And you can tell this was designed by some idiot at Bandai without any input from the television people.
And you can tell this was designed by some idiot at Bandai without any input from the television people.
And you can tell this was designed by some idiot at Bandai without any input from the television people.
Since Bandai co-produces the show, I think that's a false dichotomy. The whole franchise is essentially an ongoing advertisement for Bandai toys.
Kind of? Brings new meaning to... not sure I can say it here...This seems kinda perverted
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The clip
I wonder if they'll show that scene in the American version.The clip
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=hnSqRTZeGg4[/yt]
That sounds good. I wish we were getting stuff like that now.By the way, I've been watching Dairanger, thanks to the link you provided. It's the first Super Sentai show I've watched (unless you count the Japanese Spider-Man as a prototype), and it's interesting how different it is from Power Rangers. Every story is a 2-parter, they only gradually introduce the Zords/mecha, only a few episodes so far have ended with giant-robot battles, etc. There have even been instances of characters not following the expected formulas of the genre -- in only their second opportunity, the Rangers had the good sense to prevent the monster from dropping the bomb that would make it giant, while conversely there was one point where the monsters attacked them in mid-transform and kept them from finishing. It's also a lot darker, yet also a lot more kid-oriented in some ways. (And episode 8 totally rips off the Luke/Vader/Palpatine scenes of Return of the Jedi right down to the force lightning.)
So... the Megazord does whatever the Rangers imagine it doing? And the Red Ranger imagined it doing... that. I guess that's not surprising in a boy his age...
By the way, I've been watching Dairanger, thanks to the link you provided. It's the first Super Sentai show I've watched (unless you count the Japanese Spider-Man as a prototype), and it's interesting how different it is from Power Rangers. Every story is a 2-parter, they only gradually introduce the Zords/mecha, only a few episodes so far have ended with giant-robot battles, etc. There have even been instances of characters not following the expected formulas of the genre -- in only their second opportunity, the Rangers had the good sense to prevent the monster from dropping the bomb that would make it giant, while conversely there was one point where the monsters attacked them in mid-transform and kept them from finishing. It's also a lot darker, yet also a lot more kid-oriented in some ways. (And episode 8 totally rips off the Luke/Vader/Palpatine scenes of Return of the Jedi right down to the force lightning.)
From my understanding, Super Sentai that year with Dairanger was mimicking "Star Wars"
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