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Mazinger/Mazinger Z

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Mazinger Z

Mazinger Z

Mazinger ZマジンガーZMajingā Zetto

Genre Mecha, Science fiction
Anime series: Mazinger Z
Studio

Toei Animation

Network
Original run

3 Dec 1972 — 1 Sep 1974

No. of episodes

92

Mazinger Z (マジンガーZ, Majingā Zetto) is a manga series by Go Nagai, serialized in Shueisha Shonen Jump from October 1972 to August 1973. In December of 1972, an anime adaptation premiered on Fuji Television. The TV series ended September 1, 1974, outliving its manga counterpart.

Contents

Plot

Mazinger Z is a gigantic Super Robot, constructed with a fictitious metal called Chogokin Z (literally Super-Alloy Z), which is forged from a new element mined from a reservoir found only in the sediment of Japan's Mt. Fuji. The mecha was built by Professor Juzo Kabuto as a secret weapon against the forces of evil, represented in the series by the Mechanical Beasts (mecha used for evil purposes) of Dr. Hell. The latter was the German member of a Japanese archeological team, which discovered ruins of a lost pre-Grecian civilization on an island named Bardos; the civilization was loosely based on the ancient Mycenae, and was called the Mycene Empire in the series. One of their findings was that the Mycene used an army of steel titans about 20 m in height (compare with the Greek legend of Talos). Finding prototypes of those titans underground which could be remote-controlled and realizing their immense power on the battlefield, Dr. Hell goes insane and has all the other scientists of his research team killed except for Professor Kabuto; the lone survivor manages to escape back to Japan, and attempts to warn the world of its imminent danger. Meanwhile, Dr. Hell establishes his headquarters on a mobile island which he sails around on, and plans to use the Mechanical Beasts to become the new ruler of the world. To counter this, Kabuto constructs Mazinger Z and manages to finish it just before being killed by a bomb planted by Hell’s right-hand man, Baron Ashura. As he is dying, he manages to inform his grandson Kouji Kabuto about the robot and its use. Kouji becomes the robot’s pilot, and from that point on battles both the continuous mechanical monsters, and the sinister henchmen sent by Doctor Hell in every episode.

Development

In his Manga Works series, Go Nagai reveals that he had always loved Tetsuwan Atom and Tetsujin-28 as a child, and wanted to make his own robot anime.Template:Fact However, for the longest time he was unable to produce a concept that he felt didn't borrow too heavily from those two shows. One day, Nagai observed a traffic jam and mused to himself that the drivers in back would surely love a way to bypass the ones in front. From that thought came his ultimate inspiration: a giant robot that could be controlled from the inside, like a car. In his original concepts, the titular robot was Energer Z, which was controlled by a motorcycle that was driven up its back and into its head (an idea which was recycled for the Diana A robot). However, with the sudden popularity of Kamen Rider, Nagai replaced the motorcycle with a hovercraft. He later redesigned Energer Z, renaming it Mazinger Z to evoke the image of a demon god (Ma, 魔, meaning demon and Jin, 神, meaning god). The motif of the Hover Pilder docking itself into Mazinger's head also borrows from Nagai's 1971 manga Demon Lord Dante (the prototype for his more popular Devilman), in which the titular giant demon has a human head (of Ryo Utsugi, the young man who merged with him) in his forehead. Interestingly, Koji Kabuto takes his surname (the Japanese word for a helmet) from the fact that he controls Mazinger Z from its head. Template:Clr

Sequels

The Mazinger Z anime ran to a total of 92 TV episodes from 1972 to 1974. Its period of greatest popularity lasted from roughly October 1973 to March 1974, during which time it regularly scored audience ratings in the high twenties; episode 68, broadcast March 17, 1974, achieved the series' highest rating of 30.4%, making Mazinger Z one of the highest-rated anime series of all time[1]. It culminated in the destruction of the original robot by new enemies (after Doctor Hell's final defeat in the penultimate episode) and the immediate introduction of its successor, Great Mazinger, an improved version of Mazinger, along with its pilot, Tetsuya Tsurugi. The idea of replacing the first robot with Great Mazinger (sometimes called Shin Mazinger Z) is a variation of a death-rebirth myth found in most Japanese action series: The title character, even if it is only a robot, is never truly defeated or destroyed, only improved upon, and replaced by the next version. Koji and Mazinger Z come back in the last episodes of Great Mazinger to help their successors defeat the forces of evil.

Another sequel, albeit in a different line, was introduced in 1975, with the appearance of Grendizer, set in the Mazinger and Great Mazinger story continuity that included Koji Kabuto as a supporting character.

The shows spawned so-called “team-up movies” early on, which were like longer episodes that teamed up Mazinger Z with one of Go Nagai’s other creations, as in Mazinger Z vs. Devilman (mazinga zeto tai debiruman) in 1973 and Mazinger Z Vs. The Great General of Darkness (mazinga zetō tai ankoku daishogun) in 1974.

Thirty years after the start of the original program, Nagai’s company Dynamic Planning released a continuation of the original Mazinger series as an OVA—named Mazinkaiser (mazinkaizā)—in 2002. This work would be succeeded by the movie Mazinkaiser: Deathmatch! Ankoku Daishogun, which in some ways served as a partial remake of Mazinger Z vs. the General of Darkness.

Legacy

The series is noteworthy for introducing many of the accepted stock features of giant robot anime: The mechanical marvel that is the world's only hope, forgotten civilizations, power-hungry mad scientists, incompetent henchmen, lovable supporting characters (usually younger siblings, love interests, or friends of the hero), the scientist father or grandfather who loses his life heroically, and strangely clothed, eccentric or physically deformed villains (the intersex Baron Ashura as one example). Mazinger Z was also the first show to feature a female robot (Aphrodite A, which was piloted by Sayaka Yumi and is remembered for its missile-launching breasts), and a comic-relief robot made of spare parts and garbage named Boss Borot (which ended up suffering severe damage in nearly all of his appearances), after its pilot, brash yet simpleminded gang leader, Boss.

The peculiarity about this Super Robot, differing from the ones in earlier robot manga, is that Koji has to fly a small red hover-vehicle up to the head of the humanoid armor. The hover-vehicle, named Pilder, lands in the head of the robot and activates it (shouting PILDER ON!). Manga and anime historians see the Pilder-Robot combination as the origin of the “transforming robot” genre, because it marks one of the first published examples in a manga of two distinctive vehicles forming a specific entity. This is often interpreted as the root of later series like Go-Lion (english "Voltron – Defender of the Universe"), the Transformers, and the giant robots in the "Super Sentai" Series (the basis for Power Rangers). Mazinger Z is not a vehicle that transforms into another shape, yet it requires the smaller, non-combative vehicle to get going. This idea may have inspired the Core Fighter in Gundam/Mobile Suit Gundam and the entry-plug in Evangelion/Neon Genesis Evangelion.

Another characteristic is seen in the unusual use of Mazinger's formidable weaponry: Kouji would always announce with a shout the name of the super-power or attack he was about to use, including eye-fired laser beams (Koshiryoku Beaamu!), melting rays (Bureesto Fiyaa!), gale-force winds (Ruusto Hurricane!), and the famous and oft-copied “Rocket Punch” (Roketto Paanchi!) attack. Most of these simple gimmicks were later incorporated in most of Nagai’s robot series, and widely imitated in many other mecha shows. Although the roots of announcing the weapons can also be traced back to Toei's 1968 tokusatsu series Giant Robo (US title, Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot), or even the way the heroes of chambara eiga and television used to announce their sword techniques before cutting down their opponents.

However, the most notable characteristic that the show brought to the Super Robot genre was the relationship between machines and humans; Go Nagai established from the start the premise that machines and humans could act as one, and interact between each other. Since Kouji piloted the robot from the head, he acted as the robot's "brain", and almost every time Kouji would move, laugh, or suffer inside its cockpit, the robot would act the same, mimicking its pilot. Additionally, some minor characters included were cyborgs, that could act like humans, showing feelings and emotions (even crying). These ideas were used repeatedly in many similar shows (Grendizer, another Nagai work, would have the pilot injured in his own body where the robot was attacked).

In terms of plot, despite being all too simplistic in its portrait of good and evil characters, the show was able to stay fresh with young audiences with an irresistible mix of action, horror, comedy, and drama, sometimes all in one single episode. Some of them (specially after the introduction of the Boss Borot), were heavy on slapstick and jokes, even to the point of making fun of the hero and the villains; others carried strong melodramatic touches (this characteristics of heavy satire humor and melodrama were in fact staples of almost all of Go Nagai's creations in manga, even before their adaptations to the small screen). We also have a change in the concept of main female characters (already seen in Harenchi Gakuen, later reinforced in Cutie Honey), who were until then modeled after the "quiet, sweet, compliant" Japanese ideal: Kouji's partner and love interest Sayaka Yumi is tomboyish, loud and stubborn, very unlike the traditional heroines. Of course, Kouji Kabuto was not your usual hero of the time -- a crass, arrogant, impulsive and hot-headed ne’er-do-well -- who was the polar opposite of the virtuous Japanese males in the media. While Kouji's very outrageous and abhorrent behavior was very appealing to young boys, it was the bane of many establishment organizations, such as the Nippon PTA.

Later sequels of the media franchise share many characteristics of the Japanese tokusatsu heroes as well as 1970s kaiju films. The team-up anime Grendizer & Getter Robo G & Great Mazinger vs. The Giant Sea Monster is very similar to tokusatsu films like Godzilla vs. the Sea Monster.

International versions

Europe

Mazinger was translated into many languages spoken outside Japan and the Far East, was broadcast, and found an audience in much of the rest of the world. In Europe, Mazinger Z was televised in Spain and Italy, with astounding success. Oddly enough, it was not shown in France until the 1980s, by which time it was perceived as a Grendizer imitation, even though it was actually the original, and the main character, Koji Kabuto, is a major character in both series. The inconsistent distribution of the Mazinger Z series outside of Japan led to similar confusion in other western markets.

South America

Mazinger Z was also shown in Central and South American countries in its entirety and without editing (although the version produced for Spain was edited to 30 episodes). Mazinger Z was also very popular in Puerto Rico, where the show aired in its entirety as well, and it has had a faithful cult following since. In the decades since its original broadcast, Mazinger Z has maintained a loyal cult following since its initial airing in Latin American countries.

North America

In 1984, the show was syndicated in the United States under the title Tranzor Z from 3-B Productions. Unlike the generally faithful treatment other countries gave their versions of Mazinger Z, 3-B's version of Tranzor Z was heavily edited and shortened to 65 episodes, with a modified storyline that was altered from the original, along with most of the characters' names. Credit for the series went to producer and licensor, Bunker Jenkins (although token credit was given to the Toei Company). 3-B Productions was a short-lived company that grew out of the production team who worked on the US version of Space Battleship Yamato, entitled Star Blazers, at Sunbow Productions. The "Americanization" of Mazinger Z for US consumption was done because of the strict standards in regards to content for children's programming at the time -- a large percentage of the action scenes were deemed unacceptable by Standards and Practices.

In other words, Mazinger Z was too violent for US television -- the original version contained numerous scenes of mass hysteria, urban destruction, gratuitous violence, cold-blooded homicide, sadistic torture, gruesome dismemberments, violent death, and other acts of wanton chaos (i.e., a commercial airliner, flying through heavy clouds collides with the villains' giant air fortress, killing all onboard). With such scenes winding up on the cutting room floor, audiences knew that something was missing. Additionally, footage from the sequel series, Great Mazinger, was sometimes briefly utilized; such as in the series opening where the creator tells his grandchildren about Mazinger Z's weapons, but he is actually describing weaponry unique to Great Mazinger (like the Great Boomerang), as well as footage of Great Mazinger taking off in place of Mazinger Z being activated. Strangely enough, while some content was considered too explicit, Baron Ashura/Devleen's nature as a literal half-man/half-woman was not truncated in the Tranzor Z version. To this day, there is still debate over what caused the show's quick exit from US television syndication, generally blaming the haphazard editing and ineffectual rewriting.

There was another English dub of the show, commissioned by Toei Animation and produced by Frontier Enterprises (a Tokyo-based company established by American ex-patriate William Ross). in 1977. This version was far more faithful to the original Japanese version, retaining the Japanese names for all of the characters (with slight variations in a few instances). The opening and ending themes and insert song "Z Theme" were translated into English by William Saylor and sung by veteran anime theme singer Isao Sasaki; these songs were released as a single in December of 1977. This dub only covered 29 episodes.

Another North American country with a great number of fans is Mexico. In this country the Mazinger Z anime was aired from 1984 to 1986 on Channel 5 by Televisa Mexico in the same ages when was aired other famous anime series. From 1994 until 1995, it was re-aired on Channel 13 by the recently-formed TV Azteca (years before it was a government broadcaster called Imevisión or Instituto Mexicano de la Televisión with other acquired anime series) and the last time it was broadcast was in 1997 on Channel 7 of the same broadcaster, with the same master tapes resold by Televisa with the dub mixed, the same case happened with other anime series.

In 1984, some scenes were censored with semi-nudes and insults, but the most censored transmision was in 1994 by TV Azteca where they also censored dialogue and violent & explicit language. In 1984 on Televisa, this violent & explicit language was uncensored.

The Mexican Mazinger dub version had some errors in the voice actor sequences due to the fact that the Mazinger version aired in Mexico and other Central and South American countries had a mixed dub realized by two different enterprises, Cadicy International (nowadays First Line Films) and Audiomaster (an ancient Televisa enterprise, years ago called "AudioFutura" but now gone). In the first case, the first third of the Mazinger Series was dubbed by Cadicy International in Miami, Florida, by voice actors with Cuban-Spanish pronunciation who had done voices in other animes and cartoons like Ginga Repuu Baxingar (Gladiadores del Espacio), X-Bomber Flota espacial), Huck & Tom's Mississippi Adventure (Aventuras en el Mississippi) or Woody Woodpecker (Pajaro Loco). The names of the voice actors are unknown.

In 1982, Audiomaster made the Mexican dub with Mexican recnognized actors. The dub was recorded in Los Angeles, California, with a character voices in disorder. Koji Kabuto had two main voices, Jesús Barrero and Juan Alfonso Carralero. Sayaka Yumi was done by Gloria Gonzalez, and Ashura by Antonio Raxel (a Mexican films actor), among others. Finally, both dubs were mixed for most Latin American countries.

In both cases, the opening, ending, and the chapters recorded by Toei Animation with the singer Ichiro Mizuki were recorded without singer lyrics because the original tapes of the "international version" distributed by Toei Animation were recorded this way. Only the Japanese version has the lyrics, and the reason is to permit other countries to record the opening and ending versions in several languages and include titles and subtitles for the credits. Only Spain recorded a Spanish version of the opening and ending songs.

The Philippines

The Frontier Enterprises dubs were later aired in the Philippines, where dubbing was continued by the local broadcaster prior to the show's cancellation, allegedly by order of dictator-president Ferdinand Marcos. Mazinger Z was first aired by Philippine broadcaster GMA Network at an early primetime slot of 6:00PM in 1979 and it became an instant hit among children of that time. The whole 6:00PM slot from Monday to Friday featured a series of "super robots," such as Grendizer, Mekanda and Voltes V with Mazinger Z airing on Wednesday. There were rumors that Marcos found the series "too violent" for the then Philippine government censored-television industry while others say the series was too popular in the ratings game, killing competition of other TV networks allegedly owned by Marcos' business cronies.

Middle East

An Arabic dub, entitled "Mazinjer", was made in an attempt to cash in on the Super Robot craze created in Arabic-speaking countries by UFO Robot Grendizer. Although it didn't do as well, Mazinger Z still found popularity and earned a huge fanbase throughout many Middle Eastern countries, including Egypt. However, only the first 27 episodes were translated (There's a possibility that it was an Arabic dub of the 27-episode English dub produced by Frontier Enterprises).

Merchandise

Mazinger remains one of Go Nagai’s most enduring success stories, spawning many products in the realm of merchandising, model kits, plastic and die-cast metal toys (the now famous "Soul of Chogokin" line), action figures and other collectibles. Mazinger has also been successful in the video game area (at least in Japan), as one of the main stars in the acclaimed battle simulation game series Super Robot Wars, released by Banpresto, featuring characters and units from almost all Mazinger-related shows, alongside other anime franchises such as Gundam, et al.

In 1994, Banpresto released an arcade game called Mazinger Z which was a vertical shoot'em-up with three selectable characters : Mazinger Z, Great Mazinger and Grendizer.[2]

Trivia

  • In Italy "Ratzinger" was a chapter of Ratman, a superhero parody comic (the name is a pun on Batman). The robot Ratzinger though was more based on Grendizer, which was more popular in Italy, than Mazinger.
  • Mazinger tributes can also be found in games. In the Mr. Driller series, one of the characters is a multi-purpose drilling robot named Horinger Z (hori meaning "dig"). One of the enemies in Mega Man 6 is "Metonger Z", a Metool (the hard-hatted enemies common to the Mega Man series) riding a mechanical tank with elements of Mazinger Z's design. Similarly, in Marvel vs Capcom and its sequel, one of Megaman's hyper combos has him transforming into a large battle mode obviously inspired by Mazinger Z, while Megaman's sister Roll has a similar move that changes her into a form highly similar to Aphrodite A. Furthermore, the 'Hard Knuckle' attack Megaman gains from defeating Hard Man in Mega Man 3 is reminiscent of Mazinger Z's Rocket Punch attack. In Makai Senki Disgaea, during one of Etna's imaginative 'Next time on Disgaea' segments, the Prinnies merge into a powerful Mazinger-like super robot, which is referred to as "Pringer X". This is said to later be reborn as "Pringer Z". Later into Episode 13 of Sonic X had Sonic the Hedgehog fight "Gearhead", a Mazinger-like robot of Dr. Eggman's that also included a Pilder slot on the head for Eggman's hovercraft. In Bomberman Generations for the Nintendo Gamecube, one of the bosses, Constructor X, is based on Mazinger Z.
  • Go Nagai is often considered the father of giant robot anime because of Mazinger, but he himself has said that while he is honoured, he believes the name should go to his own inspirations, the creator of Tetsuwan Atom (Astro Boy) Osamu Tezuka and the creator of Tetsujin-28 (Gigantor), Mitsuteru Yokoyama.
  • The reason Mazinger's enemies looked so strange was because when Go Nagai and his crew were coming up with them, they would think about the fight first, then design the robot.
  • Go Nagai is said to have been highly shocked that Mazinger, which he originally did not take very seriously, far surpassed Devilman in popularity. The reason was that he had worked especially hard on Devilman and only made Mazinger as a way to blow off steam. While Mazinger Z's television ratings peaked at over 30%, Devilman's highest rating was roughly half that (15.5% in January 1973) [3].
  • Mazinger parodies also appear on television. In an episode of the American cartoon Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, teenagers staged arena battles with their imaginary friends. The Mazinger Z pastiche was rusted into immobility by the tears of Eduardo. Also, in one episode of Robot Chicken, N'Sync singer Joey Fatone took part in a Celebrity Deathmatch-style battle where Great Mazinger was one of his opponents. A sentient robot strongly resembling Mazinger Z (called "Zanzor," a play on its American inception) also appeared in the originally unaired season one episode of Megas XLR, Coop D'Etat.
  • Mazinger Z is the only robot to show up in all the franchised based versions of the Super Robot Wars games (This does not include the Lord of Elemental sidestory or the Original Generation games, both of which deliberately exclude all non-original works. With the exception of the original Game Boy SRW, which did not depict pilots at all, Koji Kabuto and Sayaka Yumi are the only characters to show up in all the franchised series.
  • Boss Borot is the only robot character to appear in all three of the Mazinger trilogy series: Mazinger Z (during the second half of the series), Great Mazinger (as a regular), and Grendizer (in a pair of cameos).
  • In an episode of Brave Express Might Gaine, where the title hero fights a black version of himself, the enemy uses a jet very similar to the Pilder to control it.
  • There's a half-size statue of Mazinger Z in Tarragona, Spain. [4]
  • In one episode of the "Sgt. Frog" anime, Kururu designs a robot that resembles a cross between Aki Hinata and Aphrodite A.
  • In the second opening of the Demashita! Powerpuff Girls Z anime, Mojo Jojo can be seen piloting a giant robot bearing a strong resemblance to the Mazinger Z.
  • Mazinger Z is featured as a recurring character on the Godzilla-themed photo-webcomic Twisted Kaiju Theater.

References

  1. http://www.mazingerz.com/ANIME/TVmazinger.html
  2. http://www.arcade-history.com/index.php?page=detail&id=1590
  3. http://www.mazingerz.com/ANIME/TVdevilman.html
  4. http://ceo.upc.es/extras/eventos/mazinger/mazinger.htm

External links

Facts about Mazinger/Mazinger ZRDF feed
GenreMecha  +, and Science fiction  +
Series nameMazinger Z  +