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Speed-Racer

Originaltitel: Mahha GoGoGo
  • Fernsehserie
  • 1967–1968
  • TV-Y7
  • 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
3691
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Jack Curtis, Peter Fernandez, and Katsuji Mori in Speed-Racer (1967)
Home Video Trailer from Lionsgate Home Entertainment
trailer wiedergeben1:27
1 Video
99+ Fotos
Aktion im AutoMotorsportSuperheldAbenteuerActionFamilieKomödieScience-FictionSportAnimationsfilm

Der Teenager Gô Mifune strebt mit Hilfe seiner Freunde, seiner Familie und dem Hightech-Rennwagen seines Vaters, dem Mach 5, danach, der beste Rennwagen-Champion der Welt zu werden.Der Teenager Gô Mifune strebt mit Hilfe seiner Freunde, seiner Familie und dem Hightech-Rennwagen seines Vaters, dem Mach 5, danach, der beste Rennwagen-Champion der Welt zu werden.Der Teenager Gô Mifune strebt mit Hilfe seiner Freunde, seiner Familie und dem Hightech-Rennwagen seines Vaters, dem Mach 5, danach, der beste Rennwagen-Champion der Welt zu werden.

  • Stoffentwicklung
    • Tatsuo Yoshida
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Katsuji Mori
    • Peter Fernandez
    • Corinne Orr
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    3691
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Tatsuo Yoshida
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Katsuji Mori
      • Peter Fernandez
      • Corinne Orr
    • 29Benutzerrezensionen
    • 12Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Episoden52

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    Videos1

    Speed Racer (1967)
    Trailer 1:27
    Speed Racer (1967)

    Fotos202

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    Topbesetzung37

    Ändern
    Katsuji Mori
    Katsuji Mori
    • Gô Mifune
    • 1967–1968
    Peter Fernandez
    Peter Fernandez
    • Speed Racer…
    • 1967–1968
    Corinne Orr
    • Mom Racer…
    • 1967–1968
    Jack Grimes
    • Chim-Chim…
    • 1967–1968
    Jack Curtis
    • Pops Racer…
    • 1967–1968
    Nelly Valverde
    • Trixie
    • 1967–1968
    Cleonir dos Santos
    • Speed Racer
    • 1967–1968
    Nair Amorim
    • Gorducho
    • 1967–1968
    André Filho
    • Corredor X
    • 1967–1968
    Milton Luiz
    • Inspetor Detetor
    • 1967–1968
    Allan Lima
    • Narrador
    • 1967–1968
    Orlando Drummond
    Orlando Drummond
    • Pops Racer
    • 1967
    Paulo Pereira
    • Pops Racer
    • 1967–1968
    Paulo Gonçalves
    Paulo Gonçalves
    • Inspetor Detetor…
    • 1967
    Joaquim Luis Motta
    • Vozeiros
    • 1967–1968
    Magalhães Graça
    Magalhães Graça
    • Vozeiros
    • 1967–1968
    Lauro Fabiano
    • Narrador
    • 1967
    Amaury Gutemberg
    • Vozeiros
    • 1967
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Tatsuo Yoshida
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen29

    7,23.6K
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    tzer0

    Mmmmm . . . That's Good Cheese!!!

    Speed Racer "Mahha Go Go Go" (1967) is arguably the seminal anime of all time. The only thing in the states that predates it, aside from a feature film like, Alakazam The Great "Saiyu-Ki" (1960-61)and other Peter Fenadez efforts like Asto Boy, Marine Boy, Gigantor etc . . . is a series called 8-MAN "Eitoman" (1963). It was an excellent series about an android, who looks strangely similar to Racer X, that "powers-up" by reaching behind the 8 into his chest and smoking a "Power Cigarette". You can see why that series didn't make it out of the 60's. Speed Racer, however, is and remains a timeless classic. Everything is so over the top, on has to wonder if Peter Fenandez and crew even had a proper translation to work from. Maybe they didn't, but it doesn't matter. The have one of the coolest cars in the world! Right up there with the Batmobile, The Green Hornet's Black Beauty and Mad Max's Interceptor is the Mach 5. You can's drive it and not look cool in doing it, especially with Trixie by your side, not to mention Spridle and Chim Chim hiding in the trunk.

    But Speed is impetuous. Always trying to win the race by leaping before he looks. But, luckily for him Kabala of Ka-pe-ta-pek (You have to say it that way or it's just not funny) is really Racer X, who is really Speed'solderbrotherRexwhoranawayfromhomeyearsago. (You have to say it that way too. In fact the stilted and slurred together English as the voice actors try to match the story elements to the Japanese lip movements is part of it's charm. That and the fact that the Mach 5 can drive straight up the side of a mountain with little or no problem at all.

    And you can never get enough of all the "Joke Names", like Snake Oiler of the Car Acrobatic Team. Speed Racer maybe one of the few anime that's actually better than the original Japanese. As well as the most violent cartoons since the original Johnny Quest (1964). But only the baddies get killed in them. So there's always that rewarding sense of poetic justice, so it's okay. Sure, The Malange or anything equipped with the GR-X engine may be faster, but they're just too dangerous to drive. So strap yourself into the Mach 5 and hold on! OOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
    greenlandnative

    Only kid who watched it.

    Nobody in my group of friends watched it but I loved it. It was on UHF so it was obscure for sure. Kimba the white lion, the three stooges were all on Channel 52 on California.
    shaneyfex

    Speed Racer: The best cartoon ever!!!!

    I watched this cartoon as a kid and it was one of my favorites. It was aired right after Johnny Sokko & his Flying Robot 4:00pm after school on channel 41 in 1969-79(Kansas City local tv market). Great opening credits and great show A to Z. I like the Alpine Race and the Challenge race with the skull head driver. Snake Oiler is my favorite bad driver & racer X is the coolest of the bunch, even over Speed to a degree, Enjoy....
    TomReed

    Action and adventure in early anime.

    One of the most complex early anime series to be dubbed for American audiences. Speed Racer is the teenaged son of a car designer, whose Mach 5 can jump, go underwater, clear a path of trees and do other tricks. Besides winning various races, Speed and his family (girlfriend Trixie, kid brother Spritle and pet monkey Chim-Chim) run into spies, saboteurs, criminals and other bad-guy types.

    What raises the show above simple adventure is the family background. Speed's brother Rex, suffering dishonor and shame, adopts the identity of Racer X, secretly aiding his brother and goading him into becoming the world's best racer. The series has its dark moments, and the use of gunfire and explosives kept it off American TV for years ("too violent for kids").

    The show is far better than the 1994 version, a simple licensing of the character for a "kid-friendly" racing show. However, a new anime version (under the Japanese title "Mach A Go Go") has been made; it may surface in a well-dubbed English version in a few years.
    stp43

    Speed Racer The Ultimate Anime Race

    Arguably the greatest of all anime shows, Speed Racer is by far the best combination of the varied qualities of anime - goofy humor, nerve-packed action, and superior character interplay. Many fans' introduction to anime was in viewing of this show in 1970s syndication.

    The original version, titled Mach Go! Go! Go!, reflects the greater violence of Japanese anime, violence toned down for the US broadcast of the show but still at times unnerving. Peter Fernandez and Trans-Lux were given the task of "Anglicanizing" Mach Go! Go! Go! and succeeded perhaps beyond their own expectations; the show remains fresh and engaging even as the passage of time has displayed some of the anarchic racing practices portrayed in each episode.

    The show betrays some of the Gerry Anderson influences common to anime, influences even better shown by Battle Of The Planets' Thunderbirds-meets-Captain-Scarlet copycatting. The presence of the chimp Chim-Chim as pet for Spritle is a direct copy of the chimp used in Anderson's first Supermarionation show, Supercar, which served as something of a template for Speed Racer overall.

    The Racer family is as tightly knit as any family, headed by patriarch, ace motorsports engineer Lionel "Pops" Racer, his loving wife - never named in the show beyond Mom - and his two sons, Greg James "Speed" Racer and toddler Spridle. Pops, however, has an older son, Kenneth Rexford Racer, known as Rex. Years earlier Rex was entered in a major race against Pops' wishes and crashed heavily in winning; a furious Pops refused to let Rex race until he was older, but Rex refused to be pigeonholed and ran out on the family to become a racing champion; he has never been seen again by the family.

    This estrangement of Rex from his family, while not part of the show's pilot two-part episode, is nonetheless the real starting point for the series. Pops fears that his second-eldest son Speed will meet the same fate as Rex, but Speed is determined to race, and Pops reluctantly acquiesced to his son's passion. Speed is a special racer, and this draws the wrath of unscrupulous types determined to see that he never becomes a champion. The intervention of these unscrupulous types brings to the fore the mysterious Racer X, aka The Masked Racer - in reality Rex, in disguise, fearing that knowledge of his identity will bring the wrath of his enemies to his family and especially the gifted younger brother he's never known. There is a special chemistry between Racer X and Speed, a chemistry driven by Speed's budding curiousity about Racer X's true identity, and budding suspicion that Racer X is his long-lost brother.

    The show gets off to a good start in the first two cliffhanger episodes as well as the two-part "The Secret Engine," but by far the most popular and best episodes are the two that reach the show to its apex - the rousing Mob/racing actioner "Race Against The Mammoth Car" and the show's only three-part episode, the genuinely scary "The Most Dangerous Race."

    The Mammoth Car, highlighted by a sharply distinctive echoing whine as well as unforgettable music cue, is a 600-foot-long train-like monster owned by an infamous mobster who is suspected of stealing millions of bars of gold, a theft that Speed and his spunky girlfriend Patricia "Trixie" Shimura get swept into in the course of racing the Mammoth Car.

    The Most Dangerous Race is the Great Alpine Race, a race through mountains that becomes even more dangerous when heavy rains collapse weak overhangs and force racers to try a dangerous jump over chasms. Spritle has given Speed a small Mexican doll as a good luck charm, and this leads to the most genuinely terrifying moment of animation - when Speed slides into the chasm, the soundtrack fades into an echo, and we see nothing but tire marks, some debris from destroyed racecars, and finally the small good luck charm half-buried in the mud, seemingly dead - and Speed nowhere to be found. Never has a cliffhanger more effectively frightened a viewer more than this indelible image.

    Though the show could never reach the emotional height of these two episodes, excellent stories followed in the harrowing revenge tale "Race For Revenge," and follow-up stories; as the show proceeded stories switched to one-part episodes instead of the two-part cliffhangers used most often but never lost their punch of superb character interplay ("Man On The Lam," "The Car Hater," and "Most Dangerous Race's" one-part late-series sequel are the best of the one-parters), goofy charm (most of the villain names are straight out of Dick Tracy central casting), and the revved-up power of the show's signature mode of transportation, the Mach Five, which went from the enriching Bimmer-esque hum of the first 11 episodes to a pre-1995 NASCAR-flavored growl for "Race For Revenge" to the unsatisfying mixture of high-pitched whine and cheesy growl of the show's balance.

    It is this combination that makes Speed Racer a race winner and champion of all time in anime.

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    • Wissenswertes
      The original Japanese title "Mach GoGoGo", is a rather elaborate pun:
      • it is the name of the hero Go Mifune (as Speed Racer was known in Japan)
      • it contains the car's name "Mach-go", or Mach 5 ("Go" is Japanese for the number five)
      • it contains the English word "go", a staple of racing (multilingual puns were becoming vogue back then)
      • and "Go-Go-Go" is the Japanese sound effect for the rumbling of tires on a racetrack.
    • Patzer
      In several episodes, Speed is wearing a helmet in the long shots when he driving the Mach 5,but not in the close-ups.
    • Zitate

      [English theme song]

      Chorus: Here he comes, here comes Speed Racer! He's a demon on wheels! He's a demon, and he's gonna be chasing after someone! / He's gaining on you, so you better look alive! He's busy revvin' up the powerful Mach Five / And when the odds are against him, and there's dangerous work to do / You bet your life Speed Racer's gonna see it through! / Go, Speed Racer! Go, Speed Racer! Go, Speed Racer, Go! / He's off and flying as he guns the car around the track / He's jamming down the pedal like he's never coming back / Adventure's waiting just ahead! Go, Speed Racer! Go, Speed Racer! Go, Speed Racer, Go!

    • Crazy Credits
      Each episode title in the English dub is set against a red-yellow checkerboard background, similar to a racing flag.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into The What NOW Caper (1989)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 18. November 1971 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • MeTV Toons site
      • Official site
    • Sprache
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Speed Racer
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      • Tatsunoko Production
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      • 30 Min.
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      • 1.37 : 1

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