Sunday, December 14, 2008

it's xmas and I feel like sharing

It's that time of year again, and in the spirit of the season I figured I'd share some presents with you. Namely, images of Usei Shonen Papi / Prince Planet menko cards that were passed on to me via old-school Prince Planet fan M.E. So if you want your Christmas to be filled with slightly-off register pictures of Prince Planet and his pals printed on thick slabs of cardboard and intended to be slapped onto the pavement with the mighty force of an 8-year old arm, then you are in luck!

Prince Planet is, of course, the 1966 TCJ show based on the Hideoki Inoue manga about a young boy from the planet Radion who comes to Earth and with his friends Diana, Dan Dynamo, and Adji Baba, defends peace and justice!!




Here we see Prince Planet in his "Bobby" disguise, along with Diana, meeting a strange bowtie-wearing man in a park.




On our next card, Bowtie man seems astonished at Dan Dynamo's manly chest and Adji Baba's little beard as Bobby assumes the position to shout "Kazow" or "Kapow" or "Wowee", or whatever the English voice talent decided to have him yell, as he changes into Prince Planet.




Meanwhile, above Diana and her father Pops Worthy, a mysterious white-haired figure hovers in the air like a religious apparition. From the look on his face I don't think he's here to convey holy blessings.




And our assumptions were correct - white haired guy is sending his super robot to go forth and bring destruction to the world! Bad mans!




In a seemingly unrelated card illustration, Bobby and Diana chat while an auto speeds away and evil Martian wizard Warlock watches them from a tree. Warlock has been taking ninja lessons.




When Warlock is around you know evil can't be far off and we see Bobby menaced by chains! Don't worry, he's using his Pendant of Power to change into Prince Planet!




In his Prince Planet identity he's able to evade the chains with ease and in about a minute Warlock is going to get blasted by a lightning-like bolt from Prince Planet's pendant!




And it's back after that car that sped off earlier. Or maybe this is a different car. It's hard to tell.




This could be Prince Planet fighting that giant robot we saw in a previous card, or it may be him just running through fire. Who knows?




Sometimes Prince Planet flies into outer space and battles other super powerful space people including this one who looks as if Kamen Rider V-3 and Space Ace got together and had a baby.




And sometimes Prince Planet likes to dress in his pink outfit. Don't ask, don't tell, that's the motto of the Universal Peace Corps.



Happy Holidays, everybody! See you in 2009!!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

wears boots, can talk


AROUND THE WORLD WITH PERO, THE PUSS ‘N BOOTS

Like many of my most amazing adventures, this one begins in the thrift store, where a mint-in-box copy of the Nintendo Entertainment System Puss 'N Boots Pero's Great Adventure "Game Pak" one day awaited my feverish little hands. Price? One dollar. That's what I call value. 


Well, actually this story REALLY begins in 1969, when Toei Animation Company released the film that would give Toei its mascot and inspire two sequels. The Wonderful World Of Puss ‘N Boots is one of Toei's many excellent 1960s theatrical releases. Falling somewhere between the classy quasi-full animation of Little Norse Prince aka Horus Prince Of The Sun and the wacky limited gag animation of Jack And The Witch, Puss ‘N Boots is both a retelling and an expansion of Charles Perrault’s famous European fairy tale about the talking cat with the surprising taste in footwear. Dubbed and released in America by American International Pictures, it became a staple of children's video for years. And with key animation by a guy named Hayao Miyazaki, it became an object of interest for those same children, now grown up and hooked on them there Japanese cartoons.


The movie begins with a bang as Pero, the talking cat in question, is sentenced to death by the Legion Of Cats for failing to kill a mouse. "I always side with the underdog," Pero nonchalantly explains. Three cat-assassins are assigned to kill Pero, and in escaping them Pero runs headlong into Pierre, the human half of the cat-boy equation.

Pierre’s squeezed out of his inheritance by his two evil brothers and ignominiously thrown into the rain, so with nothing to lose, he and Pero join forces to see the wide world. They stop in the first big medieval town they find, and find out that local Princess Rosa has been betrothed to the evil wizard Lucifer, a giant ogre with a perpetual dopey look. Pero figures this is their big chance to score, so Pierre pretends to be royalty while Pero pulls strings behind the scenes. There's lots of slick 60's Toei animation, crazy Eisenstein-style cross-cut editing, and what appears to be a trial run for the finale of Lupin III Castle Of Cagliostro as Pero battles Lucifer in Lucifer's castle. Now, I'm not very knowledgeable in the fairy tale department, but as near as I can tell, this isn't too far from the original story, which also featured an evil ogre and unwilling matrimony.



Puss ‘N Boots is an entertaining hybrid between Toei's full-motion stuff and the limited animation that would become their 1970s hallmark. The character designs are really stylized, but that only enhances the middle-ages feel of the film, further heightened by the use of actual medieval paintings in some scenes. The dubbing by Peter Fernandez's Titan Studios is zippy and fun, with Corinne Orr's "Spritle" voice in full effect. There are, however, too many songs. Though it's a slow starter, Puss ‘N Boots’ last third is a full-on actioner, the equal to any of Toei's other 60s offerings. Some of this film is downright frightening and may not be recommended for younger viewers. Thanks to Diskotek Media it was released on DVD here in the United States, including subtitles and the original trailer. Toei felt so warmly about Pero that he’d become the company's mascot, a corporate figurehead promising fun and adventure for the children of the world.



Puss would return in 1972’s Return of Pero aka Ringo Goes West, an hour-long full-on Western. “Go Go Town” is run by a corrupt mayor and terrorized by his gang of outlaws, and when Pero and Jimmy ride in, they come to the aid of young restaurateur Annie. After a few gunfights, high-noon showdowns, rescues by tribes of mouse-Indians, wagon chases, and attacks by the three cat-assassins always on Pero’s trail, justice is restored to the West and kids can enjoy the next short film in that season’s Manga Matsuri screening. This film received an English dub and a limited Western release, but remains obscure on this side of the Pacific.



In 1976 the cat returned for one final film, the impetus for the game behind this column, the reason we’re all here reading and/or writing this - Nagagutsu o Haita Neko 80 Nichikan Sekai IsshÅ«, or as we like to call it, Puss ‘N Boots Travels Around The World. 400 years after the events of the first film, Pero is still a happy-go-lucky talking cat with mice for friends, and in this film, he's called "Pushty". Anyway, "Pushty" is a waiter in a restaurant in a Victorian-era town full of talking animals. In this furry paradise resides the wealthy, actual-pig billionaire Sir Rumblehog, who posits the statement that nobody could go around the world in less than 150 days. "Pushty", Puss, Pero, whoever, calls his bluff and bets that he could circumnavigate the globe, not in a piddling 150 days, but in the unheard-of-time of 80 days. The bet is on and "Pushty" sets off in his self-designed little boat, accompanied by his hippo pal and his loyal mice. Oh yeah, and he's being pursued by the same three cat assassins, who apparently have been chasing "Pushty" for 400 years. That's job security for you. Welcome to Jules Verne's Around The World In 80 Days starring talking animals, animated with Toei's mid-70s team of slightly-better-than-TV-average animators.



Puss sets off to conquer the globe - Spain, Venice, Arabia, Mississippi, Hong Kong- and drama ensues when Rumblehog hires the evil inventor Dr. Mysterioso to stop "Pushty" with various evil mechanical devices - a drill car, a submarine, an armored aeroplane. Mysterioso’s character design will be lifted wholesale for use as the evil genius Moriarty in 1984’s anime series Famous Detective Holmes, and the kooky wolf provides the film with some much needed action. After the North Pole battle with Mysterioso's gigantic mechanical wooly mammoth (on loan from Little Norse Prince), it's time for Pero to have a final showdown with Rumblehog in the... clock tower. 



Yup, if the first Puss movie was training for Cagliostro, then Around The World is the final exam, because this one has gear-dodging, stair-climbing, ladder-grabbing, clock-face-perching action galore. Rumblehog becomes definitely homicidal, foaming at the mouth and attempting to hack Puss to bits with an axe. When he's not attempting defenestration, that is. This is for kids? Fortunately "Pushty" foils Rumblehog, wins the contest, and sets out for another trip, again pursued by the three cat-assassins. 

Around The World has the sort of animation you'd see in better-than-average episodes of Grandizer; slick, stylish, but not exactly stunning. I get the feeling that after the success of Mazinger Z, Toei figured the kids would watch anything and the frame rates be damned. It is certainly more kinetic than the first Puss film and while at times it feels like a retread of earlier movies like Animal Treasure Island, well, those films are great, so that's OK. Dubbed into English by Peter Fernandez, the film was released in America by Columbia Pictures Home Video and received VHS releases of varying quality and legality.




At any rate that bring us full circle to the wonderful Nintendo Entertainment System, because the NES game Puss ‘N Boots Pero's Great Adventure is basically the story of Around The World. You're Pero - PERO, dang it, none of this "Pushty" nonsense- and you go around the world, dodging the evil drill cars and airships of your enemies -Sir Rumblehog and Dr. Mysterioso, or, rather, Count Gruemon and Dr. Gari-gari – whose in-game appearances I personally have not yet reached because the boss of the London level is a BASTARD.




 It's a typical 8-bit game, full of cheesy music and the kind of graphics that were really only slightly better than your old Colecovision and bosses thrown in seemingly at random. I assure you there are no giant metal frogs in the original film.

The best part about this game is the cool production art; lots of anime style illustrations of Pero's worldwide adventures highlight the instruction manual. There's even a little color poster featuring screen shots and scenes from Around The World. This video game was brought to us by the mysterious and enigmatic "ELECTRO BRAIN CORP and TOEI ANIMATION CO., LTD., a Premiere Animation Company Of The Orient" - at least, that's what it says on the box. It's fascinating that the success of the NES would bring us games based on 15 year old films; in Japan it would count as promotion for Toei itself, but in the States would anybody even remember the Puss ‘N Boots films? Besides me, I mean? Somebody must have; the glorified TV commercial "Captain N: The Game Master" featured an episode based on the Puss N' Boots NES game (thanks to T.C.!)

It is an entertaining enough game, I guess. So many of the Nintendo-era video games were side-scrolling platformers that they even invented a term ("platform game") to describe them, and this game is no different; a Super Mario Brothers starring a fairy tale cat turned corporate logo traveling around the world gettin' into fights like Russell Crowe. You can probably find it on a NES emulator or as downloadable content via your favorite Nintendo online service, or watch somebody else play through it on YouTube. Or, you can pick it up in the thrift store for a dollar. Either way, it's an intriguing look at a fairytale cat turned animated movie star turned corporate logo. And now that Discotek’s Puss ‘N Boots is out of print, it’s one of the few remaining ways to enjoy Pero’s English-language adventures.

-Dave Merrill


portions of this article originally appeared at Anime Jump

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