Un cyborg simile a una cavalletta in moto combatte l'organizzazione che lo ha trasformato per le sue azioni malvagie.Un cyborg simile a una cavalletta in moto combatte l'organizzazione che lo ha trasformato per le sue azioni malvagie.Un cyborg simile a una cavalletta in moto combatte l'organizzazione che lo ha trasformato per le sue azioni malvagie.
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- QuizAs with Urutoraman: Kûsô tokusatsu shirîzu (1966), this series, created by manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori, gave birth to another popular type of modern Japanese superhero: The "Henshin" (Japanese for "transformation") Hero. These are normal-sized superheroes who transform into a cyborg, android or mutant by performing a "henshin pose," and usually fight their enemies with martial arts, minimal weaponry and a finishing attack (usually a flying kick). The Sentai Series (starting with Ishinomori's Himitsu sentai Gorenjâ (1975)), Metal Heroes (starting with Uchû keiji Gyaban (1982)) and hundreds of other contemporary Japanese superheroes were an offshoot of this historically-important genre.
- Citazioni
Takeshi Hongô: [his "henshin" phrase] Rider... Henshin!
- ConnessioniFeatured in I giocattoli della nostra infanzia: Power Rangers (2019)
- Colonne sonoreRettsu Gô!! Raidâ Kikku
(Let's Go!! Rider Kick)
Performed by Hiroshi Fujioka and Male Harmony (episodes #1-13), Masato Shimon (as Kôichi Fuji) and Male Harmony (episodes #14-88)
Lyrics by Shotaro Ishinomori
Music and arrangement by Shunsuke Kikuchi
(First opening theme episodes 1-88)
Recensione in evidenza
Unfortunately, being a newbie of this franchise I though that starting with its first series ever it would have proven the right choice since usually by doing that I've found a lots of gems people tend to not consider because of their age, in both the comic medium and the anime one. This is not one of those gems, except the first 10/13 episodes that are interesting because they show you how originally the series was intended to be, I. E. akin to the american golden age of comics with lots of blood and dismemberment (something I'm not particularly fond when it's done past that specific period except when it has a meaning behind and it's not just for gore's sake). After that, what you're going to see if you stick until the end (something I don't recommend doing) is a progressively kiddified affair that is really, really and I can't stress enough REALLY repetitive and way more repetitive, boring and hamfisted than a lot of classic 100+ or 200+ episodes repetitive animes I've seen from front to end (fillers and recaps included) without being bored once with nothing particularly engaging if we exclude the occasional campy glimpse (provided you're a sucker of camp like me), the nice eye-candy chicks who start by factually fighting the minions and end being treated like nothing more than props and a couple of interesting episodes, in particular episode 84 which is the way I personally like superheroes to be. Other than that there is nothing here for newcomers, so as a newcomer to this franchise myself I can't recommend this to anyone in my situation. Go down on other series of the franchise before this, not on this one.
- TooKakkoiiforYou_321
- 10 nov 2022
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By what name was Kamen Raidâ (1971) officially released in Canada in English?
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