G-Force: Guardians of Space

1986
G-Force: Guardians of Space

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 The Robot Stegosaur Sep 08, 1986

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EP2 The Blast at the Bottom of the Sea Sep 09, 1986

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EP3 The Strange White Shadow Sep 10, 1986

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EP4 The Giant Centipoid Sep 11, 1986

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EP5 The Phantom Fleet Sep 12, 1986

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EP6 The Micro Robots Sep 15, 1986

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EP7 The Bad Blue Baron Sep 16, 1986

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EP8 The Secret of the Reef Sep 17, 1986

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EP9 The Sting of the Scorpion Sep 18, 1986

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EP10 The Antoid Army Sep 19, 1986

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EP11 The Mighty Blue Hawk Sep 22, 1986

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EP12 The Locustoid Sep 23, 1986

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EP13 The Deadly Red Sand Sep 24, 1986

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EP14 That Rainbow Ray Sep 25, 1986

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EP15 The Giant Jellyfish Lens Sep 26, 1986

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EP16 The Regenerating Robot Sep 29, 1986

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EP17 The Beetle Booster Sep 30, 1986

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EP18 The Whale Submarine Oct 01, 1986

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EP19 The Racing Inferno Oct 02, 1986

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EP20 The Mightiest Mole Oct 03, 1986

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EP21 Race of the Cyborgs Oct 10, 1986

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EP22 The Fiery Dragon Jan 01, 0001

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EP23 The Mammoth Iron Ball Jan 01, 0001

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EP24 The Neon Giant Jan 01, 0001

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EP25 The Rock Robot Jan 01, 0001

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EP26 The Secret Sting Ray Jan 01, 0001

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EP27 The ANIrobot Jan 01, 0001

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EP28 Invisible Enemy Jan 01, 0001

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EP29 The Project Called "Rock-E-X" Jan 01, 0001

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EP30 The Attack of the Mantis Jan 01, 0001

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7.4| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 08 September 1986 Ended
Producted By:
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

G-Force: Guardians of Space is the second American animated television adaptation of the Japanese anime series Science Ninja Team Gatchaman, following Sandy Frank Entertainment's initial 1978 effort Battle of the Planets and preceding ADV Films recent 2005 attempt, known as just Gatchaman. With G-Force, Sandy Frank Entertainment collaborated with Turner Broadcasting to create a newer, more faithful translation of Science Ninja Team Gatchaman for a new audience, and such a translation was made possible with the relaxed television standards of the 1980s, a luxury that the more Star Wars-themed Battle of the Planets did not enjoy.

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Reviews

Rectangular_businessman "G-Force: Guardians of Space" was the second dub adaptation of the "Science Ninja Team Gatchaman" anime from Tatsunoko, being more faithful to the original series than "Battle of the Planets". In that sense, it retained all the plot elements, backstories, violence and deaths that were edited in the previous dub. It also retained most of the original soundtrack of the series.In my opinion, "G-Force" was one of the coolest cartoons ever made, and it was way ahead of its time, which despite being made in the seventies, predates the aesthetic and themes from many action and superhero cartoons from the eighties and nineties.This show also had a cool cast of heroes and villains, which were also very cool and interesting, and made this series to work so well.I consider "Battle of the Planets" to be one of the most underrated animations from the seventies, totally deserving the title of cult classic despite all the "dated" elements that this series could have, at least from a modern perspective. Personally, I still like it a lot, and I consider "Battle of the Planets" to be a part of my childhood, like the original Transformers cartoon, Robotech and Saint Seiya.
RickyK777 When I first saw G-Force on Cartoon Network when I was a kid, I immediately liked this show. I even pretended to be characters such as Ace, Hoot Owl, and Pee-Wee.Years later, I discovered that this is an Americanized version of Science Ninja Team Gacchaman, a popular anime show, made for U.S. audiences by Sandy Frank and Ted Turner. This show was done in Japan by the award winning studio Tatsunoko Productions, which also produced Robotech and Speed Racer, two other great animes. I also found out that before G-Force, Sandy Frank heavily edited the violence and hired some of the best voice actors (Casey Kasem, Keye Luke, Alan Young, Janet Waldo, etc.) and added their mascot, 7-Zark-7, in a version which he called "Battle of the Planets," made in 1978. But when BOTP's copyright expired in '86, Frank teamed up with Ted Turner to re-dub Gacchaman and restore most of the violence that he previously edited in BOTP.The result was a more faithful show to the original Gacchaman story called "G-Force." The only two flaws it had were some poor dubbing and an often annoying synthesized disco soundtrack by Dean Andre. Bob Sakuma's original music is far superior to Andre's, but I also like Andre's music. I remember the music from childhood, when I first watched this show. Despite these flaws, it is the best dub of Gacchaman yet. Forget BOTP. Stay with the original Gacchaman, which is still the best, and G-Force!!! (If you want.)8/10
grendelkhan This was the second attempt at westernizing Kagaku Ninja Tai Gatchaman, aka Gatchaman. The first was the fun, but toned down Battle of the Planets. This time, Ted Turner's people got Fred Wolf to do it, with some improvements, but even more detriments.The series was more faithful to the original Gatchaman storylines; everything takes place on Earth, Galactor (Berg Katse/Zoltar) was androgynous, Dirk's (Joe/Jason) family were killed by Galctor's men, and Pee-Wee (Jinpei/Keeyop) was human. Most of the original action was shown, with only the most extreme violence edited. The Hoyt Curtain music was replaced with a repetitive and headache-inducing mix. The names were made even more childish: Ace Goodheart, Dirk Daring, Pee-Wee, Hooty; at least Agatha June was close to the original (Jun).While the stories were better and the translation more faithful, the voice work was sub-standard. The compression needed to match the Japanese lip movements made everything seemed rushed and the voice artists brought little to the production.Ultimately, the series was a failure, as it was removed after only airing 13 of 85 episodes. It later reappeared on the Cartoon Netwok, where it was run at least twice, with all 85 episodes broadcast. Most fans, including this one, generally deem it to be worse than Battle of the Planets. If the more faithful story could have been combined with the Battle of the Planets voice work and music, then Gatchaman would have made a much better transition to America. Either way, the ending was still missing.
delvillardiego I remember being about 11 and talking with my friends about about our favorite cartoons during the recess, and like I said before some loved it some hated it, obviously I was one of the followers. Even though it was an 80s cartoon it seemed like it tried to represent the 70s, when our heroes were not in action. My favorite character was Dirk, but they were all great, always fighting against Gallactor's lieutenants, and their soldiers, the costumes were great! One thing that I have to admit was pretty annoying was the background music, it didnt changed in romantic scenes, nor action, nor drama nor any, but besides that everything was more than O.K. Since I didnt saw the cartoon in English some names may not be the original ones, but we had Ace, the leather, Dirk, Agi, Pee Wee, and Auti (the Phoenix's pilot) Gallactor a super villain and of course Dr. Brilliant Mind (at least that was the translation).I only saw the final episode once and sadly all I can remember is... (you may not want to keep reading since I will reveal the same of the real hero and Gallactor's identity) ...that Dirk was the one who unmasked Gallactor and it was like pretty weird he explodes and becomes one with Computor (the prime evil one).Dont you just hate when you happen to find a re-run on t.v. and it is ALWAYS the same one? I've seen the first episode like 15 times.Why cant we see again cartoons like this one, or Defenders of the Earth, He-Man, Bravestarr, Thundarr the Barbarian, Kidd Video, and all of those 80s cartoons lots of us grew up with...