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    • Source: Zillion (TV series)
    • Zillion (Japanese: čµ¤ć„å…‰å¼¾ć‚øćƒŖć‚Ŗćƒ³, Hepburn: Akai Kōdan Jirion, literally Red Photon Bullet Zillion, fully titled Red Photon Zillion) is a Japanese anime television series produced by Tatsunoko Production. It ran from April 12 to December 13, 1987, on Nippon Television, comprising 31 episodes.


      Plot


      The story takes place on the planet Maris in the year 2387. Around this time, the Nohzas (ćƒŽćƒ¼ć‚¶, Nōza) civilization, led by Empress Admis, started a genocide program to kill all humans in order to lay eggs and reproduce on the planet. Three mysterious guns dubbed the "Zillion Weapon System" appear and three teen soldiers (JJ, Champ, and Apple) are chosen to wield them as a task force called White Nuts (惛ćƒÆ悤惈惊惃惄, Howaito Nattsu) (W.N.) (known as the White Knights in the English version), whose purpose is to fight back against the Nohzas.


      = Main characters

      =

      JJ: the series' 16-year-old main protagonist and third member of the White Nuts. He is an avid fighter.
      Champ (ćƒćƒ£ćƒ³ćƒ— Chanpu): the 18-year-old primary leader of the White Nuts.
      Apple (ć‚¢ćƒƒćƒ—ćƒ« Appuru): the 17-year-old female member and navigator of the White Nuts.
      Amy Harrison (ć‚Øć‚¤ćƒŸćƒ»ćƒćƒŖć‚½ćƒ³ Eimi Harison): a primary assistant of Mr. Gord. She has a liking for J.J.
      Mr. Gord (Mr.ć‚“ćƒ¼ćƒ‰ Mr. Gōdo): the commissioner/commander of the White Nuts.
      Dave (惇悤惖 Deibu): a mechanic and assistant pilot, later member of the White Nuts.
      Opa-Opa: White Nuts' companion robot and ally, and later member of the White Nuts.
      Bernstein (ćƒćƒ¼ćƒ³ć‚¹ć‚æć‚¤ćƒ³): Commander in Chief of Maris.


      = Nohzas

      =
      Admis (ć‚¢ćƒ‰ćƒŸć‚¹): empress of the Nohza Empire.
      Baron Ricks (ćƒćƒ­ćƒ³ćƒ»ćƒŖ惃ć‚Æć‚¹): the main antagonist of the story, leader of the invasion troops.
      Navarro (惊惐惭): a big Nohza soldier, filled with micromissiles, specially created to fight against the White Nuts, one of the three Nohza Warriors (N.W.)
      Solar (ć‚½ćƒ©ćƒ¼ćƒ«): a flying Nohza woman, also specially built to fight the White Nuts, the second N.W., shaped somewhat like a wasp.
      Gurdock (ć‚¬ćƒ¼ćƒ‰ćƒƒć‚Æ): a soldier with stretchable arms, the third Nohza Warrior created to counter the White Nuts.


      Cast




      Equipment


      Equipment of the White Nuts team:

      Zillion (ć‚øćƒŖć‚Ŗćƒ³): a mysterious weapon, impossible to analyze and reproduce. It fires a load of a strange substance, appearing as a red light that engulfs the target and disintegrates it. It uses a small red crystal ("zillionium") for ammunition, unstable and also impossible to reproduce. One of the guns is destroyed in episode 10 and reconstructed afterwards by Dave, changing its initially "flat" design to a more ergonomic one. All pistols are then rebuilt, allowing the use of special accessories that change them into a sub machine-gun, used by Apple, or a precision sniper rifle, used by Champ.
      Ridingcepter (ćƒ©ć‚¤ćƒ‡ć‚£ćƒ³ć‚°ć‚»ćƒ—ć‚æćƒ¼): a motorcycle. It can carry a Sidecepter (ć‚µć‚¤ćƒ‰ć‚»ćƒ—ć‚æćƒ¼), a Cargocepter (ć‚«ćƒ¼ć‚“ć‚»ćƒ—ć‚æćƒ¼) or a Cannoncepter (ć‚­ćƒ£ćƒŽćƒ³ć‚»ćƒ—ć‚æćƒ¼).
      Tricharger (ćƒˆćƒ©ć‚¤ćƒćƒ£ćƒ¼ć‚øćƒ£ćƒ¼): a tricycle that can change into a versatile mobile suit. It has three forms, buggy form (ćƒć‚®ćƒ¼ćƒ•ć‚©ćƒ¼ćƒ ), kneeled form (ćƒ‹ćƒ¼ćƒ«ćƒ‰ćƒ•ć‚©ćƒ¼ćƒ ) and armoretter form (ć‚¢ćƒ¼ćƒ¢ćƒ¬ćƒ¼ć‚æćƒ¼ćƒ•ć‚©ćƒ¼ćƒ ).
      Big Porter (ćƒ“ćƒƒć‚°ćƒćƒ¼ć‚æćƒ¼): a Vertical Take Off and Landing vehicle, prepared to carry one of three special crafts, named:
      Submarine Aqua-Carried (ę½œčˆŖč‰‡ć‚¢ć‚Æć‚¢ć‚­ćƒ£ćƒŖ惃惉), a yellow small submersible;
      Armoured Vehicle Land-Carried (č£…ē”²č»Šćƒ©ćƒ³ćƒ‰ć‚­ćƒ£ćƒŖ惃惉), a red battle tank;
      Fighter Bomber Aero-Carried (ęˆ¦é—˜ēˆ†ę’ƒę©Ÿć‚Øć‚¢ćƒ­ć‚­ćƒ£ćƒŖ惃惉), a blue air-and-space fighter.


      Media




      = Anime

      =
      Despite the cult success of the video games, the Zillion anime received only a very brief release in the early 1990s in the United States. The first five episodes of the TV series, as well as the Burning Night OVA were dubbed and released on VHS by Streamline Pictures. The anime was featured in the music video for Michael and Janet Jackson's collaboration "Scream". Samples from the English dub of the anime were also featured in Del the Funky Homosapien's single "Cyberpunks".
      In October 2018, Funimation has released the complete series and the OVA on a Blu-ray/DVD set with Japanese audio and English subtitles.


      = List of episodes

      =
      "My Name Is J.J." (US title: "They Call Me, J.J.") (Original Airdate: April 12, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Attack the Enemy of the High Skies" (US title: "Hang Fire") (Original Airdate: April 19, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "0.1 Second Chance!" (US title: "Splitā€”Second Chance") (Original Airdate: April 26, 1987): written by Haruya Yamazaki
      "Trap of the Shapeless Ninja Squadron" (US title: "Target, The White Knights") (Original Airdate: May 3, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Apple Order Violation!?" (US title: "Judgement Call") (Original Airdate: May 10, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Take Off, Tricharger" (Original Airdate: May 17, 1987): written by Haruya Yamazaki
      "Struggle 'Til Death! J.J. vs. Ricks" (Original Airdate: May 24, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Strike the Oceanfloor Base!" (Original Airdate: May 31, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Stolen Zillion" (Original Airdate: June 7, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Flames! Ricks' Counterattack" (Original Airdate: June 14, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Birth of New Zillion!" (Original Airdate: June 21, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Attack! Triple Shoot" (Original Airdate: June 28, 1987): written by Haruya Yamazaki
      "Angry Shutter Chance" (Original Airdate: July 5, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Nightingale of the Battlefield" (Original Airdate: July 12, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Life Or Death!? Confrontation of Fateā€”Part. 1" (Original Airdate: July 19, 1987): written by Haruya Yamazaki
      "Life Or Death!? Confrontation of Fateā€”Part. 2" (Original Airdate: July 26, 1987): written by Haruya Yamazaki
      "Tears! Let's Search J.J." (Original Airdate: September 6, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "The Beautiful Noza's Challenge" (Original Airdate: September 13, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Match! Let's Throw the Coin" (Original Airdate: September 20, 1987): written by Haruya Yamazaki
      "Kick with a Broken Heart" (Original Airdate: September 27, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Clash! The Sniper" (Original Airdate: October 4, 1987): written by Takao Koyama
      "Great Victory from a Lie!" (Original Airdate: October 11, 1987): written by Takashi Yamada
      "Terror! Demon's Bio Weapon" (Original Airdate: October 18, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Great Adventure! Warrior Opa-Opa" (Original Airdate: October 25, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Gentle Fugitive Apple" (Original Airdate: November 1, 1987): written by Takashi Yamada
      "Revenge Demon Ninja!" (Original Airdate: November 8, 1987): written by Haruya Yamazaki
      "Extraordinary Rebel Ricks" (Original Airdate: November 15, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Mystery!? Zillion Power" (Original Airdate: November 22, 1987): written by Mami Watanabe
      "Heroic! Ricks Dies!?" (Original Airdate: November 29, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Planet Maris on the Corner!" (Original Airdate: December 6, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito
      "Last Shoot for Victory" (Original Airdate: December 13, 1987): written by Tsunehisa Ito


      = Music

      =
      Opening
      "Pure Stone" by Risa Yuuki
      Closing
      "Push!" by Risa Yuuki (eps. 1ā€“20)
      "Rock Candy" by Risa Yuuki (eps. 21ā€“31)


      = OVA

      =

      Zillion: Burning Night, known in Japan as Red Photon Zillion: Songstress's Nocturne (čµ¤ć„å…‰å¼¾ć‚øćƒŖć‚Ŗćƒ³ ę­Œå§«å¤œę›², Akai Kodan Jirion Utahime Yakyoku), is a Japanese direct-to-video anime release by Tatsunoko. It is also referred to as "Red Bullet Zillion: Burning Night" and "Zillion: Burning Night Special". It was released on June 21, 1988.
      According to Toshinori Otsuri, it's inspired by Streets of Fire.


      Plot


      In the peaceful aftermath of the Nozsa wars, the charismatic heroes known as "White Nuts" have changed career paths to becoming music making rock stars. Their music career would soon be interrupted by a new threat of colonial settlers. Apple is kidnapped by the sadistic ODAMA Clan - a family of ruthless killers. Located in a heavily fortified mountain retreat, J.J. and company attempt a rescue mission with their laser weapon Zillion, but the former Knights only have a limited supply of Zillium for the Zillion guns. A mysterious stranger named Rick, a wondering bodyguard for the ODAMA Clan, turns out to be an old lover of Apple.


      = Comic

      =
      In 1993, Eternity Comics published a comic book adaptation, written by Tom Mason, drawn by Harrison Fong, and lettered by Tim Eldred.


      = Video games

      =

      Two games were made based on the series, both by Sega for the Master System: Zillion, an action game similar in play style to Metroid and Impossible Mission, and a sequel, Zillion II: The Tri Formation, which was a faster-paced game involving a powered armor mecha which transformed into a motorcycle.


      Publications


      Zillion Creations 1 and Zillion Creations 2 were released in 1987 and 1988, respectively. These books offer an in-depth look at the equipment and characters from the series.
      In 1993, Eternity Comics published a comic book adaptation of the series, written by Tom Mason and illustrated by Harrison Fong.


      = Toy

      =
      A Zillion-based laser tag toy line also by Sega was also released in Japan and Brazil. The design of the gun, which was also featured in the series released in 1987, was reused from the Master System Light Phaser light gun which was released in 1986 in North America, Europe and Brazil.
      Later in the series, Sega and Tatsunoko changed the design of the anime series' guns, simultaneous with a cosmetic change in the laser tag guns on which they were based.
      In 2009, a Brazilian man used the toy in a hostage crisis situation where a woman was held for more than 10 hours.


      Development


      After the production of the anime, Tatsunoko Production and Mitsuhisa Ishikawa, the producer of Zillion, established IG Tatsunoko (which later became Production I.G) to obstruct the dispersing of the excellent staffs of Tatsunoko branch which had done actual production. Therefore, Zillion is considered to be Production I.G's first work.
      The anime's mechanical designs were done by Studio "Ammonite".


      References




      External links


      Zillion at IMDb
      Zillion (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia

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