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23 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
Despite its shortcomings, a visually faithful version of the famous web-slinger!, 21 April 2003
Author:
John Cassidy (ryuuseipro@comcast.net) from Richmond, VA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Well, true-believers, here's a brief history on Spidey in
Japan:
In 1970, a SPIDER-MAN manga appeared in Shounen Magazine, illustrated by
famed manga artist Ryouichi Ikegami. It was pretty good, and very
faithful
to the original story by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, but that ends with the
Mysterio story arc (previously, Electro, the Lizard and a wrestling
villain
called "Kangaroo" appeared). After that, it becomes an artsy-fartsy mess
that focuses less on Spidey and more on crime, violence, romance, rape,
lust
and stuff like that. One gets the feeling that Ikegami lost interest in
the
comic, and used it as his own personal scribble-pad. The manga was a
failure in Japan, even with Spidey-fans there. Marvel brought an edited,
translated version to the US in 1999 or so (Marvel Imports, or something
like that), but few people actually cared. Neither did
I.
And in 1978, Marvel struck a deal with Toei: For four years, they could
use
their characters in any way they saw fit. Toei producer Tooru Hirayama,
who
was responsible for bringing many great superhero shows to TV throughout
the
70s, decided to do a Spider-Man series, and wanted the story to remain as
faithful to the Marvel comic as possible, but Toei's sponsor Bandai wanted
to sell more toys, so there was a major story rewrite, and they had to
push
a giant robot into the story! Toei's producers thought Bandai was crazy!
Nonetheless, this was to be the first time in a Japanese superhero series
in
which a costumed superhero (as opposed to a regular pilot, such as in
MAZINGER Z) rode a giant robot.
The next Toei/Marvel project was BATTLE FEVER J (the 3rd Sentai Series and
1st "Super Sentai"), a Japanization of Captain America (the project was
going to be called CAPTAIN JAPAN), but Bandai got more control than
Hirayama, for whom this show was the last straw. When he left superhero
shows (and worked on kiddie/family shows at Toei), it was completely Toei
and Bandai's show from there on (except for Ishinomori's Masked Rider
shows). The next Sentai Series, DENJIMAN (1980) and SUNVULCAN (1981) had
Marvel Comics Group in the opening credits, but no Marvel characters were
ever used in either series! Go figure.
Here we have Toei's SPIDERMAN, which, despite its shortcomings, should
definitely be a treat for Spidey/Marvel fans! I will say that it was
better
than the short-lived American series starring Nicholas Hammond (which
wasn't
TOO bad). Before the excellent new SPIDER-MAN film starring Tobey
Maguire,
this is definitely the most visually faithful Spider-Man ever portrayed on
film! The costume was right, the poses and stunts were incredible, he can
even do whatever a spider can; Spin webs from his wristband (but he only
has
one wristband; More on that later), scale buildings and even has his
trusty
Spider-Sense! But the faithfulness ends with Spidey himself.
The STORY is what bugs me! The Japanization is much more extreme than the
aformementioned manga from 1970, and here, Spidey's foes are nowhere to be
seen. Also, his origins have been changed completely! He's from outer
space, he has a racing car (Spider-Machine GP-7) and rides a giant ship
called the Marveller (hmmmm . . . Where DID they get that name . . . ),
which transforms into the giant robot Leopardon! OK, now this is TOTALLY
out of place for ol' Spidey, even more absurd than any of Ralph Bakshi's
"drug-trip" Spidey adventures (from the last two seasons of the classic
animated series)! But that's not all! Toei ran out of money to do the FX
by Episode 5, and after Episode 10, no more footage of Leopardon could be
done, as it was rumored that some nasty fanatic stole the robot costume!
So
its appearance was limited to stock footage of the robot, with new footage
of the monster-of-the-week (reacting to and being destroyed by Leopardon's
"Swordvicker" attack) spliced in!
But let's look on the show's plusses: At least we get to see more Spidey
action! In fact, the show is VERY violent! Spider-Man rarely kills his
enemies, so he doesn't have any Masked Rider-like attacks (unless he yanks
his enemy by the neck with his webbing, like he did to one in the final
episode; He usually resorts to using Spider-Machine GP-7 and
Marveller/Leopardon, as his enemy is the monster of the week that grows to
giant size), but he DOES get to use cool martial arts to waste a bunch of
cannon-fodder henchmen (yep, every Japanese superhero show must have 'em)
in
each episode! Hirosuke Kayama, who plays Spidey's alter-ego Takuya
Yamashiro, is very good and makes a nice dead-ringer for Peter Parker's
later incarnations in the 70s! It's too bad that Kayama usually played
villain roles (he later played General Hedrer in DENJIMAN), but this is
one
of his best non-villain roles! Veteran Hiroshi Miyauchi (MASKED RIDER V3,
GORANGER, ZUBAT, etc.) is on hand as a semi-regular character, Interpol
Agent Tachibana, who dresses like a cowboy, plays guitar and sings
(exactly
like his Ken Hayakawa/Zubat character!), as well as occasionally helping
Spidey fight the baddies! It's still very refreshing to see our
web-slinging hero fighting Henshin-style monsters (as opposed to his
regular
foes like Green Goblin and Doctor Octopus), and the ones in this show are
pretty good! And also of note is the main villain, Professor Monster,
played by the late Mitsuo Andou (Professor Gill in KIKAIDER, Fuehrer
Geisel
in INAZUMAN FLASH and Black Cross Fuehrer in the first Sentai Series,
GORANGER)! Prof. Monster is obviously designed after Marvel's Doctor Doom
(except that only half his face is covered)!
I'll be as brief on the plot as I can: In space, Professor Monster, leader
of the Iron Cross Army (his cronies include right hand woman Amazones, a
similar two Caucasian women, and crow-like henchmen) are in pursuit of the
space craft Marveller, which comes to Earth and crashes on a mountain in
Japan, freeing an old hermit named Galia, who was from the planet Spider
(which the big Prof. plundered and destroyed long ago). After a race
show,
motorcycle stuntman Takuya Yamashiro (who lives with his sister and little
brother, and has a photographer girlfriend, who's unaware that her boss is
acutally Amazones in disguise! Wow, and you thought J. Jonah Jameson was
evil!) is fatally wounded by Amazones and the crow-henchmen, but is saved
by
Galia, who injects "Spider Extract" into Takuya before turning back into a
spider! He also recieves a metallic bracelet, which stores his Spidey
suit
(PLUS!!!), shoots webs, and is also a communicator for the Spider-Machine
GP-7 and Marveller, which he can ride and transform into Leopardon, which
kills Professor Monster's monsters with its "Swordvicker" attack (it hurls
its huge sword at the monster, as opposed to slashing it)! That's pretty
much the formula with the whole series.
**SPOILERS**
I will say that the final episode (Episode 41), though incredibly rushed
(especially after its slow first half), has its own cheesy, campy charm,
mostly in the climax! After Spidey kills all of the other villains (right
after Amazones meets her fate), he finally comes face to face with
Professor
Monster, who, after a little scuffle with our web-slinger, grows to giant
size (Yes, just like all the other monsters!), pounds his chest like King
Kong, and shouts "The Iron Cross Army is immortal!!!" Spidey does the
usual
Marveller/Leopardon thing and kills the evil Professor the same way he
usually kills the other monsters, but this time, with a bit of ray-firing
thrown in between for dramatic effect (remember, there was no Leopardon
costume after Episode 10).
My final take: Toei's SPIDERMAN is a fun series, and a must-see for Marvel
fans, just to see ol' Web-Head himself in breathtaking action! I say,
don't
let the minuses get to you, and just sit back and enjoy the
plusses!
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