Ultra Seven (ã¦ã«ãã©ã»ãã³, Urutora Sebun) is a tokusatsu science fiction TV series that aired on Japanese TV in 1967. Created by Eiji Tsuburaya, this follow up to Ultraman went on to become one of Japan's greatest fantasy TV series. Such is his popularity that Ultra Seven (or simply "Seven") has appeared or at least made cameos in nearly every Ultra Series following his own and has had far more exposure than even the original Ultraman (though the original Ultraman is without a doubt the face of the Ultras).
Ultra Seven is sometimes incorrectly called "Ultraman Seven" by many sources outside Japan (or in the case of KHON/Honolulu, Hawaii, Ultra 7, as listed in TV Guide when it ran in 1975). Both the series and its hero can also be called Ultraseven (without a space), which is generally the form used when romanized.
The 1967 TV series
Ultra Seven, produced by Tsuburaya Productions, aired on Tokyo Broadcasting System from October 1, 1967 to September 8. In the not-too-distant future, the Earth finds itself constantly under attack from extraterrestrial threats. To combat them, the Terrestrial Defense Force establishes the Ultra Guard (ã¦ã«ãã©è¦åé, Urutora keibi-tai), a team of six elite members who utilize high-tech vehicles and weaponry. Joining their fight is the mysterious Dan Moroboshi who is secretly an alien from the Land of Light in Nebula M-78, Ultraseven.
Characters â" The Ultra Garrison (ã¦ã«ãã©è¦åé)
- Commander Kaoru Kiriyama is the captain of the Ultra Garrison. A no-nonsense but kind leader. He is from Tokyo.
- Actor: ShÅji Nakayama
- Shigeru Furuhashi is a rotund, strong, trigger-happy member of the Ultra Garrison. Many years later, he would find himself a high-ranking TDF commander and one of Ultra Seven's few allies. He is from Hokkaido.
- Actor: Sandayū Dokumamushi, or Iyoshi Ishii, who had previously been Science Patrolman Daisuke Arashi in Ultraman
- Anne Yuri is the only female member of the Ultra Garrison, and also the youngest. She is the team's communications operator and nurse, but is still effective in action. Has feelings for fellow member Dan Moroboshi. She is also from Tokyo.
- Actor: Yuriko Hishimi
- Soga is Ultra Garrison's expert marksman. He is easy-going, but fierce in battle. He is a friend of Dan Moroboshi. He is from Southern Kyushu.
- Actor: Shinsuke Achiha
- Amagi is the twitchy stragegist. He is from Nagoya.
- Actor: Bin "Satoshi" Furuya, previously the suit actor of Ultraman
- Dan Moroboshi/Ultra Seven (Agent 340), the title character, is from the Land of Light in the Nebula M-78, the same planet as Ultraman. Originally sent to map the Milky Way, he visits Earth and it captivates him. On his first visit he saves the life of a young mountain climber named Jiro Satsuma, who nearly falls to his death while saving a fellow climber. Instead of merging with him, as Ultraman did with Science Patrolman Shin Hayata, 340 morphs himself into a duplicate of the unconscious Jiro. However, he names himself Dan Moroboshi to avoid confusion. A mysterious but friendly young man, Dan joins the Ultra Guard as its sixth member. Unknown to them or anyone else, he saves the day from alien invasions as Agent 340, christened by the Garrison as its "honorary 7th member," Ultra Seven.
- Actor: Kohji Moritsugu; Suit Actor: Koji Uenishi
Statistics
- Height: 40 meters
- Weight: 35,000 metric tonnes
- Flight Speed: Mach 120.9
- Running Speed: Mach 6.55
- Swimming Speed: 769 kilometer per hour
- Tunneling Speed: Mach 1
- Jumping Distance: 2300 meters
- Home Planet: Land of Light, Nebula M-78, 2,000,000 light years from Earth
- Human Form: Dan Moroboshi
- Transformation Item: Ultra Eye, called the Task-Mask in the English-dubbed version
Powers
Unlike most other Ultramen, Ultra Seven does not demonstrate any of the time constraints that plague most of the other heroes of the Ultra Series. On one occasion however, the green Beam Lamp on his forehead would begin blinking in a similar fashion to the Color Timer that the other Ultra-Crusaders had.
However, this tended to occur when Ultra Seven was in mortal danger, suggesting it warned him how badly weakened he was rather than how much time he had left to fight. This is similar to some of the more recent Ultra-Crusaders, whose warning lights acted as indicators of battle injury and damage levels of their Ultra-Armor suits rather than time limit.
- Eye Slugger: The crest on Ultra Seven's head can be detached and used as a throwing weapon. This is Ultra Seven's most well-known weapon, and possibly the most famous of all Ultra attacks. It has been incorrectly referred to as an "Ice Lugger" by various sources. This name was coined during the early pre-production on the series, which was going to be called "Ultra Eye" (Urutora Ai), hence "Eye Slugger." When the title of the series was changed to "Ultra Seven," the name of the weapon remained "Eye Slugger"â"according to official Tsuburaya Productions production notes, published in Kodansha Official File Magazine Ultraman Vol. 4 & 5: "Ultra Seven" (2005).
- Emerium Beam: Various concentrations of energy rays could be fired from the Beam Lamp on his head as one of Ultra Seven's finishers. It is one of his trademark moves. He would either fire it standing with his left hand drawn to his chest while his right arm was outstretched, with his arms crossed so that his hands are touching his armpits, or more commonly on one knee, two fingers from both hands nearly touching the gem.
- Wide Shot: Ultra Seven's most powerful attack. By gathering energy in the armor plates on his shoulders and chest, Ultra Seven could unleash a powerful stream of energy by crossing his arms in an L-shape (his left arm upright, his right arm bent). He could further increase the potency of the beam, but this special attack drains his own energy. The Wide Shot was later turned into an ordinary weapon where Ultra Seven can just pose his arms into a L-style and does not drain his energy. Of course, this style will not be as powerful as the one needs to drain his own energy.
- Capsule Monsters: When unable to fight (usually because his Ultra Eye has been stolen), Dan will often produce a small capsule that releases a giant-sized monster to fight in his place. Although he is shown to have four or five capsules, only three capsule monsters are shown in the series, Windam, Miclas, and Agira. In the 1998 Direct To Video series, Ultra Seven once used one of the capsules to incapacitate a member of the new Ultra Garrison in order to take his place. The Capsule Monsters would later return in the form of the Maquette Monsters from Ultraman Mebius.
- Ring Shot: When severely depleted of energy, Seven uses the ring shot to replace the wide shot. It is generated by Seven spreading both his arms our and joining his palms together. In a split second, a ring shaped beam zips through his palms and usually cuts through the enemy.
- Ultra S.O.S.: Like the other Ultra-Crusaders, Seven can summon a blue signal from his eyes and send an S.O.S flashing in the sky. Unlike that of Ultraman Ace, his S.O.S flashes in green.
- Ultra Splitter: Seven splits himself in many forms, to confuse his opponent. Usually he uses it to drive his enemy in circles. The move depletes his energy supply by one minute, and is used against teleporting enemies.
- The "Seven Shrink": As seen by Crazygon, Seven shrinks himself and enters into a cannon. The cannon fires and the miniature Seven cuts through the monster like a bullet.
- Eye Beam: Seven crosses his hands together and pulls it down to his lower torso. Twin beams burst from his eyes and hit the enemy.
- Solar Recharge: When severely depleted of energy, Seven turns towards the Sun and absorbs the rays into his chest, he then has enough energy to finish his opponent off.
Differences from the original Ultraman
Ultra Seven was not only visually different from the first Ultraman (being mostly red with a removable crest/weapon and more 'boxy'-looking eyes), but often faced numerous moral and ethical dilemmas. On one occasion, he was forced to break a promise Dan had made to a young boy who was undergoing an operation in order to protect the hospital from a monster. On another occasion, he was forced to battle the sole survivor of a small planet that was destroyed by a careless weapons test, making him wonder if he was fighting for a worthy cause. On yet another occasion, as Dan, he desperately tried to contact the inhabitants of a space faring city before it was destroyed by the Ultra Garrison, to keep it from crashing into Earth.
Also, Ultraseven did not possess a mortally injured human to use as his host but instead used his powers to scan a brave human that he had saved from being fatally injured and used that human as a template to create a human form for him to shift into. Thus, Dan Moroboshi literally IS Ultraseven while the original Ultraman would instead merge into the body of Shin Hayata to make two beings into one. However the consequence of Ultraseven transforming into a human form is that catastrophic injuries he receives as Ultraseven can and will pass on to his human form of Dan Moroboshi. This was shown best in the opening episode of Ultraman Leo when Ultraseven was badly beaten by a tag team of two monsters and their alien master, with one of the monsters breaking his right leg. After he reverted to his human form, the injuries were still there and as a result of the injuries as well as the severe energy drain he suffered, Dan was unable to transform back into Ultraseven and his Ultra Eye was damaged in the process. Ultraman Leo, Ultraman 80 and Ultraman Mebius also used their powers to create a human form to transform into and thus they also would share this same weakness as Ultraseven.
Episodes
- The Invisible Challenger (å§¿ãªãæ'æ¦è , Sugata naki ChÅsensha)
- The Green Terror (ç·'ã®ææ, Midori no KyÅfu)
- The Secret of the Lake (æ¹ã®ã²ã¿ã¤, Mizumi no himitsu)
- Max, Acknowledge (ããã¯ã¹å·å¿ç"ãã, Makkusu-gÅ ÅtÅ seyo)
- The Negated Hours (æ¶ãããæé", Kesareta Jikan)
- The Dark Zone (ãã¼ã¯ã»ã¾ã¼ã³, DÄku ZÅn)
- Space Prisoner 303 (å®å®å人303, UchÅ« ShÅ«jin San-Maru-San)
- The Targeted Town (çãããè¡, Nerawareta Machi)
- Android Zero Directive (ã¢ã³ããã¤ã0æä»¤, Andoroido Zero Shirei)
- The Suspicious Neighbor (æªããé£äºº, Ayashii Rinjin)
- Fly to Devil's Mountain (é"ã®å±±ã¸é£ã¹, Ma no Yama e Tobe)
- From Another Planet with Love (éæããæã'ã"ãã¦, YÅ«sei yori Ai o Komete)
- The Man from V3 (V3ããæ¥ãç"·, Bui SurÄ« kara Kita Otoko)
- Westward, Ultra Garrison (Beginning) (ã¦ã«ãã©è¦åé西ã¸ï¼åç·¨ï¼, Urutora Keibitai Nishi e (Zenpen))
- Westward, Ultra Garrison (Conclusion) (ã¦ã«ãã©è¦åé西ã¸ï¼å¾ç·¨ï¼, Urutora Keibitai Nishi e (KÅhen))
- Shining Eyes in the Darkness (éã«å ãç®, Yami ni Hikaru Me)
- Underground: Go! Go! Go! (å°åºGO! GO! GO!, Chitei GÅ! GÅ! GÅ!)
- Escape from Area X (空é"Xè±åº, KÅ«kan Ekkusu Dasshutsu)
- Project Blue (ããã¸ã§ã¯ãã»ãã«ã¼, Purojekuto BurÅ«)
- Smash Epicenter X (å°éæºXã'å'ã, Jishingen Ekkusu o Taose)
- Pursue the Undersea Base (æµ·åºåºå°ã'追ã, Kaitei Kichi o Oe)
- The Human Ranch (人é"ç§å ´, Ningen BokujÅ)
- Find Tomorrow (ææ¥ã'æã, Asu o Sagase)
- Return to the North! (åã¸éã!, Kita e Kaere!)
- Showdown at 140 Degrees Below Zero (é¶ä¸140度ã®å¯¾æ±º, Reika HyakuyonjÅ«-do no Taiketsu)
- Super Weapon R-1 (è¶ å µå¨R1å·, ChÅheiki Äru Ichi-gÅ)
- Operation: Cyborg (ãµã¤ãã¼ã°ä½æ¦, SaibÅgu Sakusen)
- The 700 Kilometer Run! (700ããã'çªã£èµ°ã!, Nanahyaku Kiro o Tsuppashire!)
- The Forsaken Earthman (ã²ã¨ãã¼ã£ã¡ã®å°ç人, Hitoribotchi no ChikyÅ«jin)
- For Whom Takes the Glory (æ å ã¯èª°ãã®ããã«, EikÅ wa Dare no Tame ni)
- The Devil Who Dwells in a Flower (æªé"ã®ä½ãè±, Akuma no Sumu Hana)
- The Wandering Planet (æ£æ©ããæ'æ, Sannpo suru Wakusei)
- The Dead Invaders (ä¾µç¥ããæ»è ãã¡, Shinryaku suru Shishatachi)
- The Vanishing City (è'¸çºé½å¸, JÅhatsu Toshi)
- Horror on the Moon (æä¸çã®æ¦æ , Gessekai no Senritsu)
- The 0.1 Second Kill (å¿ æ®ºã®0.1ç§', Hissatsu no Rei-ten-ichi ByÅ)
- The Stolen Ultra Eye (çã¾ããã¦ã«ãã©ã»ã¢ã¤, Nusumareta Urutora Ai)
- The Courageous Battle (åæ°ããæ¦ã, YÅ«ki aru Tatakai)
- The Seven Assassination Plan (Beginning) (ã»ãã³ææ®ºè¨ç"»ï¼åç¯ï¼, Sebun Ansatsu Keikaku (Zenpen))
- The Seven Assassination Plan (Conclusion) (ã»ãã³ææ®ºè¨ç"»ï¼å¾ç·¨ï¼, Sebun Ansatsu Keikaku (KÅhen))
- The Challenge from the Water (æ°´ä¸ããã®æ'æ¦, SuichÅ« kara no ChÅsen)
- Ambassador of The Nonmalt (ãã³ãã«ãã®ä½¿è , Nonmaruto no Shisha)
- Nightmare on Planet 4 (第åæ'æã®æªå¤¢, Daiyon Wakusei no Akumu)
- The Terrifying Super-Simian (ææã®è¶ ç¿äºº, KyÅfu no ChÅenjin)
- The Boy Who Cried Flying Saucer (åç¤ãæ¥ã, Enban ga Kita)
- The Duel: Dan vs. Seven (ãã³å¯¾ã»ãã³ã®æ±ºé, Dan tai Sebun no KettÅ)
- Who are You? (ããªãã¯ã ãã?, Anata wa dare?)
- The Greatest Invasion in History (Beginning) (å²ä¸æå¤§ã®ä¾µç¥ï¼åç·¨ï¼, ShijÅ Saidai no Shinryaku (Zenpen))
- The Greatest Invasion in History (Conclusion) (å²ä¸æå¤§ã®ä¾µç¥ï¼å¾ç·¨ï¼, ShijÅ Saidai no Shinryaku (KÅhen))
TNT Episodes
In 1985, Turner Program Services commissioned Cinar to dub all 49 episodes for run in syndication. The Cinar produced episodes featured new opening and closing credits, eyecatches, new episode names, and even a change of name for the character of Anne Yuri, who was dubbed as "Donna". After failing to sell it to local and national stations, Turner put the tapes back into their vaults until 1994, when Ultra Seven was selected for broadcast on the Toons 'Till Noon and MonsterVision blocks on TNT. The Toons 'Till Noon broadcasts received substantially heavy editing to make them suitable for the time slot, while the MonsterVision broadcasts were left completely uncut. Episodes 5-7 were missing, but instead of paying Cinar for the missing episodes, they aired all the tapes they had already. When the contract expired between Tsuburaya, Cinar, and Turner, all materials (film, tapes, audio masters) reverted to, and were collected by Tsuburaya.
Cinar titles:
1. Enter Dan Moroboshe
2. Shrubs From Space
3. Secret of the Lake
4. Double Trouble At Sea
5. ???
6. ???
7. ???
8. Smokers On The Rampage
9. Toys In Crisis
10. The Man Next Door
11. Captured In Living Color
12. Crystallized Corpusels ( Banned Episode 12 )
13. Space Ace Reunion
14. Planets In Conflict Part 1
15. Planets In Conflict Part 2
16. The Eyes Have Had It
17. Cave-In
18. The Bells Are Ringing
19. Wane Lord Of The Universe
20. The Quakemaker
21. Nissans Return Engagement
22. Chromosone Eaters
23. Fugitive Fortune Teller
24. Mother Knows Best
25. Ultra-7 Exposed
26. The 8,000 Megaton Mistake
27. Temporary Traitor
28. Death On Wheels
29. The Apprentice Alien
30. Trial By War
31. Blood-Thirst
32. Island In The Sky
33. The Dead Invaders
34. Urban Removal
35. Moon-Stuck
36. Sharp Shooter Showdown
37. Devils Angle
38. Brave One
39. Ultra 7 - Tastes Defeat Part 1
40. Ultra 7 - Tastes Defeat Part 2
41. Killer Lake
42. The Boy By The Lake
43. Design By Tyranny
44. Stargazer
45. Simian Says Surrender
46. Dan And The Ultra-7 Challenge
47. Home Sweet Home
48. Exit Ultra-7 Part 1
49. Exit Ultra-7 Part 2
Home media
In 2012, Shout! Factory obtained a license to subtitle Ultra Seven in English, and released it for sale on their website as a physical boxed CD set, which is only available for shipping within the US and Canada. The original Episode 12, however, was not included, so the total number of episodes in this release was 48. On December 11, 2012 Shout! Factory made the set available through regular retailers. The case this time is a standard DVD keep case.
Tsuburaya released the series on Blu-ray as two separate sets with the first released on November 21, 2014 and the second on January 28, 2015.
Theme song
- "Ultra Seven no Uta" (ã¦ã«ãã©ã»ãã³ã®æ, Urutora Sebun no Uta, "The Song of Ultra Seven")
- Lyrics: KyÅichi Azuma
- Composition & Arrangement: TÅru Fuyuki
- Artist: The Echoes & Misuzu Children's Choral Group
Appearances in other Ultra series
Besides the Heisei Ultra Seven series, Ultraseven's huge popularity enabled him to make either guest or regular appearances in the following Ultra Series after the end of the original 1967 TV series. Ultraseven appeared in 2 episodes of The Return of Ultraman (Kaettekita Urutoraman, 1971), as well as in numerous episodes in Ultraman Ace (Urutoraman Eesu, 1972) and Ultraman Taro (Urutoraman Tarou, 1973). Seven loses his ability to transform and his human form, Dan Moroboshi acts as the captain for the defense team MAC in Ultraman Leo (Urutoraman Reo, 1974). A doll of Ultraseven brought to life by a boy, known as Delusion Ultraseven, appears in Ultraman 80 (Urutoraman Eiti, 1980) Episode 44 as the main Villain of the episode. It is heavily implied that Ultraseven is on Earth in his human form in Ultraman Zearth 2. Another Ultra similar to Ultra Seven, known as Ultra Seven 21, appeared in Ultraman Neos. Ultra Seven's most recent appearances include movies Ultraman Mebius & Ultraman Brothers and Superior Ultraman 8 Brothers, as well as TV series Ultraman Mebius (Urutoraman Mebiusu, 2006). Ultraseven X is actually a spin-off featuring the hero in another dimension. To date, Ultra Seven's also appeared in Ultra Galaxy:NEO and its movie, Mega Monster Battle: Ultra Galaxy, alongside his son Ultraman Zero. This also makes him the first known Ultra being other than the Mother and Father of Ultra to have an offspring. Seven returned yet again in 2010's Ultraman Zero: The Revenge of Belial as a supporting character. He also appeared alongside Ultraman in Ultraman Ginga as Ultraseven Dark, where he had become corrupted by an evil human after his spark doll fell into the wrong hands.
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