GoShogun explained

GoShogun
Ja Kanji:戦国魔神ゴーショーグン
Ja Romaji:Sengoku Majin GōShōgun
Genre:Mecha
Creator:Takeshi Shudo
Type:tv series
Director:Kunihiko Yuyama
Producer:Yoshiaki Aibara
Hiroshi Katō
Music:Tachio Akano
Studio:Ashi Productions
Network:Tokyo Channel 12
First:July 3, 1981
Last:December 28, 1981
Episodes:26
Type:film
Director:Kunihiko Yuyama
Producer:Shūichi Onodera
Yasurō Yamaga
Hiroshi Katō
Masaru Umehara
Music:Tachio Akano
Studio:Ashi Productions
Released:24 April 1982
Runtime:63 minutes
Type:film
The Time Étranger
Director:Kunihiko Yuyama
Producer:Hideo Ogata
Hiroshi Katō
Music:Tachio Akano
Studio:Ashi Productions
Released:27 April 1985
Runtime:90 minutes

is a super robot anime series created by Takeshi Shudo. It was produced and aired in 1981 in Japan, with a movie special released in 1982 and a film sequel, GoShogun: The Time Étranger or Time Stranger, in 1985.[1] [2] [3] Its title has been variously translated into English as "Demon God of the War-Torn Land GoShogun", "Warring Demon God GoShogun", and "Civil War Devil-God GoShogun", but in the US and parts of Europe it is primarily known as Macron 1, the title of its North American adaptation.[4]

The GoShogun series and its film sequel, The Time Étranger, were both written by Takeshi Shudo and directed by Kunihiko Yuyama. The series is noted for its witty dialogue and lighthearted parody of its own genre conventions.[5] [6] [7] The Time Étranger shifts away from the original genre, leaving the robot aside entirely to focus on the strong and complex heroine. It has been praised for its serious tone, psychological intensity, and handling of mature themes.[8] [9] [10]

Original story

The story is set in the early 21st century, in which a covert evil organization, Dokuga, led by lord NeoNeros, holds near total political, economic, and military control of the world. Dokuga agents try to forcibly recruit a brilliant physicist, Professor Sanada, who sets off a suicide bomb rather than let Dokuga acquire his secret research. His son Kenta becomes Dokuga's next target, but is saved by his father's colleague and taken on board a teleporting fortress, Good Thunder. Teleportation is enabled by a mysterious form of energy, called Beamler, which was discovered by Sanada. The same energy also powers a giant battle robot, GoShogun, which is operated by three pilots. The crew of Good Thunder travels the world, repeatedly fighting off NeoNeros's forces with GoShogun and often hampering Dokuga's influence on the local level, whether by destroying their bases and businesses, assisting popular rebellions, or by averting environmental disasters. On at least one occasion, GoShogun pilots must team up with Dokuga's three chief officers against a common enemy to prevent the destruction of them all. This sets the stage for an eleventh-hour reversal, in which the three Dokuga generals side definitively against NeoNeros with the GoShogun team.

Over the course of the series, it is revealed that Beamler energy originates from a meteorite fragment found on the site of the Tunguska impact. It was sent to Earth by a supernatural power and was activated when humans attained the technological capacity for space exploration, to test whether humans are worthy of engaging with civilizations from other planets. Beamler's development is closely connected to Kenta, who in the end becomes the incarnate form of the energy and the representative of the earth's collective soul, including not only living things, but also newly sentient robots and machines. NeoNeros turns out to be a negative, evil form of the same energy. After defeating him, Kenta takes GoShogun into space.

Adaptations

North America

In 1986, Saban Entertainment combined footage from GoShogun and Akū Dai Sakusen Srungle (Great Military Operation in Subspace Srungle or Mission Outer Space Srungle), a similar show produced by Kokusai Eiga-sha, to form Macron 1. Taking two (or more) unrelated series and re-editing them to appear as one storyline was common practice in adapting anime series to American television, as the number of episodes in a typical anime frequently fell short of the minimum number required for five-days-a-week syndication in the US market (65). Aside from Macron 1, , Robotech, and Captain Harlock and the Queen of a Thousand Years were also stitched together in this manner. The combined series Macron 1 was produced and released in the United States, using the same voice cast as Carl Macek's Robotech adaptation.

In the US version, test pilot David Chance is accidentally transported into a parallel universe controlled by a tyrannical organization called GRIP, led by Dark Star. This allows GRIP to send their forces to Earth, leaving Dark Star's cyborg henchman Orn as deputy in the alternate universe. Fighting against GRIP are two teams comprising "Macron 1": the first (from the GoShogun footage) battles against Dark Star's legions on Earth; Beta Command (from the Srungle footage) is working to overthrow Orn. The main focus is on the Macron team on Earth, with Beta Command appearing sporadically.

The Macron 1 adaptation made use of the so-called "Miami Vice formula" introduced a year earlier by the eponymous primetime series, incorporating contemporary pop music into the action scenes. Notable musical adaptations included "Beat It", "Shout", "Safety Dance", and "The Heat is On".

Discotek Media released the series on subtitled-only DVD in November 2017.[11] Central Park Media had licensed the Time Étranger film and released the film twice on DVD.[12] Discotek has also licensed the film and released it on DVD and Blu-ray in June 2017.

Europe

Around the same time as the US adaptation, Saban released another version of the series in several European countries, also under the title Macron 1. This version, however, did not incorporate any footage from Srungle or the parallel-universe angle, making the international Macron 1 a more straightforward adaptation of GoShogun, though still heavily edited. In Italy the series was broadcast earlier, in 1982, as Gotriniton – Goshogun, and was a direct translation of the Japanese original, without recutting. In France, the first few episodes of GoShogun were released under the title Fulgutor.

This was the first anime series broadcast in Soviet Union.

Characters

Good Thunder Team

Dokuga Crime Syndicate

Destroids

Movie Special

The GoShogun Movie, released in 1982, is a combination of episodes 20 and 17 (in that order) from the original series. It includes a summary of key events, snippets from the daily lives and background stories of the characters, and advertisements for fictional products. The closing credits show images of the main characters as children. The last of these, young Remy, would later make an appearance in The Time Étranger.[13]

The Time Étranger

A surrealistic follow-up film, known as The Time Étranger or Time Stranger (1985), is set forty years after the events of the GoShogun TV series. The team has long since disbanded, and most of them have lost touch, but when Remy is rendered comatose in a car crash, her old friends and former enemies gather at her bedside to try to lend her their strength. Meanwhile, in Remy's dream, she and her five friends are in the prime of their lives, and are trapped in a mysterious desert city inhabited by hostile fanatics, who worship a god of fate. All six team members receive anonymous letters that ordain for each of them a brutal death within several days, with Remy set to die first. As they fight back against the forces of fate, Remy is haunted by increasingly disturbing visions of her foretold demise, as well as by flashbacks to her lonely and troubled childhood, designed to drive her to despair. It is notable that the feature-length sequel of a "giant robot" series barely makes any reference to the giant robot, except for a brief shot of a GoShogun-shaped charm on the rearview mirror of Remy's car and a museum devoted to the former exploits of the GoShogun crew. All the fighting in the dream sequence is done with cold weapons and common firearms, such as Remy's trusty revolver.

Video games

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 戦国魔神ゴーショーグン(1981). 5 December 2014. allcinema.net. Stingray. ja.
  2. Web site: 戦国魔神ゴーショーグン(1982). 5 December 2014. allcinema.net. Stingray. ja.
  3. Web site: 戦国魔神ゴーショーグン Goshogun IN 時の異邦人(エトランゼ)(1985). 5 December 2014. allcinema.net. Stingray. ja.
  4. Book: Erickson . Hal . Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 . 2005 . 2nd . McFarland & Co . 978-1476665993 . 517–518.
  5. Web site: Etranger in an Etrange Land. Michael Toole. 2013-01-13. 31 January 2015.
  6. Web site: Reed All About It. Michael Toole. 2013-11-03. 31 January 2015.
  7. Web site: Dorvack & Dancougar. Benjamin Ettinger. 2009-01-06. 31 January 2015. 2011-10-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20111029000417/http://www.pelleas.net/aniTOP/index.php/title_59. dead.
  8. Web site: Buried Treasure: Time Stranger. Justin Sevakis. 2007-01-18. 31 January 2015.
  9. Toole, "Etranger in an Etrange Land".
  10. Web site: GoShogun: The Time Etranger (Time Stranger): Anime DVD Review . Brian Cirulnick . 2003 . 31 January 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140512013110/http://www.anime.com/Etranger/ . 12 May 2014.
  11. Web site: Discotek Licenses GoShogun TV Anime, GoShogun the Time Étranger Film. Anime News Network. March 3, 2017. March 8, 2021.
  12. Web site: Upcoming DVDs. Anime News Network. November 11, 2000. March 3, 2017.
  13. Jonathan Clements and Helen McCarthy, The Anime Encyclopedia, Revised & Expanded Edition: A Guide to Japanese Animation since 1917 (Berkeley, CA: Stone Bridge Press, 2006): 245–6. https://books.google.com/books?id=rZg4AAAAQBAJ&q=goshogun+clements