Ultraman Max (TV Series 2005–2006) Poster

(2005–2006)

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8/10
An updated return to the tone of the original Ultraman
ChungMo11 November 2006
The long history of Ultraman in Japan is mostly unknown here in the United States. While more then a dozen series have been produced in Japan, only three series have been seen here.

The first series, produced in 1966, was a lively, humorous and frequently surreal show. Many episodes were directed by people who later became prominent leaders in Japanese avant- garde cinema. The imagination in the first series created some of the most memorable giant monsters in the kaiju genre. The second series, Ultraseven, while equally strange at times had a more nuts and bolts sci-fi approach and was the most popular Ultra series. Both of these series made it to these shores in wacky dubbed versions although the first series translation was more faithful to the original scripts. The following series sort of fell into a predictable rut of "kill the monster of the week" and the shows lowered the age range they were aiming for. Despite being marketed for children, the violence was too extreme for US kid's television and each series became too self-referential to explain. An Australian Ultraman show showed up in the 1990's but it didn't make much of an impression.

An Ultraman revival has been building stream in Japan for the last decade. Several new series have been produced but most were basically updated versions of the kid friendly series from the 1970's and 1980's. A major change was attempted with the very dark series "Ultraman Nexus" (unlisted in IMDb). While very well done, the series was more of a sci-fi soap opera than the monster of the week fun of the original series.

When Ultraman Max was announced, the news that such Japanese cinema luminaries such as Shusuke Kaneko and prolific film psychotic Takashi Miike would be directing, one wondered what could possibly be the result. The first episodes, while enjoyable, resemble the typical pattern of the kid friendly shows. The special effects are very good for an Ultraman show and show the eye of Mr. Kaneko. Many of the monsters are from the original series or Ultraseven. It's not until episode 8 that the show really starts to hit the gears. The quirky imagination of the original series starts to come back along with the experimental photography. Then with episode 15 the show goes to new levels. A very unusual story of a blind girl who plays the flute and a giant blob that reacts to everything around it. Episode 22 is an existentialist story of the show's writer confusing his identity with the lead character in dreams. I suspect Miike was behind this one since there's a creepy transvestite in the episode. Episode 24 was directed by avant-garde director Akio Jissoji who was behind some of the more unusual episodes of the first series 40 years earlier.

An excellent series, I have no hope that it will ever find wide release here in the US which is a shame. Dr. Who came back, why not Ultraman?
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8/10
Best of the Ultraman series
ebiros25 August 2012
This by far is the best produced of the Ultraman series (that's been running for over 45 years in various forms).

The quality of the Ultraman series varied from series to series. First two were supervised by the late Eiji Tsuburaya himself, and the episodes, and the monsters that appeared had high quality to them. After Tsuburaya's death, quality meandered with some episodes being good to great while others were mediocre.

In this series, quality of special effects, and the story came together making it the best Ultraman series that I've seen. This is probably due to the involvement of talented directors like Shusuke Kaneko, and Akio Jissoji.

Many of the episodes pay homage to the characters that became famous in the original Ultraman series like alien from planet Baltan, monster Red King, and Gomorra. Stories pays homage too with Akio Jissoji reprising his famous scene that takes place between the alien from planet Metron and Ultra Seven over the Japanese style dinner table, this time with Ultraman Max in Seven's place. Koji Moritsugu who played Moroboshi Dan, aka Ultra Seven makes cameo appearance as an archaeologist doing the same gesture to put his eye glass on as when he put the Ultra Eye on as Dan. Susumu Kurobe who played Hayata in the original Ultraman series appears as the head of DASH. He cowers when he sees Zetton, the monster that defeated the original Ultraman.

There are so many funny scenes that are noticeable only to the ones who've seen the previous Ultraman series. This combined with the high quality production, makes this series enjoyable to watch even for adults.

By far Ultraman Max is the highest quality Ultraman series made to date, and is a joy to watch.
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7/10
A blast!
BandSAboutMovies9 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Ultraman Max is the eighteenth installment in the Ultra Series, originally airing in Japan from July 7, 2005 to March 25, 2006. Across 39 episodes and one special, the special anti-monster task force DASH (Defense Action Squad Heroes) battles invading alien monsters, helped by Ultraman Max, who is secretly Touma Kaito, a DASH team member.

Unlike Ultraman Nexus, which went for a darker tone, this is a return to the original Ultraman series, bringing back old favorite monsters like Red King, Gomora, Antlar, Zetton, Eleking, Pigmon and Baltan. It also has a belief that humanity's future will be a positive one, unlike so much of the science fiction of the 2000s.

There's even a black and white episode that's a tribute to the original Ultra Q and Ultraman Xenon makes a guest appearance.

Ultraman Max has an interesting role. As a Civilization Guardian, he studies developing civilizations and works to help the species of other planets exist as one. Like so many of the Ultras before him, he has bonded with Touma Kaito after a great sacrifice, honoring the human by saving his life and sharing a body with him.

I like the idea that even the evil aliens have to admit that they like Earth in this story and how we have a place in the universe. Ultraman Max himself is inspiring, as he believes in the human race and in having faith in others. He's learned a lot in his 7,800 years of life.

Another cool part of this show is that the monsters aren't just aliens, but mythological creatures from Earth's past. This series gave me a warm, fuzzy feeling and memories of being on my parent's couch, jumping all over the room and blasting imaginary monsters with my Ultra Beam pose.
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8/10
A Brilliant Nod to the Original Ultraman
cin_kong21 June 2023
As I recall, this was my introduction to the Ultraman franchise, when it first came out. I did not get to see it all, but I have enjoyed it again now.

With original cast members added to the cast, this has often made subtle nodes to the first Ultraman series as well as paid homage to the Ultra Q series.

In each episode, it is establishing consistent story about environment and peace.

The cast is likeable and entertaining, allowing for the occasional breaking of the "fourth wall" with the audience. No other series have done that.

The updated monsters are great and the action sequences are well done.
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9/10
Ultraman with Showa concept in the Heisei era
gilangbae12 July 2022
I don't understand why the Ultraman Max rating here is so low, even though Ultraman Max has a good story.

After the failure of the Ultra N project, Tsuburaya tried to reuse the Showa era Ultraman concept in the Ultraman Max series to increase the number of viewers. They apply this concept well. Ultraman Max has a simple and interesting story. The conflict, drama, comedy and suspense are well presented, the story is also easy to understand unlike the Ultraman Nexus series which is quite heavy.

What I also like about the Ultraman Max series is the reappearance of old monsters such as King Joe, Eleking, and Zetton, Max's fight with these monsters is also very good. Although this is only a trial series but Tsuburaya is quite serious in making this series, I really enjoyed watching it.
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