bila aku teringatkan balik anime/cartoon yg pernah aku tonton pd akhir 80an & awal 90an rasa nak keluar happy tears! skrg umur aku dah 29 thn. masa sekolah rendah & menengah dulu mmg hantu anime/cartoon. ye la time tu mana ada internet, vcd, dvd etc. hiburan sekadar menonton TV percuma (cabel TV pun x wujud lg) tp yg bestnya cartoon/anime pd masa tu memang mantap!
antara anime/cartoon yg masih berbekas kat dlm hati ni:
1. Thundercats
2. Transformers
3. Voltron
4. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
5. Macross
6. Mospeada
7. Jem
8. Mask
9. G.I Joe
10. Silverhawk
11. Visionaries etc....
Sbnrnye byk lg yg x igt. Mmg time tu semua cartoon/anime dah mendahului zaman.
alah, lbh kurang sama ngan Robotech: New Generation nyer ending. Versi Robotech, Scott Bernard pigi ke Moon Base ALUCE nak carik Admiral Hunter & SDF-3.
Mospeada lak, Stig Bernard pi balik ke Mars Base. Lbh kurang gitulah ... tpkan, ada sambungan OAV Mospeada Love Live Alive dimana Stig Bernard kembali semula ke Bumi utk sesi reunion ngan Aisha (aka marlene) & geng2 Mospeada lain.
Tosho Daimos (闘将ダイモス, Tosho Daimos? Brave Leader (or Fighting King) Daimos) is a Japanese anime television series produced by Nihon Sunrise. Daimos is the third installment of the "Romantic Trilogy", following Chōdenji Robo Combattler V and Chōdenji Machine Voltes V. It ran from 1 April 1978 to 27 January 1979 and consisted of 44 episodes. A movie with the pivotal episodes strung together titled Starbirds was released in the US by the same company that released Tranzor Z. The name Daimos is derived from Deimos, one of the two moons of Mars. Outside of Japan, the show also aired in the Philippines, Malaysia and Italy. In the early 1980s there was a VHS release in France, but only the first seven episodes were available. In the 1990s, the entire series was shown in Poland (although with Polish voiceover, the Italian dubbing could be heard in background).
Nagahama, who directed the series, is often miscredited as the "creator" of the trilogy. It was actually created by "Saburo Hatte", best known to American fans as the creator of Voltron (Golion in its original Japanese).
"Saburo Hatte" (sometimes "Saburo Yatsude") is not a real person. Similar to "Hajime Yadate", the name is a pseudonym which refers to the collective staff of Toei Co. Ltd (specifically, the main Toei division, as opposed to the animation division). The series was animated by Sunrise on Toei's behalf.
UFO Robo Grendizer (UFOロボ・グレンダイザー, UFO Robo Gurendaizā?), is a super robot show created by manga artist Go Nagai. It was shown on Japanese TV in 1975 and lasted 74 episodes. In 1977 it was the greatest anime show in France, in 1978 in Italy, leading to a great merchandising, being the first mecha ever show in those countries. His first appearance in U.S. was as part of Jim Terry's Force Five series, under the title Grandizer.
Gordian Warrior (闘士ゴーディアン, Gordian Warrior?) was a popular anime series aired in 1979 to 1981 in Japan. There were 73 episodes aired at 30 minutes each. It is also referred to as Champion of Gordian or Gardian.
Mazinger Z (マジンガーZ, Majingā Zetto?), known as Tranzor Z in North America, is a manga series by Go Nagai, serialized in Shueisha Shōnen Jump from October 1972. December of the same year, an anime adaptation premiered on Fuji Television. The TV series ended September 1, 1974, outliving its manga counterpart.
Robot Taekwon V (로보트 태권 V) is a South Korean animated film directed by Kim Cheong-gi and produced by Yu Hyun-mok, the prominent director of such films as Obaltan (오발탄 ) (Aimless Bullet) (1960). It was released on July 24, 1976 , immediately becoming a mega-smashed hit in the late 1970s, and consequently inspired a string of sequels in followng years. Robot Taekwon V was released in the United States in a dubbed format under the name Voltar the Invincible. Robot Taekwon V became the first Korean film to receive full digital restoration treatment in 2005.
Dancouga - Super Beast Machine God (超獣機神ダンクーガ, Chōjū Kishin Dankūga?) is a super robot anime television series. (The English name chosen by the Japanese companies is "God Bless The Machine Dancouga", but the US release uses a literal title translation.) The show ran for 38 episodes from 4 April 1985 to 17 December 1985 and was produced by Ashi Productions (also known for their work in the Dorvack series). After the TV series ended, a number of OVAs were created. Juusenki Tai Songs featured music videos of the various theme and insert songs from the series to TV series footage. The 1986 OVA Requiem for Victims featured a recap of the television series and a newly-animated conclusion to the story. Additionally, there was a 1987 sequel OVA (often mislabeled a movie by American fans because it was animated in widescreen) God Bless Dancouga. In 1989 the four-part Blazing Epilogue OVA series presented a new sequel.
A show called Dancouga Nova (directed by Dancouga's original mecha designer, Masami Obari) began airing in Japan in March of 2007. However, it appears to be related to the series in name and mechanical design only, the overall plot bearing no apparent direct connection to the original and seeming to fans as more of a third season to Obari's Gravion than a successor to its namesake.
Dangaioh - Hyper Combat Unit (破邪大星ダンガイオー or 破邪大星弾劾凰, Haja Taisei Dangaiō?) is an anime OVA series produced by AIC studios and released in Japan in 1987. Dangaioh features character designs by creator Toshihiro Hirano, mechanical designs by Shoji Kawamori , animation direction by Masami Obari and key animation by Hideaki Anno.
Space Runaway Ideon (闘将ダイモス, Densetsu Kyojin Ideon?, lit. Legendary Giant God Ideon) is an anime television series produced by Sunrise. It first premiered on the Tokyo 12 Channel (later to be TV Tokyo) from 1980 to 1981, followed by two feature films released in 1982, and was later broadcast in Japan by the satellite TV network Animax from September 2006. Ideon was created and directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino, and was the series he produced immediately following his most famous work, Mobile Suit Gundam. Its mechanical designers were Submarine (series) & Higuchi Yuuichi (movies) and its characters were designed by Tomonori Kogawa.
The series won the Animage Anime Grand Prix prize for the second half of 1980.
Hoho, bagi peminat band-band tempatan, terutamanya band-band baru yang kemunculannya entah dari mana datangnya, secara tiba-tiba sahaja muncul di arena seni tanah air ini, muncul secara mainstream pulak tu, dengan genre muzik yang pelik-pelik, maka pastinya pernah mendengar tajuk lagu seperti yang aku tulis kat tajuk entri ini, serta “ayat yang aku quote kat atas tu (ya, aku tahu ejaan lullaby tu salah). Yep, lagu daripada band HUJAN kan?
Tapi bagi orang tertentu, macam aku contohnya, maka bila membaca tajuk lagu itu, dan kemudiannya setelah mendengarkan sendiri lagu nyanyian mereka itu, maka tidak boleh tidak, memori lampau mengimbau kembali, mengingatkan aku kepada asal-usul yang asalnya bagi lagu berkenaan. Apakah asal-usul yang sebenar bagi lagu berkenaan?
Yeah, bagi yang dapat menekanya, tahniah diucapkan! Andalah kanak-kanak 80an yang peka dengan apa yang anda tonton di TV, heheheh! Bagi yang tak tahu, mungkin anda terlalu muda, atau mungkin juga terlalu tua daripada jangka umur itu, atau mungkin anda jenis yang tidak kisah atau peduli.
Maka biarlah aku memberikan jawapannya. Ini ialah lagu yang SAMA (atau hampir sama, atau sekurang-kurangnya iramanya SAMA, serta beberapa bahagian lirik tertentunya SAMA) dengan satu lagu yang sebenarnya dinyanyikan dalam bahasa yang ternyata jauh berbeza daripada bahasa kita.
Bagi yang terkeliru (macam aku sendiri pada satu ketika dulu) mungkin membayangkan bahawa ini juga cerita yang sama yang diberi judul ROBOTECH
ROBOTECH ialah tajuk yang digunakan untuk memasarkan siri anime ini di Amerika Syarikat. Menjadi suatu amalan yang biasa pada suatu ketika dulu, untuk sesuatu penerbitan di Amerika Syarikat, tatkala mereka mengimpot sesuatu siri anime dari Jepun (iyalah, dari mana lagi kan?) ke Amerika Syarikat, mereka akan pilih judul-judul dari genre-genre yang mereka rasa mereka boleh buat duit
Kalau korang perasan la..kartun zaman 80-an ni contohnya He-man, Gi-Joe, M.A.S.K (sekadar contoh) kalau ending dia mesti ada sikit dia masukkan nasihat/pesanan dan pengajaran. kartun lani dah tak da dah buat camtu....
Originally posted by CharlieDale at 7-8-2008 10:23 PM
Kalau korang perasan la..kartun zaman 80-an ni contohnya He-man, Gi-Joe, M.A.S.K (sekadar contoh) kalau ending dia mesti ada sikit dia masukkan nasihat/pesanan dan pengajaran. kartun lani dah tak ...
Hehehheh...
kalau tgk citer Keluangman pun ada dimasukkan unsur pengajaran
Oh ye..kartun paling fames yg ada unsur pengajaran di tahun 80an...
Kartun anti dadah Malaysia....ada gambar mat gian panjat tangga & tengkorak.
Ngeri siot aku tgk masa kecik2 dulu.....