Voltron is an
American
animated television
series adaptation of two different Japanese
anime television series (Beast King Golion and Armored Fleet Dairugger XV), the
series which aired in syndication from September 10,1984 to
November 18, 1985,
first titled Voltron: Defender of the
Universe.
There have been two remakes of the original series,
Voltron: The Third
Dimension, was made in the 1990s using
CGI techniques. The series
dubbed into English and edited
by the North American television production and distribution
company
World Events
Productions.
Voltron variations
Lion Force Voltron (Voltron of the Far Universe)
The first season was based on the 1981 series , and they featured a
team of five young
pilots commanding five
robot
lions, which could be combined to form
Voltron. In this undefined future era, the Voltron Force was in
charge of protecting the
planet Arus (ruled
by Princess Allura) from the evil King Zarkon (from planet Doom),
his son Lotor, and the witch Haggar, who would create huge Robeasts
to terrorize the people of Arus. Despite being the first of the two
robots to appear on American television, the "GoLion" version of
Voltron was regarded as "
Voltron III" within the toyline
because, within the original planned "three-Voltron" continuity,
Arus was the furthest setting from Earth's side of the universe
("
Voltron I" being intended for the Near Universe, and
"
Voltron II" for the Middle Universe).
Vehicle Voltron (Voltron of the Near Universe)

Vehicle Voltron
The second season was based on , with the storyline considerably
changed. In this iteration of
Voltron, the Galaxy
Alliance's home planets have become overcrowded, and a fleet of
explorers has been sent to search for new planets to colonize.
Along the way, they attract the attention of the evil Drule Empire,
long engaged in an ongoing war against the Alliance, and the Drules
proceed to interfere in the mission of the explorers and the
colonists. Since the Voltron of Planet Arus was too far away to
help the explorers, a totally new Voltron is constructed to battle
the Drule threat.
This Voltron team consisted of fifteen members, who were divided
into three teams of five, known respectively as the Land, Sea, and
Air Teams. Each team was specialized in gathering data or fighting
in their area of expertise. Each team could also combine their
vehicles into a bigger machine, with each combined vehicle
differing amongst the three teams. These fighters were:
- The Aqua Fighter (Sea Team)
- The Turbo Terrain Fighter (Land Team)
- The Strato Fighter (Air Team)
When necessary, all fifteen vehicles combine to form the mighty
Voltron. This Voltron in the toyline was referred to as
Voltron
I (also called the Vehicle Team), possibly due to it being
closer to Earth than the more popular
Voltron III (or Lion
Force Voltron).
According to the backstory provided by World Events Productions,
Vehicle Voltron was constructed after consultations by the Galaxy
Alliance with Planet Arus's King Alfor before his death, with the
new Voltron's designs retrofitted in part from the original, much
older, Lion Voltron schematics.
In the continuity of the Image and Devil's Due comic series,
Vehicle Voltron came about through the Galaxy Garrison reverse
engineering the original Voltron after abducting it from Arus under
orders from a Drule spy. The machine was renamed "V-15" within the
comics, and was first deployed after Voltron to recapture until
they receive new orders to support it. Unlike the animated series,
which only had two
crossover
with the Lion Force (once at the end of the Lion Force run, and the
other in the "
Fleet of Doom"
special, which brought both Voltrons together), and which depicted
the two Voltron Forces as being longstanding friends, the Devil's
Due comics showed Keith and Jeff as having an antagonistic
relationship with one another, particularly with regard to
Voltron's accidental "sneak attack" on Vehicle Voltron during the
robots' first battle together.
Gladiator Voltron (Voltron of the Middle Universe)
The proposed "Voltron II" episodes (so called because they took
place in the "Middle Universe") were to have been based on .
Although Albegas toys were marketed in the United States under the
Voltron II name, the series were never aired there. Due to the
extreme popularity of the Lion Voltron and lack of popularity of
the Vehicle Voltron series, World Events Productions eventually
elected against another alternate Voltron and plans to adapt
Albegas were aborted.
Subsequent projects
- 'Voltron: Fleet of
Doom television special (1986).
In 1986, World Events hired Toei Animation to produce a one-off
crossover television special, which mixed in GoLion
and Dairugger XV footage with new
animation. The special was made for the
international market and has not been released in
Japan.

Voltron: The Third
Dimension
- 'Voltron: The
Third Dimension animated series
(1998). After some initial interest, a
computer-generated series was released in 1998, set five years
after the end of the original Lion Voltron series.
The series was met with a mixed response, due to
various changes, such as the revamped look of the Lion Voltron and
the change in the physical appearance of Prince
Lotor. The series served as a sequel to
the Lion Voltron series; amongst the tools used to bridge the gap
between the two series was an official starmap as designed by
Shannon Muir, and finalized in partnership with World Events
Productions. After Voltron: The
Third Dimension, World Events Productions went back to the
drawing board to develop a more traditionally animated series, in
an attempt to recapture the spirit of the
original.
- Voltron: Defender of the Universe
live-action movie. In July 2005, producer Mark Gordon (Grey's Anatomy, The League of
Extraordinary Gentlemen) announced plans to create a
live-action film adaptation of the
Voltron franchise in collaboration with producers Pharrell
Williams, Mark Costa, and Frank Oelman. Pharrell Williams was also
reported to compose the musical score the film. The project's
development was funded by Jim Young's Animus Films. In December
2006, screenwriter Enzo Marra was announced to have completed a
script for Gordon. In August 2007, the production entity New Regency entered negotiations with Mark
Gordon Co. to adapt Voltron. Interest in the property
heightened after the box office success of Transformers, another film
involving robots. Marks's script was described as "a
post-apocalyptic tale set in New York City... [in which] five
ragtag survivors of an alien attack band together and end up
piloting the five lion-shaped robots that combine and form the
massive sword-wielding Voltron that helps battle Earth's
invaders."" On August 18, 2008, Relativity Media entered
negotiations with New Regency to finance
and produce the film, though on a more moderate budget, utilizing
cost-saving CGI techniques such as those used in 300. Max
Makowski is set to direct. As of the end of August 2008, the
title had been set for "Voltron: Defender of the Universe".
World Events Productions
are currently in a legal battle with Toei Company Ltd. over the movie rights.
The Voltron movie may be distributed by Paramount Pictures.
- Interactive Voltron Series untitled animated
series. A new animated series was slated to be released in the fall
of 2005, produced by Kickstart Productions, with Tom Pugsley and
Greg Kline writing the episodes. As of 2009 it has yet to debut and
Kickstart's website lists the series as in production.
Episode guide
Character guide
DVD releases
In Australia, DVDs of all episodes of
Voltron have been
released by
Madman
Entertainment. The original series was released in five volumes
between August 2004 and July 2005, under the name "
Voltron:
Defender of the Universe". Each box is in the color and style
of one of the lions. Another three volumes of "
Vehicle Force
Voltron" were released between August and December 2005.
Additionally a "Best of" 2-DVD set was released in November 2006
featuring five episodes from each series.
Prior to the release of the boxed sets, a promotional DVD was
released for Voltron. It is packed in a three fold glossy cardboard
folder. The folder features full color artwork and text about the
upcoming release of Voltron on DVD. The disk has an image of
Voltron and is labeled for promotional use only. It features the
first episode ("Castle of Lions - Part 1") and several promos for
other series.
In Region 1,
Voltron is being released on DVD in its
original broadcast form by New York–based distributor
Media Blasters. Lion Force Voltron was
released in five volumes between September 2006 and December 2007.
The volumes contain about fifteen episodes each, along with special
features such as interviews with producer and director
Franklin Cofod, and various others involved
in the original and current productions. The first volume of
Vehicle Force Voltron was scheduled for release on September 30,
2008 as Volume 6.
World Events Productions Ltc. has confirmed that many copies of
Voltron Volume 6 in Region 1 suffer from a manufacturing defect.
The defect causes the disks to "grind", shake or freeze when played
in DVD players. The manufacturer, Media Blasters, has been shipping
replacements, but many of the replacements suffer from the same
problem. The defect can be seen on many of the disks as a "water
mark" on the back side of the disk.
Additionally, the
Fleet of
Doom special was released on DVD early in 2007, as an
online Voltron.com exclusive.
Fleet of Doom was a special
crossover film where the Vehicle and Lion Voltrons joined forces to
defeat the "Fleet of Doom" (Galra and Drule Empires). The special
was originally released in 1986, but was never released in Japan.
Media Blasters has announced that they will be releasing
Fleet
of Doom on May 26 2009 as a full retail release.
Media Blasters also plans to release the two Japanese shows that
made up
Voltron —
Hundred Beast King FiveLion
(GoLion), and
Armored Fleet Dairugger XV — each in
their original, unedited Japanese form, with English subtitles.
Volume 1 of
Golion was released on May 27, 2008, Volume 2
on August 12, 2008, and Volume 3 on November 25, 2008. The first
Dairugger XV DVD collection is scheduled for release on
February 23, 2010.
Digital releases
Minisodes of the first twenty
episodes of the first season can be streamed for free online on
Crackle. As of March 2009, thirty episodes
of
Voltron: Defender of the Universe have been released on
Hulu as part of a fan appreciation
promotion.
| Release |
Australia
(Region 4) |
North America
(Region 1) |
| Lion Force Voltron Collection 1 |
September 22, 2004 |
Black Lion |
September 26, 2006 |
Blue Lion |
| Lion Force Voltron Collection 2 |
November 19, 2004 |
Red Lion |
December 19, 2006 |
Yellow Lion |
| Lion Force Voltron Collection 3 |
February 23, 2005 |
Green Lion |
May 8, 2007 |
Green Lion |
| Lion Force Voltron Collection 4 |
April 13, 2005 |
Blue Lion |
September 25, 2007 |
Red Lion |
| Lion Force Voltron Collection 5 |
July 20, 2005 |
Yellow Lion |
December 11, 2007 |
Black Lion |
| Vehicle Force Voltron Collection 1 |
August 31, 2005 |
|
December 23, 2008 |
Air Team |
| Vehicle Force Voltron Collection 2 |
October 19, 2005 |
|
March 24, 2009 |
Land Team |
| Vehicle Force Voltron Collection 3 |
December 7, 2005 |
|
July 21, 2009 |
Sea Team |
| Fleet Of Doom |
|
|
July 28, 2009 |
Team-Up |
Comic book
Modern Comics
In 1985, Modern Comics, an imprint of
Charlton Comics, produced a three-issue
mini-series based on the Lion Voltron television show.
Devils' Due
In 2002, comic book publisher
Devil's
Due announced it had acquired the rights to publish
Voltron comic books. Devil's Due, through
Image Comics, published a five issue
mini-series (preceded by a #0 issue from Dreamwave) which featured
the Lion Voltron incarnation of the character and rebooted the
property. This was then followed by an ongoing series
self-published by Devil's Due, which was placed on hiatus in 2005
after the eleventh issue, due to poor sales.
Devil' Due announced in January 2008 that the five-issue
mini-series, the eleven issues of the ongoing series, and the #0
issue would be collected into a Voltron Omnibus trade paperback
that would also include the unpublished twelfth issue of the
ongoing series that would wrap up all the storylines.
In July 2008, a new five-issue mini-series was released by Devil's
Due, which picked up where the ongoing series left off. This series
further explored the origins of Lion Voltron's creation, from
12,000 years in the past to the present day. Currently, a motion
comic version of the comic is being aired on Syfy's
Ani-Monday.
The comic was adapted as the 2007 Motion Comic "Voltron: Defenders
of the Universe - REVELATIONS"
[27813]
.The primary difference from this version and the original is that
the space pilots are all largely convicted criminals or misfits who
are all considered expendable on a non government sanctioned
mission to retrieve the Voltron. Its sequel is "Voltron: Defenders
of the Universe - PARADISE LOST", introducing the V-15 and its
pilots.
The comic series has Voltron to be originally a single construct
created by sorcerers and scientists, resembling more like a knight
without the lion influence of its current incarnation. During its
battle with the first Drule Empire, Voltron was tricked by Haggar
into landing on a black comet with nearly the gravitational
attraction of a
singularity. Voltron was then
attacked by Haggar, and somehow blown into five pieces. But the
actions of a sorcerer to save Voltron result with the five pieces
becoming the five "lions" as they descend into planet Arus.
Changes from the Japanese version
Though airing in syndication, which offered other anime shows such
as
Robotech greater
freedom to deal with subject matter such as death that were
off-limits in most network children's programming, WEP's adaptation
of
Voltron was heavily edited to conform to the more
strict standards of
American television, as well
as the standard name change of characters and concepts in
Golion.
Plot changes
GoLion
- Both shows begin with the five pilots as pilots sent by the
Galaxy Alliance, whose space-exploration mission takes them to a
planet devastated by war. In Voltron, the pilots arrive on
Arus, and are captured and taken to Planet Doom. They then escape
and return to Arus, and become the pilots of the robot lions and
Voltron. In GoLion, the initial scenes are actually of
Earth, as the pilots have returned from their mission in the year
1999 to find that the entire population of Earth has been killed in
a nuclear war. They are then captured and taken to Planet Galra,
where the plot proceeds similarly.
- Zarkon's soldiers were referred to as robots as opposed to
alien soldiers. Also, crews of space ships that were destroyed were
often either said to have been evacuated prior or referred to as
robot-ships in order to lessen the impact of their deaths.
- It was a goddess, not Haggar, that split up GoLion due to his
arrogance (GoLion is supposedly sentient, although this was subtly discarded in
the Voltron series where the robot was said to be the creation of
King Alfor and his scientists).
- Shots of torture and atrocities inflicted by the alien
conquerors on their slaves (such as a "contest" where alien
soldiers would be rewarded according to how many prisoners they
would have managed to decapitate in a given time) and some shots of
corpses were removed.
- In Voltron, Sven was severely injured by Haggar and
sent to a space hospital. In GoLion, Takashi Shirogane was
killed by Honerva and buried outside the castle.
- In one episode, the Princess befriends a bear-like creature
which is subsequently captured and converted into a Beast
Fighter/Robeast. In GoLion, GoLion kills the Beast
Fighter, while in Voltron, Voltron releases the creature
from its Robeast state, rendering it in a deep sleep.
- In GoLion, Hys (Nanny in Voltron) is fatally
shot in the heart while protecting Raible (Coran in
Voltron).
- Voltron 's "Queen Merla" arc never existed in the
original Japanese run, and was created by Toei at the request of
World Events Productions. The Japanese GoLion series ended
with the destruction of the giant Daibarzaal (Zarkon) Beast
Fighter, which killed him.
- In Voltron 's episode 20, the planet the heroes visit
is Pidge's homeworld. However, in the original Golion
version, the planet is actually the war-torn Earth.
- In the original GoLion series, Syncline (Lotor) is
bi-racial. His mother was of the planet Altea (Arus). Also in the
original GoLion, Honerva (Haggar) is hinted to be secretly
Daibazaal's (Zarkon's) mother. Syncline's obsession with Falra
(Allura) is due to her resemblance to his mother (murdered by
Daibazaal when she refused to marry him) and is generally an
Oedipal complex. in Voltron, none of these are mentioned or
suggested and Lotor's obsession with Allura is written as simply
infatuation.
Dairugger XV
- Manabu (Jeff) has a serious relationship with Haruka
(Lisa).
- Chip was never Pidge's brother.
- All of the Galaxy Alliance officers that were focused on in a
given episode were killed, unless it was explicitly shown they
survived (i.e., they are in succeeding episodes); likewise, this is
also the condition for Drule officers and leaders.
- The Voltron series starts with the Drules and the
Galaxy Alliance having tense relations, with the Drules attacking
the Explorer, on the grounds it violated their space. In
the Japanese series, both powers were unaware of each other, and
there was no overcrowding within the Alliance; the
Explorer is merely an exploratory vessel, and the Drules
are stretching their power, not looking for a new world. It is by
fate that they meet, and that Dairugger XV is given a new
mission.
- Emperor Zeppo was killed in Dairugger XV. Also, Hazar
died a martyr's death, and his body was destroyed along with the
Drule homeworld.
- Newley is ranked Admiral in Dairugger XV and Hawkins
is ranked as Captain. In Voltron, their ranks are changed
to captain and commander respectively resulting in the oddity of an
officer of commander rank giving orders to a captain (assuming the
naval system of ranking). Originally, Newley
was the highest ranking commanding officer of the Explorer with
Hawkins as his first officer. Their dialogue was rewritten in
Voltron to give the appearance of Hawkins outranking Newley,
although the animation and dialogue do not often reflect this.
Anime staff
- Original Story: Saburo Hatte
- Director: Kazushi Nomura, Kazuyuki Okaseko, Hiroshi Sasagawa,
Katsuhiko Taguchi
- Scenarists: Ryo Nakahara, Masaaki Sakurai, Susumu Takahisa
- Music: Asei Kobayashi
- Theme Song Performance (Golion): Ichirou Mizuki (OP- Tatakae!
Goraion, ED- Gonin de Hitotsu)
- Production: Toei Animation Co.,
Ltd. / Toei Advertising Co. Ltd (credited as "Toei Agency")
Merchandise
A variety of action figures and other toys have been created over
the years. Plans for a
Monsterpocalypse Voltron-themed expansion
have been announced.
References
- Title Revealed
- http://crackle.com/search/voltron
External links