Friday, February 6, 2026

Cybersix: The First Animated Trans Superhero


In 1991, Argentinian writer Carlos Trillo and artist Meglia put together their original title of Cybersix in the pages of the Italian comics magazine Skorpio. This wasn’t an adult comic book, but was certainly not intended for younger readers, so it’s strange that 8 years later it would get turned into an American Saturday Morning cartoon show. Premiering on Fox in 1999, this 13-episode TV series was produced by the Canadian-based Network Of Animation and animated by TMS Entertainment which is the same anime studio that prior to this gave us Lupin III, The Rose Of Versailles, Cobra, Sherlock Hound, and Magic Knight Rayearth. TMS also contributed to several American productions like Batman: The Animated Series, Batman Beyond, Duck Tales, Inspector Gadget, The Real Ghostbusters, Animaniacs, Little Nemo, Mighty Orbots, and Tiny Toons. The series director was Toshihiko Masuda who has worked in everything from Thundercats to Death Note, and he carried TMS’ fluid style of animation throughout the entire series. TMS regularly handles some of the animation of various American animated projects, but in Cybersix they were given much more freedom to show the world how their attention to detail and slick style shines when it puts the pedal to the metal.

The premise for Cybersix was pretty revolutionary for its time, decades ahead of the curb as far as the depiction of unconventional life choices. The main character was originally a young boy who was transformed into a cybernetic woman named Cybersix, part of a type of artificial humanoids called Cybers created by the ex-Nazi scientist Von Reichter. The criminal mastermind is constantly trying to take over the coastal town of Meridiana with his genetically engineered monsters. Von Reichter’s schemes are constantly thwarted by Cybersix who wears a dramatic outfit of black leather, a wide brimmed hat, and profoundly long cape which she uses as a parachute. Cybersix hides her nocturnal activities by taking on the identity of a high school literary teacher, and a male one at that named Adrian, so Cybersix is not only a transgender character but a cross-dresser as well.

Before the animated series came out, Cybersix had a live-action TV adaptation made for Argentinian audiences even though the title character didn’t have her eye-catching ensemble and was played by a model. The first series was quickly cancelled due to low ratings, but somewhere along the way TV developers Judy Valyi and Barry Whittaker managed to convince the production companies of three separate countries to invest in the creation of an animated series. The cartoon premiered on Fox Kids in America, Teletoon in Canada where it was dubbed, plus Kids Station in Japan. The American version was heavily edited, and not all 13 episodes were shown on Fox even though they did give it a decent enough advertising campaign. This became one of those lost 90s animated series like The Legend Of Calamity Jane which came and went within a short period of time, so it never got the kind of attention that heroes like Batman or X-Men received.

The original Argentinian comic was published in Italian and later Spanish but has never had an official English translation. The comic was an elaborately mature title with sexual situations. Cybersix was one of the only surviving test subjects of Von Reichter’s experiments called Cybers, and Von Reichter wants to claim her back. Other creations were his Datas that are similar to Cybers put in animal form, as well as the Technos which look the most human, and the most common ones are the Fixed Ideas which are hulking big thugs who carry out Von Reichter’s grunt work and resemble Frankenstein including the female ones. Whenever Cybersix defeats one of these minions, they’re reduced to a vile of green liquid which she consumes for sustenance just like a vampire which is an idea that got left out of the TV series after the first episode, otherwise you’d have a main character who kills monsters only to leech off their life energy. One of the Datas was given the brains of Cybersix’s brother who had them put into the body of a panther named Data-7 who eventually becomes her sidekick.

The original artist Carlos Meglia started out as an artist for the Skorpio magazine and then as an animator on shows like Scooby-Doo and Smurfs. He teamed up with writer Carlos Trillo on a comic titled Irish Coffee involving paranormal investigations. Trillo came up with the idea about a Nazi scientist who escaped the SS by having his brain transplanted into a different body on two separate occasions. The character designs are reflections of old pulp fiction heroes like The Shadow and Miss Fury which worked well in comparison with Batman: The Animated Series which was equally inspired by the early Fleischer Studios’ Superman cartoons. The Cybersix comic had a gratuitous amount of nudity in them which is common for a few European publications. The short-lived live-action series did help get the ball rolling on Cybersix’s progression into an American animation. TMS Entertainment did a spectacular job honoring the original comic’s style with long flowing shots in action scenes and breathtaking fight choreography. The character designs maintain that of Carlos Meglia’s original incarnations combined with TMS’ crisp animation.

Cybersix was a major attraction for those seeking transgender representation in animation as the title character was a male put into the body of a female disguised that kept the dual-identity of a male named Adrian who was befriended a man named Lucus who in turn was attracted to Cybersix, thus setting up a love triangle which is a common staple of superheroes. Lucus in the original comic was a reporter, but in the cartoon he is a science teacher that works at the same school Adrian does and the two of them are work buddies, even though Lucus finds himself going out of his way to help Cybersix on her latest case acting as the Steve Trevor to her Wonder Woman. The trans allegory came out more in the cartoon series than it did in the comic as Cybersix and Lucus’ relationship was physical as well as emotional.

Despite the lack of success of the Cybersix cartoon, the show premiered around the same time as James Cameron’s Dark Angel TV series which was also on Fox. Both creators believed that Cameron had lifted the idea for their series about a female vigilante from their source material and filed a lawsuit against, but ultimately the suit never went anywhere because they didn’t have enough money to support it. Part of the problem Cybersix had was maintaining the difference between a cartoon intended for children while still having it based on a mature comic book. Another was that the series was very formulaic with its standard Monster of the Week cliché.

Cybersix had an exceptional premise about a female superhero beating up Nazis which is one of the most time-honored traditions in comic books. It worked for Captain America, Spy Smasher, Shazam and several other Golden Age superheroes, so for that idea to be carried over into a modern-day production gives it major appeal. Nazi-punching is what superheroes do best, and having it be done by a woman is even cooler. Cybersix would normally fight Von Reichter’s latest lab experiment gone wrong with everything from werewolves, flying eyes, winged goblins, brainwashed birds, krakens, shapeshifting mud, and an entire kaiju-sized living island. Each episode had her defeating the new challenger along with her panther/brother Data-7 usually with Lucus’ assistance plus a homeless boy Julian who they never seem to get a home for. Von Reichter regularly has his youthful clone Jose carrying out his fiendish plans, although Jose sometimes has his own agenda when carrying out his father’s schemes.

The animated cast had a roster of anime dub professionals with Cathy Wesluck who most know as Shampoo from Ranma 1/2 as Cybersix. Terry Klassen, aka: Krillin is Von Reichter. Michael Dobson who portrayed Starscream in the Transformers Unicorn Trilogy was Lucus. One of the best is vocal chameleon Scott McNeil who was half of the cast of Beast Wars voiced Data-7 who despite having human intelligence communicated like any other panther would.

Cybersix gained little ground during its initial American TV run thanks to getting cancelled to early and lasting only a single episode. Thankfully, the rescue department of Discotek Media managed to put the entire series on both DVD and Blu-Ray including several bonus features including the original pilot. The fact that this was one of the earliest American cartoons that was inclusive to LGBTQ audiences should have guaranteed its place as an icon among other series like Steven Universe and The Owl House. Hopefully its underground status will peak out more as it is available free on multiple streaming formats. It’s got sweeping superhero action, romance, enthralling animation, and one of the greatest theme songs for a Saturday Morning cartoon ever made.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

ANI-MOVIES, *The Deer King

The Deer King was originally a series of novels written by Nahoko Uehashi who had anime adaptations done of her works including Moribito and The Beast Player as episodic TV series, but this was the first time that a motion picture would try telling an entire fantasy saga in single feature-length movie. Production IG was the studio behind this 2021 release directed by former Studio Ghibli animators Masashi Ando and Masayuki Miyaji, and their prior experience is on full display as there are major influences in this from films like Princess Mononoke of which one of the animators actually worked on. The quality of animation is up to Hayao Miyazaki standards, but what really bring it down from the reputation of a Ghibli production is bad pacing and the rush to fill in the entire novel series plot into a 114-minute-long movie.

In an alternate reality, the Zol Empire had taken over the country of Aquafa, but rebellious Aquafese wish to liberate themselves from Zol even though they have maintained peace with their conquerors a decade ago. A bizarre plague is sweeping through the land while taking the form of spiritual wolves, a bite of which causes Zolians to eventually die while the Aquafese are unaffected. In a prison mine, former resistance leader Van and an orphaned girl Yuna are the only survivors after a wolf attack. Van is one of the last of an Aquafese tribe known as the Lone Antlers and they had a special kinship with the deer of this land here called pyuika, and manages to wrangle one of his lost bucks into giving him and Yuna passage to a village of pyuika wranglers. Van seems content in this new home with Yona as his adopted daughter even if he lost his family during the Zol occupation. Meanwhile the new lord of the Aquafa is preparing for a visit from the Zolian emperor which is threatened by this virus, and a young doctor seeks out Van and Yuna as their blood might be the cure to the disease. The hunt is on now for the doctor, his eager bodyguard, and a tracker woman to locate these survivors, but Yuna is taken away by the wolves leading to Van teaming up with his unlikely allies to bring her back from the Aquafese liberators planning to use the outbreak to free their nation no matter who gets hurt along the way. Van realizes that his immunity to this virus is giving him enhanced strength and supernatural powers, but he has to suppress his emotions in order to not let it give in to rage.

The Deer King contains spectacular visual aesthetics with rolling landscapes and a very rich lore to it, however the dense lore is what prevents it from achieving any replay value. There is more than enough backstory to comprehend and several conflicting terms to keep up with. Many critics shot down the movie for its bad pacing and trying to understand the post-credits conclusion, plus there are too many comparisons to Princess Mononoke as both films are eerily similar. I'd suggest catching the film on streaming first before you decide whether or not if you want to actually add this to your library.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

ANI-MOVIES, *Cosmic Princess Kaguya!

No, you are not mistaken! There was a movie titled The Tale Of Princess Kaguya released by Ghibli Films in 2013, but that and this new film, Cosmic Princess Kaguya! are both based on the monogatari about a bamboo cutter who becomes the adopted father of a child from the moon. Unlike in Over The Moon which is inspired by Chinese folklore, this one also follows the Japanese legends of the moon being a heavenly domain ruled over by divine beings. Studio Colorido finished out the third of a 3-picture deal with Netflix after Drifting Home and My Oni Girl which would all premiere on the streaming service with this movie, and the level of reality-bending they implemented in Penguin Highway is on full display in this tilt-a-whirl which is constantly switching between the real world and the online world. Similar to Belle and Summer Wars, this takes place in the soon-to-be future with slightly more advanced technology where VR is a commonplace, however like Belle this movie is also a musical at least in the slightest sense with the occasional number that is intended as a performance and not a plot-halting song that gives way to a miniature music video. The soundtrack was scored by some of the Vocaloid producers of numerous J-Pop bands, so the songs are more like an impromptu concert than a musical scene that adds to the storyline. After being in production for 3 years, Studio Colorido drove a lot of online culture into this movie, even though this can drag on with the runtime of 142 minutes, not to mention the multiple endings that were tacked on like you're playing a visual novel instead of watching a movie. A good thing is that this is one of the most sapphic anime movies ever made.

Happening in 2030, struggling high school student Iroha is barely making ends meet as she lives on her own as she desperately tries to achieve a college scholarship. On her way home from her part-time job, Iroha comes across a glowing telephone pole when a baby inside comes out. Now, Iroha has to be the caretaker of this child who rapidly ages into her teens, and it's determined that she is the reincarnation of Princess Kaguya from the old story, so she decides to give the moon child the same name as her progenitor. While getting used to having a needy alien girl declaring her love to her, Iroha also has an active life in the digital community of Tsukuyomi where everyone has online cosplay personas in a cyberspace modeled after feudal Japan where the virtual idol of Yachiyo is the apple of Iroha's eye. Kaguya decides that she's not going to let her story end the same way as her namesake where she is taken back to the moon by celestial spirits, so she nudges Iroha into using her hidden songwriting talent to help her be the newest online sensation. After gaining enough support and finances from their efforts, Iroha and Kagura move into a high-rise pad with the two of them growing together as a couple. Of course, just like in the fairy tale, the moon folks come to collect Kaguya, but not after she and all her allies put on a banging concert even if Kaguya does reluctantly give in and goes back home. Now, you would think that this is where the story ends, in fact there's a faux pas ending that any Netflix subscriber will recognize which turns out to be totally fake. There is an additional 20 minutes left where a great deal of secrets are revealed involving time travel, alternate history, retro-cyberpunk cliches, and a love story spanning thousands of years.

Cosmic Princess Kaguya! is a total recommendation for anyone deep into online culture and its future possibilities, although it might not completely appeal to non-otaku who have as yet to pop their anime cherry. Studio Colorido along with Studio Chromato did a spectacular job producing this with spontaneous battle sequences when the characters abruptly go into Fortnite mode along with the dreamy asthetics of the virtual world. The music gives off the appearance that it was extemporized instead of planned in advance and make for a banging soundtrack, despite that the Japanese language version of the songs are leagues better than the Americanized lyrics even though the dub actors do have singing potential. Netflix ran across this same hiccup last year with their release of The Rose Of Versailles where the English versions of the song don't fit all that well into a musical not originally written for western audiences, so this film will probably not gain the same fanbase that K-Pop Demon Hunters made bank on. Fans of shoujo-ai will appreciate the yuri representation on display here as its left up to the viewer to interpret whether Iroha and Valkyrie have a genuine girls love anime.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

ANI-MOVIES: *Alpha And Omega

Open Season screenwriter Steve Moore along with Christopher Denk started the franchise of 8 movies that all began with a single slightly successful box office release of Alpha And Omega in 2010 that was done by Crest Animation who some might remember from producing The Swan Princess films. Crest's streak didn't go on for long as the latter half of the Alpha And Omega movies were completed by Splash Entertainment because Crest folded in 2013 after their other animated project Norm Of The North bombed in theaters which ironically spawned a series of made-for-video sequels headed by Assemblage Entertainment who also drove that franchise into the ground. Lionsgate distributed all the Alpha And Omega films, but the original directed by former Simpsons animator Anthony Bell and Ben Gluck who had directed of few sequels to Disney films both had trouble configuring how to translate the original 2D designs for this 3D production. The first movie had big stars like Justin Long, Danny Glover, Christina Ricci, and Dennis Hopper in one of his final roles, even though none of them return to the video sequels and were replaced by anime voice actors Benjamin Dikson and Kate Higgins. Whether or not the first movie was originally intended to start a franchise like an animated TV series or multiple sequels or not is a pretty wavy bet.

Set in Canada, a pack of wolves have separated from a rival pack whose leaders plan to unite with a marriage with their firstborns, one of which is Kate, an alpha wolf. A promising omega wolf named Humphrey has had his eye on Kate for some time, and the two of them happen to get tranked by rangers who send them both to a park in Idaho to repopulate. Despite Humphrey's prospects looking up, Kate wants to get back to their home to prevent a turf war between the packs. Luckily, the get help from some golf-obsessed birds who help them return after hitching rides on a camper and then a train. The would-be couple make it back just in time to stop the packs from eating each other, even though there was still an extra 20 minutes left in the film. Kate realizes that she loves Humphrey and they manage to save the heads of each pack after a caribou stampede nearly kills them off like Mufasa, so they become mates and plan to repopulate an entire box set of sequels.

For one thing, the concept of alpha and omega wolves doesn't actually exist, so the entire concept behind the actual title is completely stupid. For a CGI movie, the animation is only a little above average at least for a theatrical release, although this feature still doesn't really anything all that significant. If the story had more of the two leads learning to love each other on their trip back home then it might have fared better, but the story keeps cutting to a completely different wolf couple getting together and the pointless antics of the bird golfers that pad out the plot to a definitive humdrum. This movie was a tedious watch and doesn't contain much anything eventful, which makes you wonder how this went on to colonize an entire cinematic universe.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Thundercats 2011: A Worthy Successor

The 1980s were the era of toy-based animation with Transformers and GI Joe leading the pack. Fantasy and sci-fi were also big with Masters Of The Universe first picking up the ball for that genre combo, but a rival soon appeared in thanks to toy/game creator Ted Wolf which he titled Thundercats. He had the idea of merging anthropomorphic humans and took it to Telepictures who in 1984 made it into one of the most successful franchises ever, which is pretty good considering it was their first animated series. The TV show was originally animated by Topcraft who had just finished production on Nausicaa And The Valley Of The Wind, although the production was handled by Rankin/Bass Productions and had worked with Topcraft on previous animated projects like The Last Unicorn. The later seasons were done by Pacific Animation Corporation who were formed when Topcraft folded while most of the other animators went on to form Studio Ghibli. Despite lasting for four whole seasons which was a rarity in the 80s, the TV series eventually ended even though the toy line for it had long since ceased. Topcraft was eventually bought by Warner Entertainment who held onto the property into 2011.

Warner decided to bring back the franchise in 2011 with Bandai handling the new action figures. Done as the last collaboration between founders Arthur Rankin and Jules Bass before they passed away, Thundercats was part of a new lineup of action/adventure cartoons that were premiering on Warner’s Cartoon Network. The entire remake lasted for a single season of 26 episodes over the span of a year with some good ratings at the beginning, but as Cartoon Network decided to start culling their episodic action shows, Thundercats was among its number. The series almost fell completely due to low toy sales, Lego however stepped in and were going to produce their own line of toys based on the new show, even though Warner’s taking Thundercats off the air prompted Lego to rebrand their toys as Legends Of Chima with reusing many of the character designs for the standard Lego blocky model.

The 2011 Thundercats was a totally new take on the series whereas instead of the Thundercats coming from a doomed planet to Third Earth and battling the evil Mumm-Ra and his Mutants, this new version took place entirely with all the characters on Third Earth. The Thundercats were an entire race of feline humanoids living in the kingdom of Thundera which had been decimated by Mumm-Ra and his reptilian forces thanks to the sabretooth traitor Grune who turned against his own people. Thundera’s king dies leaving behind his two sons Lion-O and Tygra along with the superfast cleric Cheetara and the homeless twins Wilykat and Wilykit all setting out to avenge their people. Lion-O and the others come across lost general Panthro who had survived on his own riding around in an abandoned Thundertank.

The collected team discover that all the animal races on Third Earth were originally enslaved by Mumm-Ra who used them to collect four powerful stones that he would use to take over the universe, each of which would be used on a special gauntlet. So basically, the new Thundercats show borrowed Marvel Comics’ Infinity Gauntlet premise just before the MCU started rolling out their first Avengers movie. Throughout the series, Lion-O earns his place as Thundercat lord while befriending the other animal races who unite to help them prevent Mumm-Ra from gaining the other stones. Along the way, they are joined by Thunderian female Pumyra who was secretly working for Mumm-Ra the whole time. Mumm-Ra does gain one of the stones while Lion-O had two with one more left to be found. However, the second season of the series was never produced.

Season Two would have seen the retrieval of the last stone, Pumyra being transformed into an insect monster, a betrayal by Wily twins, the reveal of original series character Lynx-O, and how Mumm-Ra was responsible for the creation of Snarf’s clan. The Fukushima disaster caused a major financial upheaval in Japan which plummeted the cost of the US dollar which nearly doubled the price of production for each episode. Even though the remake had great ratings in the beginning, the numbers began to sink due to the advent of streaming which was slowly replacing network broadcasting. Combined with low toy sales, Cartoon Network decided to cancel it along with most of their other toy-based programming.

The 2011 remake had a lot going for it. Fans of the original series praised it for carrying on the legacy of the original series, and newcomers found the refreshed anime style appealing. It was developed by Avatar: The Last Airbender animator Ethan Spaulding and Teen Titans Go co-developer Michael Jelenic. The two of them added much new lore to the Thundercats history along with a leap forward in worldbuilding. Overcoming racism also played a large part of the story as in the beginning of the series there is much discrimination between the other animal humanoids which are split up into cats, reptiles, apes, birds, dogs, fish, and more as most of them band together to defeat their common enemy as well as defying inequality.

The new Thundercats show had a stacked cast. Lion-O was voiced by Will Friedle which most would know as Batman Beyond and Ron Stoppable who went on to write a few episodes. Tygra was voiced by Matthew Mercer a few years before he helmed the Critical Role empire, so Thundercats played a big part in a whole new generation discovering Dungeons And Dragons. Snarf was rendered mostly mute in this series but was still voiced by Satomi Korogi who has portrayed several anime critters in Japan including the lead in Chi’s Sweet Home. One of the best is Clancy Brown playing the traitorous Grune who had a way larger role in this show than he did in the original. Pamela Adlon who some would know as the voice Bobby Hill also played a more aggressive version of Pumyra.

Despite all that it had going for it, the 2011 Thundercats had numerous things working against it. The series premiere was epic and set the stage for a sprawling adventure, however there were a good deal of episodes dedicated to side quests which diverted from the main journey. Nearly a fifth of the series is comprised of flashbacks that rammed truckloads of backstory, which is helpful but meandering. Another detraction was that you could tell that if an episode focused primarily on the Thunderkittens that it was ultimately filler. The fact that the series ended with a whole half of the story left to be chronicled is the biggest shame of all.

With talk of a Thundercats movie flickering on and off over the last few decades, then the 2011 series was really one of the best adaptations of the original 80s show outside of the some of the comic book remakes. Cartoon Network’s attempt to rekindle the franchise with the viciously sabotaged Thundercats Roar didn’t help either with any fans by trying to make it appealing to modern day kids while turning it into a spastic spoof of the 80s show like Teen Titans Go in the overused CalArts style. Thundercats 2011 is worth looking up as it is currently streaming on Hulu, but you’ll get the best experience from watching the Blu-Ray set which has the best visual quality and highlights the crisp animation that Studio 4°C Co put such effort into producing.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

ANI-MOVIES, *The Cat Returns

If anyone remembers the story from Whispers Of The Heart that the main character was writing, then this is that story. The Cat Returns was based on a manga by Aoi Hiiragi inspired by the original movie that was first intended as a short film for an amusement park but was lengthened to be a 75-minute-long feature from Studio Ghibli written by Reiko Yoshida who brilliantly did the screenplay for A Silent Voice, as well as directed by Hiroyuki Morita in his theatrical debut. Despite what some might think, Hayao Miyazaki was not heavily involved in what was Ghibli's first spinoff movie. Released in 2002, The Cat Returns is one of the earliest examples of a 21st Century isekai which reflects elements of various portal fantasy tales like The Wizard Of Oz and Alice In Wonderland, although this is more of a fairy tale than RPG-inspired high fantasy. The movie's fluid animation doesn't contain the lush details that most other Ghibli films are known for, however the backgrounds, humor, and character portrayals are still priceless.

Haru is an inhibited high schooler who saves the life of what she thinks is a stray cat but turns out to be Lune, the prince of a kingdom lying in its own little realm inhabited by talking felines, and now she is engaged to marry Lune. Haru tries to get out this arrangement by going to visit a small anthropomorphic cat called The Baron along with his vastly rotund partner Muta who act as ambassadors between the human and cat worlds, despite this Haru does get abducted by the Cat King's servants and taken to the pussycat planet where she slowly begins to change into a cat. Baron and Muta manage to infiltrate the King's castle and rescue Haru, leading into a long merry chase for our heroic trio and the King's soldiers and escape after being shown an exit at the end of a maze thanks to Lune's true fiance Yuki who happened to be another cat Haru had saved years ago. The King reluctantly gives up and retires, Haru returns home as a full human again along with a renewed sense of self-confidence.

The Cat Returns is a short but thoroughly sweet jaunt into an adventurous otherworld that is charming for anime fans and even the occasional watcher of Ghibli movies, and certainly the most charming family feature Ghibli has done since My Neighbor Totoro. Similar to Spirited Away, Ghibli knows how to create a believable isekai where not everything is dreamlike as there is a healthy amount of danger lying within this otherworld. Hiroyuki Morita brought a unique sense of wonder to the whole production which is largely an enchanting piece of escapism. The dub Disney put together for this is overwhelming with a younger Anne Hathaway as Haru, Cary Elwes reprising his role as The Baron, and Tim Curry totally steals the show as the bipolar hippie King Cat going from Garfield in one moment to the Tasmanian Devil in another. The Cat Returns is not an epic up there with the likes of Princess Mononoke but clearly outshines most of the Disney animated movies since the turn of the century.