Darkstalkers (TV series)
DarkStalkers | |
---|---|
A.D. Vision VHS cover art | |
Genre | Fantasy, adventure, comedy |
Based on |
Darkstalkers by Capcom |
Developed by |
Capcom Graz Entertainment The Summit Media Group[1] |
Written by |
Richard Mueller Christy Marx Douglas Booth Kat Likkel Brooks Wachtel Katherine Lawrence |
Directed by |
Dora Case J.K. Kim Sue Peters |
Starring |
Lisa Ann Beley Kyle Labine Saffron Henderson Michael Donovan |
Composer(s) | William Kevin Anderson |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Kenzo Tsujimoto Stephanie Graziano Jun Aida Daniel S. Kletzky |
Producer(s) |
Victor Dal Chele Gwen Wetzler Akio Sakai Takeshi Sekiguchi |
Running time | 20 min. |
Release | |
Original network | UPN |
Original release | September 30 – December 30, 1995 |
Darkstalkers (also known as DarkStalkers: The Animated Series) is an American children's animated TV series produced by Graz Entertainment and aired in syndication on UPN from September to December 1995. The cartoon is loosely based on the Capcom fighting game Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors. It ran for one season of thirteen episodes.
Plot
As the television series was aimed towards a young audience, the violence and the sexual content present in the games were toned down. In addition, rather than following the complex backstory of the games, the show went for a standard good-vs.-evil plot. Various changes were made to the game characters themselves, most notably Morrigan Aensland, who became a villain descended from Morgan le Fay, and served alongside Demitri Maximoff (who was her rival in the games), under Pyron's command. The main protagonist is an ordinary human boy named Harry Grimoire, a descendant of Merlin created exclusively for the show.
Cast
- Kyle Labine - Harry Grimoire
- Lisa Ann Beley - Felicia, Hsien-Ko
- Saffron Henderson - Morrigan Aensland, Morgan le Fay
- Michael Donovan - Demitri Maximoff
- Garry Chalk - Donovan Baine
- Ian James Corlett - Victor von Gerdenheim, Huitzil, Pyron's ship computer
- Scott McNeil - Lord Raptor, Rikuo, Anakaris
- Colin Murdock - Bishamon
- Richard Newman - Pyron, Merlin, Terramon
- Lee Tockar - Jon Talbain
- Dale Wilson - Bigfoot
- Kathleen Barr - Harry's mother
- Laura Harris - Hairball
- Gerard Plunkett - Klaus Schmendrick
- Venus Terzo - Quan Yin, Orin
- Zoltan Buday - Anakaris ("Out of the Dark", "The Game") (uncredited)
Episodes
- "Out of the Dark"
- "Donovan's Bane"
- "Pyramid Power"
- "The Game"
- "And the Walls Come Tumblin' Down"
- "Ghost Hunter"
- "Little Bigfoot's Last Stand"
- "My Harry's in the Highlands"
- "Aliens Keep Out"
- "Samurai's Honor"
- "There's no Business Like Dragon Business"
- "Darkest Before the Dawn"
- "Everyone's a Critic"
Production
The cartoon version of Darkstalkers was co-produced by Capcom USA and Graz Entertainment. According to a June 1995 news article in GamePro, the show would "star Bobby Bridges [later renamed Harry Grimoire], a kid who befriends the game's supernatural cast of characters and sets out to prevent an alien invasion."[2] Jun Aida, Capcom's director of licensing, said: "With an enormous built-in audience of young arcade players across the nation and a colorful range of fun, but spooky characters who lend themselves so well to animated television, we're confident that Darkstalkers will be a big hit with kids everywhere. This show will make it hip to be scared. ... It's this decade's answer to the popular Ghostbusters sensation of the 80s."[3]
Reception
The series was received negatively, both as an adaptation and as a cartoon, and was therefore not renewed for a second season. Topless Robot included Harry Grimoire, who "turned Capcom's gorgeously animated fighting game into a cheap, unfunny comedy," on their 2010 list of the 10 worst cartoon kid sidekicks.[4] Rachel Jagielski of VentureBeat commented, "The plot is bad. But even more offensive than that is the shoddy animation."[5] Ryan Winterhalter of GamesRadar opined that the show "takes the characters that fighting gamers know and love and throws them out the window. In their place, [UPN] inserted the most idiotic band of video game character doppelgangers that you could imagine."[6] Vincent Chiucchi of 411Mania rated it first in his 2008 list of the top five "most shameful" video game cartoons, lambasting it as "the worst video game cartoon in history" while adding, "Everything about this cartoon is horrible. The plot is stupid, the animation is complete garbage, and the dialog is atrocious."[7]
See also
- Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge, the 1997 anime miniseries
- Street Fighter (TV series)
- Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm
References
- ↑ "Arthurian Literature XVIII". Keith Busby. ISBN 0-85991-617-0. Retrieved August 26, 2016.
- ↑ GamePro 71 (June 1995), p. 148.
- ↑ Capcom press release—1995; reprinted on Google Groups. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
- ↑ "The 10 Worst Cartoon Kid Sidekicks". Topless Robot. 2010-11-08. Retrieved 2013-11-14.
- ↑ Jagielski, Rachel (April 4, 2011). "Discovering the Darkstalkers Cartoon". VentureBeat. Retrieved June 17, 2014.
- ↑ Winterhalter, Ryan (July 8, 2010). "Five truly horrendous TV shows based on videogames". GamesRadar. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
- ↑ Chiucchi, Vincent (November 12, 2008). "Hall of Shame: Top 5 Most Shameful Video Game Cartoons". 411Mania.com. Retrieved June 8, 2014.