Ultraman Cosmos Japanese tokusatsu TV show being the 16th show in the Ultra Series. Produced by Tsuburaya Productions, Ultraman Cosmos aired from July 7, 2001 to September 28, 2002, with a total of 65 episodes, which currently makes it the longest running Ultra Show to date. Ultraman Cosmos was also the 35th anniversary for the Ultraman series.
is aIn June 2002, Cosmos was taken off of television for several weeks (following the broadcast of the 49th episode) when lead actor Taiyo Sugiura was questioned in an assault and extortion case. When the case against Sugiura was dropped for lack of evidence, Cosmos was put back on the air.[1] TBS and Tsuburaya ultimately pulled five episodes (50, 52, 54, 56, and 58) from broadcast to make up for time lost, and these episodes were later released on DVD.
Plot
A kinder, gentler Ultra hero was released in the summer of 2001 to coincide with the 35th anniversary of the original Ultraman. The launch of the TV show was quickly followed by a feature film prequel, and is the first time that an Ultra movie and TV series were so closely linked. Following recent trends, Cosmos is another type-changing Ultraman, with the all-blue Luna mode, and the asymmetrical red and blue Corona modes. The modes represent a "gentle" side and a "strong" side, respectively. Later in the series, Cosmos also develops the "courageous" Eclipse mode, with a symmetrical blue, red and gold design. The series was extended to 65 episodes, which makes it the longest-running in the franchise to date.
This series is preceded by the feature film Ultraman Cosmos: The First Contact. In it, Musashi Haruno encounters the being of light, Ultraman Cosmos , and befriends him as the two confront a threat to Earth. The TV series takes place eight years after the events in the movie, when monsters are once again plaguing humanity. Now Musashi is a 19-year-old young man. He joins a wing of SRC known as Team EYES. Musashi encounters Cosmos again, and the two merge to defend the Earth.
The recurring villain in this series is the Chaos Header, a virus that either infects monsters or replicates them, creating more violent and aggressive versions of them, even Ultraman Cosmos himself. Usually, you can distinguish the original monster from the infected monster because the infected one has "Chaos" as a prefix in its name and has a head with a lot more junk on it, and it has a power boost. This series has a lot of monsters that pay homage to monsters from past series. The Baltans are the most blatant example. Golmede and Lidorias are similar to Gomess and Litra in episode 1 of Ultra Q. There is also Spittle (with head-covering armored petals around his neck like Gabora of Ultraman episode 9), Gigi (with distinct black and white lines and three faces like Dada of Ultraman episode 28), Mudon (like Seabozu) , Mienin and Gamoran (like the perennial favorites, Pigmon and Garamon, respectively), Clevergon (like Crazygon) and Mogrudon (like mongular).
This series is followed by the feature film, Ultraman Cosmos 2: The Blue Planet, in which Cosmos gains a couple of new modes (Space Corona and Phantom Corona). This in turn is followed by Ultraman Cosmos Vs Ultraman Justice: The Final Battle.
Characters
Ultras
Allies
- Main article: EYES (Elite Young Expert Squad)
Media
Movies
- Ultraman Cosmos: The First Contact (2001)
- Ultraman Cosmos 2: The Blue Planet (2002)
- Ultraman Cosmos Vs Ultraman Justice: The Final Battle (2003)
- Mega Monster Battle : Ultra Galaxy Legend The Movie (2009)
- Ultraman Saga (2012)
- Ultraman Ginga S Movie : Showdown! The 10 Ultra Warriors! (2015)
Cast
- Musashi Haruno : Taiyo Sugiura
- Musashi (Child): Kounosuke Tokai
- Captain Harumitsu Hiura : Daisuke Shima
- Shinobu Mizuki : Kaori Sakagami
- Keisuke Fubukiフブキ ケイスケ : Hidekazu Ichinose
- Koji Doigaki : Koichi Sudo
- Ayano Morimoto : Mayuka Suzuki
- Ultraman Cosmos : Hiroyuki Sato
- Chaos Header Koji Haramaki
Suit actors
- Ultraman Cosmos: Hiroyuki Okano, Yasuhiro Mashita
Songs
- Opening theme
- "Spirit"
- Lyrics: Goro Matsui
- Composition: KATSUMI
- Arrangement: Takao Konishi
- Artist: Project DMM
- Ending themes
- "Ultraman Cosmos ~ Kimi ni Dekiru Nanika"
- Lyrics: Goro Matsui
- Composition: Kisaburo Suzuki
- Arrangement: Seiichi Kyoda
- Artist: Project DMM
- "Kokoro no Kizuna"
- Lyrics/Composition: KATSUMI
- Arrangement: Kazuya Daimon
- Artist: Project DMM
- Insert Themes
- Touch the Fire
- Lyrics: KATSUMI
- Composition/Arrangement: Kazuya Daimon
- Artist: Project DMM
10th Anniversary release
In 2011, Tsuburaya productions has released the entire TV Series in DVD Box set, under the title "Ultraman Cosmos 10 Anniversary memorial box", Features all 65 episodes plus three newly-edited episodes. Comes with a 32-page description.
Taiyou Sugiura's Crime
Taiyou Sugiura was arrested after the 49th episode was broadcast in 2002 June 8th, as the suspect of the injury blackmail incident which happened in 2000, before he started work on this television series. Because of that, the program was discontinued without broadcasting a series finale. A summary episode of the series which reaches to the last time June 22nd, 2002 was broadcast on June 29th “in the form of the front second volume of the special entire collection compilation of (“Cosmos' Greatest Crisis” and “Cosmos' Final Fight”)”.
After that, because the victim “the representation which untruth recognizes the portion of incident” is submitted concerning the injury in non-prosecution dealing, it became prosecution postponement dealing concerning blackmail, situation looked at legal conclusion. Receiving this, the broadcast was reopened from July 20th of the same year.However, because broadcast period is beforehand decided, they made new episodes ( 50, 52, 54, 56, and 58) where it has ended between it was broadcast. The feature film Ultraman M78 Theater Love & Peace and the direct-to-video Ultraman series 'Ultraman Neos' were broadcast during broadcast dormant period.
References
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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