Movie vampire schlock." And if anyone did guess it, they were either insane or a prototype for the internet troll.
I talked about these episodes in a previous post of most disappointing Sentai villain demises. I think the evidence is clear that Inoue never had an idea of how to handle Maria/Rie. Maria's the only Vyram member whose send-off isn't given a touch of grandness or uniqueness; she accepts Radeige's offer to give her power, and he turns her into a vampire in the hope of her going full monster and becoming his.
OK, here's about a hundred problems with this scenario. It makes Maria look stupid to accept Radeige's help. Remember how competitive the Vyram are with each other? Remember how nasty Radeige is, the levels he'll stoop? None of these guys liked each other. Here's another problem: I take it we're to assume Radeige has feelings for Maria -- the Kaori of the Vyram side, just everybody loves her -- and wants to turn her into a creature like him, so she has no choice but to be with Radeige. (I sadly never really realized Radeige's a vampiric creature, but the evidence is there; from the usage of his blood to the dime-store plastic vampire teeth he dons when monstering out.)
THE SHOW HAS NEVER INDICATED THAT RADEIGE CARED FOR MARIA! Radeige gave Grey a dirty look 70 episodes ago, and THAT'S IT. Radeige obviously only cares about Radeige. Other than when Torazna was around, he treated his cohorts with disdain. I know Inoue likes to leave some things up in the air, to make them mysterious, so maybe you're meant to question if there's more to Radeige (especially if you consider how different he was when he lost his memory), but...it's such an important detail to the character, such an important component of the storyline, that I think it needed to be MUCH clearer and definitively stated.
I've always read people say Radeige loved Maria, creating a love triangle within the Vyram that mirrored the one within the Jetman team, but I thought those people were crazy and really reading into it something that wasn't there. While I think a lot of those people are just shippers, something IS supposed to be there. It's just extremely vague and poorly done. If Radeige is a vampire, you could have made this some kind of sick, Gothic love story. But there's nothing there. In fact, with the way Radeige despises humans, it never made sense to me he even grabbed Rie in order to turn her into Maria. So, it makes even less sense that he'd love her. Inoue probably thinks this makes Radeige seem complicated, but it's really just sloppy writing.
The whole thing with Maria being a vampire, stumbling around and sucking the blood of a bunch of random dudes is the weakest part of this two-parter. She eventually turns Ryu into a vampire, and it's just kinda silly to me. It's meant to be shocking to see the reliable Red of our show turned into a monster, only being freed by Kaori's love and devotion to him, but it all just seems like padding. Like a way to avoid a genuine final confrontation with her.
The best parts of these two-parters is the sliver of episode remaining after the vampire nonsense. A healed Ryu confronts Maria, in one last attempt to reach out to Rie, and kisses her. While this was probably pretty shocking at the time -- I can't recall any toku show prior to Jetman showing an on-the-lips kiss that wasn't comedic -- it's marred and made laughable by the fact that Kotaro Tanaka can barely make contact with Maho Maruyama because all of the vampire make-up and prosthetics.
Maria reverts to Rie, but we know it's not going to be a happy ending here. For the entire series, Ryu has vowed to save Rie, but we know Toshiki Inoue better. Rie feels too burdened by her sins, so she makes a the decision to attack Radeige, guaranteeing her death. (She feigns that she's still on Radeige's side and then stabs him in the back -- literally, too.) Radeige cuts her down, and in her final moments, she tries to cut Ryu loose, before being whisked away by Grey. This pretty much destroys Ryu, in a display of raw emotion so upsetting that Gai commands the other Jetman to leave him be and not even witness it. Can our Red, our trustworthy leader, be dumped on any more? This is the good stuff. Why we couldn't have more of this instead of silly shit with vampires...I dunno. Tanaka does a good job here, and Maruyama's at her best as Rie, rather than Maria.
Rie's final words to Ryu are a request that he forget her and move on. She tells him to erase all traces of her in his heart; this is pretty damn close to the phrasing Kaori uses in episode 22, but I'll talk more about this in the next episode.
Rie dies in Grey's arms and he cries, his tears transferring and scattering her into the sea. An interesting stylistic choice. It's a little sad that, outside of Toranza, Grey's stuff with Maria is the strongest portion of the Vyram side -- considering he's, you know, a robot, and that Rie's presence as Maria DOESN'T EVEN MAKE SENSE! Grey has a couple of good moments in these episodes; one when he approaches Maria to let her know Radeige's just using her. (She doesn't care. Why?!?!) Another when he approaches the Jetman and asks them to help Maria.
The episode ends with a scene, a vision of a cheerful Rie in a park, running towards the camera in joy, her image fading in and out before finally settling on a fade out. A nice, stylish choice by director Masao Minowa in his last Jetman outing.
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