Monday, February 9, 2026

ANI-MOVIES: *Ultraman: The Adventure Begins

You might've seen Netflix's recent reboot of the Tsuburaya Productions' tokusatsu franchise, but the first time the Ultra Series was specifically animated for English audiences was in 1987 in a combined project between them and Hanna-Barbera of all people. Ultraman: The Adventure Begins was the second attempt to remake Ultraman for foreign audiences after a live-action film was made for Thailand in the 70s that created an entire licensing fiasco, but for Tsuburaya's first animation they made for outside Japan it was done by Ashi Productions and Studio Sign in a feature-length movie that was supposed to be the pilot for a TV series, although it never got picked up and the movie only got a limited release on VHS in the 90s. Recently, Mill Creek Entertainment had a Blu-Ray release of the film, but with a whole new English dub. The original dub included an all-star cast including Adrienne Barbeau and Stacy Keach Sr. along with regular animated voice actors from the 80s like Charles Adler and William Callaway. Mill Creek's release of the film has standard modern actors such as Kellen Goff and Caitlan Glass, plus for some reason there are no subtitles on the Japanese track of the Blu-Ray with no closed captioning. Originally titled in Japan as Ultraman USA, the film didn't even get released there until two years after its American premiere, but copies of it did include the first English dub, so there appears to be some sort of licensing kerfuffle between Mill Creek and Tsuburaya.

Taking place in a somewhat advanced version of the 80s similar to what you would see on GI Joe, three stunt pilots all survive an air crash caused by a spontaneous burst of light. They then get a call to come to a golf club in Georgia which is secretly the headquarters of a groundskeeper who somehow has ties to benevolent aliens and tells the pilots that they're no bonded with superpowered giants that appear when big monsters are around. Conveniently, three giant monsters happen to be running amok all over America, so the newly dubbed Ultra Force (no relation to the Malibu Comics series of the same name) take off from their new base set in Mount Rushmore with Lincoln's mouth acting as a runway. One of the monsters is a botanical nightmare while the other is an electrical abomination that the Ultra Force defeats. The last of the three monsters is really just a baby hippo-like dinosaur that the Ultra-Force send off to a peaceful planet. However, one other monster appears which begins to keep evolving every few minutes and attacks New York, which might have explained why this movie was in limbo for years as the World Trade Center is featured prominently during the kaiju rampage. The Ultra Force turn into their giant silver forms to stop the monster which gets new superpowers including phasing and cloaking until the only way to stop the kaiju is to quickly drop it into the sun before it grows to being the size of a planet. There's the hint of possible more adventures for the Ultra Force, but this was all she wrote as far as a sprawling space opera.

Tsuburaya's franchise has had better success in Japan with its various releases in English, even though most people might confuse Ultraman with SSSS Gridman which has similar character designs. The American-designed production had some prime animation incorporated into it and the Blu-Ray was given a quality release for an anime forty years old, although you're better off catching this on streaming since Mill Creek botched the hard copy, but make sure you get a bootleg Ultra Force t-shirt.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.