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Power Rangers

Wow, that is cary timing, I just watched the 2017 movie on Amazon Prime this morning.
I actually really enjoyed the movie, I haven't seen the show since I was a kid so I can't judge it as a PR movie, but approaching it as a sci-fi/superhero movie, I liked it. I do have a feeling it was very different from the show, I can't really see the show having jokes about jerking off bulls, or a character arc involving sexting.
I thought they did a goof job of making the Rangers flawed, but still likeable, and the actors all did a great job. Elizabeth Bans was a lot of fun, I'm surprised there was any scenery left the way she was chewing it, but that kind of performance for a role like this. Bryan Cranston and Bill Hader were also both good, I was a bit surprised they gave Zordon the whole ulterior motive for helping the Rangers, but him giving up him giving up his one chance to come back in order to bring back Billy instead was a nice redeeming moment.
It took a bit longer to get the the action than I expected, but it was nice to get so much focus on character development, and once we got to the action I liked it.
After this I would love to see Dean Israelite take on a MCU or Worlds of DC movie.

It was a decent movie. I think if it had better designs that resembled the original stuff a bit more (it doesn't have to be spandex, but be at least recognizable, instead of going for a style that was basically the Transformers films mixed with Iron Man) and had more Ranger action then just the last 15ish minutes, it would have done a lot better. It had good characters (outside of that one thing with Kimberly), and a decent story, but a lot of it looked like hot garbage and calling it Power Rangers almost felt like false advertising based on how little of the Rangers the movie shows.
 
Lupinranger VS Patoranger episode 26

https://www.mp4upload.com/dp7p1av4rhnv

Decent episode. Even with minimal Patranger involvement this episode, it actually worked out well for Noel, being one who knows how to think like a cop and like a thief, accomplishing something that neither team would've accomplished on their own. It was nice to have Noel work with Umika.

Kamen Rider Build

44
https://www.mp4upload.com/z93t05n2nzux

45
https://www.mp4upload.com/iq9ruu5oxu75
46
https://www.mp4upload.com/ng5m0jfcm89c

44
That fight scene, with all four Riders transforming side by side and dealing a final (but not) blow to Evolt was super satisfying. What an episode. Build is so close to wrapping up, and while I'm looking forward to Zi-O, I'm going to miss these science dorks.


45
Evolt's monster form didn't last long. Thanks, Hazard Trigger, for being able to counteract him. Genius Hazard didn't look any different from regular Genius

We're moving towards the end, and that sense of finality is hovering over everything.


"Be the One" summer movie takes place between 45 and 46. It will probably be awhile till it's subbed



46
In true Toei style, they held off on debuting Grease Blizzard until the episode very nearly concluded, but it was worth it. The sequence is, as expected, a refit of Cross-Z's Magma but with more ice crystals, and that final shot was really nice. Kazumi also got a weird moment with Misora before the episode concluded, but that's par for the course. However, based on the next episode preview....

Could Kazumi be joining his three hokuto friends?
 
Lupinranger VS Patoranger episode 26

That was fun -- a nice crime/mystery episode where the Ganglar was almost incidental. It was actually a fair mystery, to an extent -- once the Ganglar was revealed as the auctioneer, I realized that when the lights came back up at the auction, the Ganglar was on stage and the auctioneer was nowhere to be seen. So the clues were right in front of us all along.

Interesting throwaway line that the Lupins' masks have an "anti-recognition function." Swiped from Clark Kent's glasses, no doubt. Well, I guess that saves our favorite Global Police trio from having to be deeply unobservant.

Anyway, Umika-chan cleans up nice. And Kudo Haruka is a terrific comic actress.


On Build, things are getting really intense.
Evolt got up to some Dark Phoenix-level stuff there on that alien planet, and the random destruction and death being inflicted in his "game" in episode 46 is startling. On Super Sentai, you often see scenes of buildings being destroyed by sudden attacks, implicitly with no time for their occupants to evacuate, but the implied death toll is never overtly acknowledged. Here, there's no question that a hell of a lot of people are dying. I guess that's been the case ever since the start of the series, with the original Pandora's Box disaster and the formation of the Walls. It's an interesting paradox, then, that Kamen Rider seems to have less violence than SS in another sense, in that the heroes (at least in Ex-Aid and Build) try to cure the monsters they fight and restore their humanity, while Sentai teams just straight up kill all their monstrous foes.

In any case, I'm getting rather creeped out by Kazumi's obsession with Misora, which is getting more disturbingly sexual. Between that and Gen-san's ongoing sartorial (and now culinary) disasters, the character humor on this show has gotten less effective and more annoying. If the reports of Kazumi's imminent death are not exaggerated, I won't miss that aspect of his character at all. Although, well, 44 was called "The End of Evolt," so you can't trust the titles to be accurate.

I was worried about what I'd miss with the movie falling between 45 & 46, but the transition was pretty seamless. I get the impression from the opening of 46 and from the movie clips in the titles that the plot of the movie revolves around the country finally being reunited, with the three governors appointed by Evolt apparently being evil Kamen Riders (does that mean we finally get a female Rider in this series?).
 
More Build thoughts:
I realized that Sento's plan to stop Evolt by merging two Earths is basically a variation on his old mentor Mogami's plan from the crossover movie, although in a less destructive way, presumably. What he formerly fought against, he now embraces. There's an interesting symmetry to that. I like it because it makes the movie less of a random side adventure and more of an integral setup for the show's endgame.

Although I note that Sento never answered Misora's question about whether duplicate individuals would be erased. It's hard to see this not being cataclysmic on a human level. If, say, the two worlds had different individuals populating them (or even doppelgangers of the same individuals), and they all stayed alive on the new merged world, then that world would suddenly have double its population and would be in for an environmental and humanitarian disaster of untold magnitude -- basically a reverse Thanos Snap.
 
I still find Zi-O unpleasantly arrogant, with his talk about how he's felt destined to be a king or whatever. Granted, Sento/Build is arrogant, but only about his scientific genius and being the awesome hero (and lead character), not about feeling entitled to personal power. I'm hoping the show's arc is about him learning humility and selflessness, but he comes off unlikeable to start with.

I wonder if it's significant that Kamen Rider Geiz's name is pronounced "Gates." A portal through time could perhaps be called a gate.
 
It looks like the anniversary special will be a lite version of the comic book storyline "Shattered Grid"

http://comicbook.com/powerrangers/2018/08/10/power-rangers-plot-25th-anniversary-episode-revealed/

Dimensions in Danger will feature several classic Rangers, a few of which have already made their debut in images and trailers, including Tommy Oliver (Jason David Frank), Katherine Hillard (Catherine Sutherland), Jason Faunt (Wes Collins), and Gemma ( ), and will feature even more. While all will play a part in the episode, it is expected that only Tommy and Wes will be the primary players in addition to the Super Ninja Steel cast, and they will all be facing a villain known as Lord Drayvon.

Drayvon is kidnapping Rangers throughout the various universes and is using them to create evil Rangers (i.e. Sentries).

It will take legendary and newer Rangers coming together to take him down, paving the way for Tommy, Kat, Wes, and more, all facing down evil Rangers, including an evil Tommy who turns out to be an evil robot clone.
 
Ninja Steel Anniversary episode sneak peek

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So does Jason David Frank have the longest history with the franchise of any actor? He was on for a quite a while, and he seems to pop back up a lot.
 
So does Jason David Frank have the longest history with the franchise of any actor? He was on for a quite a while, and he seems to pop back up a lot.

Yes. He's the one who's been brought back the most, and been a regular in the most different series. Presumably that's why the comic storyline is centered on his evil doppelganger -- because he's the most historically important and best-known Ranger. (Honestly, though, he was never a favorite of mine.)
 
So does Jason David Frank have the longest history with the franchise of any actor? He was on for a quite a while, and he seems to pop back up a lot.
No, that honor goes to Paul Schrier who was a main cast member from the first episode to the end of Power Rangers in Space, he then did a handful of episodes of Lost Galaxy, popped up in Forever Red during Wild Force and was a main cast member again for Samurai and Super Samurai. Jason Narvy also appeared more than Jason David Frank, he left at the end of in Space, had a cameo during Lost Galaxy's first episode amd then did Forever Red and the Super Samurai finale.
 
^Well, that depends on how you define the longest history. I admit I forgot about Bulk and Skull, but I was defining the question by duration rather than quantity. Paul Schrier's debut in PR was about 5 weeks before Jason Frank's in 1993, but Schrier's last appearance to date (not counting the Hyperforce RPG webseries) was on December 2012, while Frank last appeared as Tommy in "Legendary Battle" in November 2014, had a cameo as a bystander in the 2017 movie, and is now going to appear again as Tommy in the new special on August 28, 2018. So that means Frank does still have the longest history with the franchise overall.
 
I didn't realize that many actors had that kind of a history with the franchise. Other than JDF, I thought pretty much everyone else had done one or two seasons and then been done with it.
 
^Well, that depends on how you define the longest history. I admit I forgot about Bulk and Skull, but I was defining the question by duration rather than quantity. Paul Schrier's debut in PR was about 5 weeks before Jason Frank's in 1993, but Schrier's last appearance to date (not counting the Hyperforce RPG webseries) was on December 2012, while Frank last appeared as Tommy in "Legendary Battle" in November 2014, had a cameo as a bystander in the 2017 movie, and is now going to appear again as Tommy in the new special on August 28, 2018. So that means Frank does still have the longest history with the franchise overall.
By that definition you're almost right (Amy Jo Johnson holds the record if we go by duration from first to last appearance until new new reunion episode airs) but I prefer number of appearances, to me it feels a bit more significant than being at the top of the list because you show up on set every few years for a single appearance.
 
I didn't realize that many actors had that kind of a history with the franchise. Other than JDF, I thought pretty much everyone else had done one or two seasons and then been done with it.
Yeah, there are a few more than JDF. Kelson Henderson is a more recent long running cast member, he was a series regular in SPD, Mystic Force, Operation Overdrive, Jungle Fury, Ninja Steel and Super Ninja Steel and had guest appearances in Dino Thunder, RPM, Megaforce and Dino Charge. But unlike the others he played different characters in each series.

The vast majority of actors left after a relatively short run though, you are right about that.
 
I didn't realize that many actors had that kind of a history with the franchise. Other than JDF, I thought pretty much everyone else had done one or two seasons and then been done with it.

Not that many, really, if you discount the odd anniversary-episode guest spot. Jason Frank was a regular for most of MMPR, all of Zeo, and the first half of Turbo, then came back about 7 years later as a regular in Dino Thunder, and has made a couple of guest appearances since. Paul Schrier was a regular for the first 7 seasons, then came back a dozen years later to be a regular in Samurai. Jason Narvy was a regular for the first 6 seasons and had a handful of later cameos. Then there's Kelson Henderson's multiple roles, as mentioned above. John Tui also appeared in two consecutive seasons in different roles, as Cruger in S.P.D. and Daggeron in Mystic Force. And Holly Shanahan was Leelee in Mystic Force and Camille two years later in Jungle Fury. Michelle Langstone was Kat in S.P.D. and Master Guin in Jungle Fury, but the latter was only a 3-time guest appearance, not a second regular gig.

There's also Ricardo Medina, Jr., who was the Red Ranger Cole in Wild Force and the anti-villain swordsman Deker in Samurai 9 years apart (and who's currently in prison for committing voluntary manslaughter with a sword, creepily enough).


By that definition you're almost right (Amy Jo Johnson holds the record if we go by duration from first to last appearance until new new reunion episode airs)

Well, I wouldn't count the movie, since she wasn't playing Kimberly, just cameoing as a random citizen. I only threw in Frank's movie appearance as a side mention because it didn't affect the answer to the question.


but I prefer number of appearances, to me it feels a bit more significant than being at the top of the list because you show up on set every few years for a single appearance.

It's not about my own preference, just my literal-minded effort to answer the question exactly as JD posed it, which was who had the longest history.
 
Both of the answers work for me. I honestly had assumed whichever actor had the longest period of time between their first and latest appearances also had appeared in the most episodes.
 
Both of the answers work for me. I honestly had assumed whichever actor had the longest period of time between their first and latest appearances also had appeared in the most episodes.

Which is complicated by the fact that many of the "latest appearances" are one-time guest spots in anniversary specials years after the fact. As mentioned above, only a few actors have come back as regulars in later seasons, and sometimes not as the same character. (In fact, a few former Rangers and other cast members have occasionally come back without fanfare to do voices for monsters-of-the-week.)
 
I think JDF feels like his been around more (which may be true as he's been in more episodes than any other Ranger) but after Dino Thunder he didn't play Tommy for about a decade, then Legendary Battle, two Bat in the Sun Beat Downs, the 2017 cameo, now Super Ninja Steel and Legacy Wars. That's a lot of independent projects in 4 years!

I hope Kelson Henderson is involved in Dimensions in Danger being the longest serving current cast member.
 
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