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News Stay At Home With ULTRAMAN| Ultra Science Fiction Hour on YouTube

For some reason, I always get "Video unavailable -- The uploader has not made this video available in your country" for your Ace and Ultraseven links. I found the playlists at the YouTube site, and the videos are hidden for me. Just as well, since I've already seen both series (they have them on ShoutFactory), but I wonder why the links don't work. Maybe because they have them on ShoutFactory in the US.
 
For some reason, I always get "Video unavailable -- The uploader has not made this video available in your country" for your Ace and Ultraseven links. I found the playlists at the YouTube site, and the videos are hidden for me. Just as well, since I've already seen both series (they have them on ShoutFactory), but I wonder why the links don't work. Maybe because they have them on ShoutFactory in the US.
I think that's exactly because they have the streaming licencing deal with ShoutFactory in North America. The YT uploads of Seven and Ace appear to be for those parts of the world without licencing deals.

Have caught up by now.

On Decker #18, it really was a good episodes, and seeing the return of Yapool really was a blast. I actually had forgotten about the original design, so for a moment I thought it was a Zetton Alien with Yapool technology. Also, the fight had some really glorious miniature and forced perspective work. The foreground miniatures really sell the illusion, and when the buildings were destroyed, the debris was pretty realistic. Otherwise, the episode was light on plot but heavy on emotional drama, which is fine with an episode this fast-paced. And once again, a really good cliffhanger.

On Destined Crossroads #1, it actually had been so long that I'd barely remembered that the previous UGF series was mostly set-up for this new series. I did find it interesting that Z was specifically asked about his human host Haruki, once again showing that their relationship is different compared to other Ultras and their hosts.
 
I did find it interesting that Z was specifically asked about his human host Haruki, once again showing that their relationship is different compared to other Ultras and their hosts.

Somewhat, but X and Daiji had a similar partner dynamic. And there were occasional earlier cases of Ultras and their hosts having distinct personalities and conversing with each other from time to time -- mainly The*Ultraman and the Australian Towards the Future (aka Ultraman Great), but also Ultraman Max to an extent. Plus there was Zero and Leito's odd-couple relationship in Geed, jockeying for control of the same body. And you've got Taiga, where Hiroyuki has three Ultras inhabiting him at once. (Those last two both remind me of Kamen Rider Den-O in different ways.)

Granted, though, I don't think any of those felt as much like a friendship as X/Daiji or Z/Haruki. Joneus was sort of a wise mentor voice occasionally speaking to Hikari. Great's relationship with Jack Shindo reminded me of KITT and Michael Knight, a wry observer kibitzing over the hero's shoulder. Kaito and Max had occasional conversations getting to know each other and comparing points of view, but not often. Leito and Zero developed a friendship of a sort, but it was more of a bickering, competitive relationship. And Taiga, Titas, and Fuma were usually bantering with one another inside Hiroyuki's head, so it didn't leave much room for friendship with any particular one of them.


You know, I was just thinking the other day about how the first half-dozen New Generation series eschewed the usual "Ultra within human host" arrangement. In Ginga and X, the Ultras inhabited items carried by their hosts -- Ginga's Spark Doll form and the X Devizer that X inhabited as data -- rather than actually being merged with their hosts. Then you had Orb, who was just a guy with Ultra powers. Geed was an Ultra/human hybrid with innate powers (although you had the usual possession dynamic, sort of, with Zero and Leito). And Rosso, Blu, and Grigio inherited their powers from deceased holders and thus had no other personalities sharing their bodies.

But then Taiga brought the "possession" dynamic back with a vengeance, and then you had the partner relationship between Z and Haruki. Although that was followed up with Kengo/Trigger being a single personality. And then Decker, where there is a separate Ultra being, but a nonverbal one that doesn't exhibit any distinct personality from Kanata's.
 
In episode #34 of "Ultraman Ace", Seiji saves a young boy from drowning while looking for a lost ship, but shortly after, he sees the boy at the beach collecting seashells for a peculiar reason:
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Decker #19:
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It was alright. Kengo's back, and brings a further motivational boost for Kanata. I'm a little bummed Yapool has been beaten already, and not even primarily by the heroes. I guess the Spheres have a bit of the Brain Slugs from Futurama in their DNA. The episode is mostly set on the moon, even the final kaiju battle, which allowed for a smaller budget/workload on miniatures, it's always good to have story reasons for that, and it allows the FX team to put that much more effort into the miniature FX in other episodes.
 
Not bad. I guessed that it was directed by Sakamoto, and I was right. The mid-battle henshins were unusual for Ultraman, and that and the human-scale action felt a lot like Kamen Rider or Sentai. It's nice when they mix things up like that.

I'm unclear on what the wreckage of Galactron and King Joe was doing on the Moon. As far as I can tell from the wiki, neither one has appeared in the Decker/Trigger universe before, discounting King Joe STORAGE Custom's brief visit, and it was taken back to Z's universe.

It looked like the Sphere were trying to take Kanata's memories, but he didn't lose them like Yapool did, which is odd. Maybe being an Ultra protected him?

It looks like Captain Murahoshi has figured out Kanata is Decker and is covering for him. Not unusual for a defense force captain. Just once, I'd like to see an Ultra host called on the carpet by his captain and charged with dereliction of duty or whatever, since having that kind of advantage and hiding it from your commanding officer has got to be a serious crime. Heck, maybe even espionage, for allowing an alien, however benevolent, to infiltrate the defense force in secret.
 
Here's episode 2 of Ultra Galaxy Fight: The Destined Crossroad:

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Pretty short this week -- only 12 minutes, about 1/4 of which was theme songs. The Wiki says episode 1 was an extended intro, so I guess this will be the normal length.

Interesting how Ultrawoman Grigio is shaping up to be one of the central characters here. She's been a significant presence in a couple of the recent webseries, but it seems she may have the most prominent character arc here, or at least one of them.

Looking over the credits, I realize that we've reached the point where none of the Showa-era Ultras are voiced by their original actors anymore, with the sole exception of Ultraman 80. I didn't realize it at first, since the new Ultraseven actor sounds pretty similar to Kohji Moritsugu, and the Joneus actor sounds pretty close to the original too.
 
Here's episode 2 of Ultra Galaxy Fight: The Destined Crossroad:

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Pretty short this week -- only 12 minutes, about 1/4 of which was theme songs. The Wiki says episode 1 was an extended intro, so I guess this will be the normal length.

That's been indeed the usual length of the Ultra Galaxy Fight episodes. At some point, Tsuburaya usually releases a re-edited film version, which on rewatch is probably the better option, as you don't have to watch the opening and end titles over and over again.

Interesting how Ultrawoman Grigio is shaping up to be one of the central characters here. She's been a significant presence in a couple of the recent webseries, but it seems she may have the most prominent character arc here, or at least one of them.

It is still early in the series, there's still eight episodes to go, so there might be shifting focus later on, especially with the Ultras from the US cartoon still to come. But I'm happy Grigio gets some time to shine.


In episode #9 of "UltraSeven", Furuhashi's lying to impress a woman immediately backfires:
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That's been indeed the usual length of the Ultra Galaxy Fight episodes. At some point, Tsuburaya usually releases a re-edited film version, which on rewatch is probably the better option, as you don't have to watch the opening and end titles over and over again.

Yeah, I saw the previous two UGF miniseries in the film format. I thought of waiting for that here, but it's already been months since I saw the previous one, so I don't want to wait any longer than necessary to see the continuation. Plus I still kind of enjoy the novelty of getting to see tokusatsu releases live (even if this is a rebroadcast from a paid service).


It is still early in the series, there's still eight episodes to go, so there might be shifting focus later on, especially with the Ultras from the US cartoon still to come.

Oh, are they going to get a significant focus rather than just a cameo?


But I'm happy Grigio gets some time to shine.

It's interesting that a character who didn't even become an Ultra until after the end of her series proper has become such a major player in the web productions. But female Ultras are so rare that it's nice to see one getting a major role. Indeed, this miniseries seems to have more female suit characters than just about any of its predecessors.
 
I don't know, but they were the prominent part of the trailer's stinger.

Given how these are structured, though, there's no telling whether they actually play a story role or are merely highlighted in an action sequence.


It's wild how they're bringing in so many obscure characters, even joke Ultras like Zearth and Nice, and the characters from that Andro Melos thing. It's the ultimate in fannish indulgence.

But it's interesting that they touched on how many Ultras are from different planets of origin, yet have all come together in the Land of Light. The worldbuilder in me wants to see that explored more fully. I know I'm overthinking it, of course, but it's the way my mind works. How are there so many Ultras from parallel universes, and how have they ended up interacting so freely? I had the thought that maybe the Ultras had colonized parallel universes in the past, but then I remembered that the U-40 Ultras (Joneus and Titas's people) were given a distinct, if somewhat similar origin in the anime. So now I figure that it's more of a parallel-evolution thing, that whoever invents a similar kind of planetary power source in a given universe gets mutated into Ultras in the same way (at least if they start out humanoid). They hinted at that in the prologue here, with the Absolutians having their own version of the power source.
 
In this week's episode #35 of "Ultraman Ace", a monster invades a young boy's dreams to make him wet his bed so the monster can shape itself out of the stain:
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A nice Decker episode today, featuring the Ultra Q monster Ragon, basically Tsuburaya's answer to the Creature from the Black Lagoon. (Hmm... "Ragon" can also be transliterated as "Lagon." Have I hit upon the etymology?)

A nice quiet little story with a small town and its traditions, and the old woman with a special bond with the sympathetic kaiju. The setting in a (formerly) small oceanside town and the danger of the land subsiding are nods to the original UQ episode's story. It even opens with a cue of Ultra Q music to make the most of the homage. Although the giant version of Ragon with the energy ray comes from the Ultraman episode where a Ragon was mutated to giant size by a nuclear explosion (presaging Frankenstein Conquers the World and Godzilla's revised origin in the Heisei era).

Some nice camera angles on the Decker/Ragon fight sequence. I liked the bit with the fight reflected in the fallen traffic mirrors, and the ground-level camera on the sidewalk tracking the fighters as they rolled on the ground.

I could've done without the bits of the vice-captain being annoyed about not being as young and pretty as Ichika.
 
RUMOR. The next Ultraman series title may have been leaked

https://twitter.com/SuperSaberman7/status/1598323071017943041

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Okay, so either they're sticking with the nostalgia kick, or someone's just guessing they will. Either option is plausible. I gather that Tiga, Dyna, and Gaia are considered a trilogy of sorts even though Gaia was in a different universe. So it makes sense that they'd carry the pattern forward at least one more year.

Hmm, what if they kept doing it for a fourth year and did a "New Generation Cosmos?" Let's see, Tiga to Trigger, Dyna to Decker, Gaia to Gazer, Cosmos to... Copper? Collar? Coder? Corsair?
 
A nice Decker episode today, featuring the Ultra Q monster Ragon, basically Tsuburaya's answer to the Creature from the Black Lagoon. (Hmm... "Ragon" can also be transliterated as "Lagon." Have I hit upon the etymology?)

A nice quiet little story with a small town and its traditions, and the old woman with a special bond with the sympathetic kaiju. The setting in a (formerly) small oceanside town and the danger of the land subsiding are nods to the original UQ episode's story. It even opens with a cue of Ultra Q music to make the most of the homage. Although the giant version of Ragon with the energy ray comes from the Ultraman episode where a Ragon was mutated to giant size by a nuclear explosion (presaging Frankenstein Conquers the World and Godzilla's revised origin in the Heisei era).

Some nice camera angles on the Decker/Ragon fight sequence. I liked the bit with the fight reflected in the fallen traffic mirrors, and the ground-level camera on the sidewalk tracking the fighters as they rolled on the ground.

I could've done without the bits of the vice-captain being annoyed about not being as young and pretty as Ichika.
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Heavy on the Lovecraft references, light on Kanata. As is probably better for what is basically an Ultra Q episode snuck into an Ultraman series, to keep the Ultra-character out of it as much as possible. Makes for a nice change of pace.

Have to correct you on the order of releases, though. Ultra Q and Ultraman, and therefore the first appearances of Ragon pre- and post-nuclear explosion, aired in 1966, while Frankenstein Conquers the World was released in Japan in 1965.
 
Have to correct you on the order of releases, though. Ultra Q and Ultraman, and therefore the first appearances of Ragon pre- and post-nuclear explosion, aired in 1966, while Frankenstein Conquers the World was released in Japan in 1965.

D'oh! I knew I should've checked. I thought it was early '70s for some reason.
 
I think Nick Adams was dead by the early '70s.

UGF: The Destined Crossroads, episode #3:
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This episode has quite the battle between several Ultras and their adversaries, but Grigio still feels like the main focus in this one, as well.


In episode #10 of "UltraSeven", Dan gets trapped in another dimension:
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This episode has quite the battle between several Ultras and their adversaries, but Grigio still feels like the main focus in this one, as well.

Unlike the previous chapters, it's all one sequence, with Grigio, her comedy-Ultra allies, and the New Generation Heroes dealing with Grigio Darkness and the other villains. I'm surprised Grigio Darkness was dealt with in one chapter. The way she was played up in the previews made it seem like she'd be a more central figure.

I found it a bit silly when Grigio was worrying, "Am I too weak to defeat myself?" Uhh, it's yourself. Presumably you and she will be equally matched no matter how powerful you are. Although I guess they were going for some metaphor about having the strength to defeat one's own inner darkness. At first, I thought they were undermining Grigio by having her need the help of the boys to save her, which would've been kinda sexist, but it turned out that they just cheered her on and gave her moral support, which gave her the strength to prevail by herself.
 
Got my ticket for Shin Ultraman today!!! I thought it would never get a showing in the States. Unfortunately it's for two days only in January (11th and 12th). And also unfortunately I had to get tickets to the dubbed version since both shows are in a small auditorium and all the good seats were taken for the subtitled version. I think I was the third person to get a seat for my showing, and it's in a prime spot, so there's that. Still, I'm super excited and glad it's getting some kind of release here!
 
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