Planet Prince

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Planet Prince
File:Yusei Oji poster.jpg
1959 Japanese movie poster
Directed byEijirō Wakabayashi
Written byMasaru Igami (story),
Shin Morita (writer)
Produced byWalter Manley, Toei Company
StarringTatsuo Umemiya
CinematographyMasahiko Iimura
Music byKatsuhisa Hattori
Distributed byToei Company
Release date
March 19, 1959
Running time
57 min. (Part I), 63 min. (Part II), 85 min. (US version)
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Planet Prince (遊星王子, Yūsei Ōji) is a 1958 tokusatsu superhero television series. Created by veteran writer Masaru Igami and produced by Nippon Gendai and Senkosha, the series aired on NTV from November 4, 1958 to October 6, 1959, with a total of 49 episodes (divided into several segments). It was created to capitalize on the success of the Super Giant serials. In fact, the title hero (whose alter-ego was Waku-san, played by Toshio Mimura) bore a strong resemblance to Super Giant.

Toei produced two movies that featured the character, but in a completely different, more streamlined costume (and goggled helmet). The hero was this time played by Tatsuo Umemiya. The films were titled:

  • Planet Prince (遊星王子) (Yūsei Ōji) Released: May 19, 1959
  • Planet Prince - The Terrifying Spaceship (遊星王子 - 恐怖の宇宙船) (Yūsei Ōji - Kyōfu no Uchūsen) Released: May 25, 1959

For release in America, these two movies were compiled into a TV movie titled Prince of Space.

Television and movie differences

File:Yusei Oji poster 2.jpg
another version of movie poster of Planet Prince

As mentioned before, the TV version looks very similar to Super Giant, in that both wear cowled costumes and capes. Each character also has super powers and flies. The two-part movie version (produced by Toei) is different, as Prince of Space wears a streamlined costume, cape and helmet. In the edited US version he has no superpowers other than the invulnerability of his costume, but in a subplot unique to the Japanese version he is able to revert a man brainwashed by the Silver Star aliens to a peaceful state. He uses weapons (a wand-like laser gun) and flies a small spaceship.

In the TV version, just like Moonlight Mask, the Planet Prince persona was credited as being played by "?" (even though he never wore a mask).

In the film, Prince's enemy is Ambassador Phantom of the Silver Star (銀星のまぼろし大使) (who also appeared in one of the series' story arcs), or in the US version, Ambassador Dictator Phantom of the Planet Krankor. He (along with his henchmen) wears a prosthetic nose and cowl that gives him a decidedly chicken-like appearance, something that is constantly mocked in the Mystery Science Theater 3000 version. Phantom and his henchmen also appear to eschew undergarments, as is made painfully obvious in several shots.

Phantom claims that Planet Krankor is "half a million Earth miles" from Earth. This seems highly unlikely, given that the Moon is less than 240,000 miles from Earth, which would make Krankor quite visible from Earth. Phantom races back and forth between Earth and Krankor in his spaceships (one of which resembles the Nautilus, the other resembling a metallic roast chicken). He kidnaps scientists, blows up a rocket and continually threatens Earth and Prince, despite the fact that his weapons, even at close range, have no effect whatsoever on Prince. He reminds Phantom of this fact many times, but still finds it necessary to dodge his foe's "lasers" each time he fires. Phantom also keeps a grotesque giant humanoid creature as a guard for his palace on Krankor who is about as successful at stopping Prince as Phantom is himself.

Cinema Insomnia

Prince of Space was also featured on the nationally syndicated television series Cinema Insomnia.[1][2] On the show, there is a commercial for the album Candles, Krankor and You where the Ambassador Dictator Phantom sings various cover songs to popular music as "Unforgettable" and "Summer Wind".[3]

Cast

(Americanized names in parentheses)

  • Planet Prince/Waku-san (Prince of Space/Wally) - Tatsuo Umemiya
  • Ambassador Phantom (Ambassador Dictator Phantom) - Joji Oka
  • Sachiko (Susie) - Hiroko Mine
  • Dr. Maki (Dr. Macken) - Ushio Akashi
  • Ichiro (Johnnie) - Akira Asami
  • Makoto (Mickey) - Koji Komori
  • Kimiko (Kimmy) - Midori Tsuzuki
  • Takeda (Commissioner) - Takashi Kanda
  • Sawamoto (Dr. Sangamon) - Akira Tatematsu
  • Shibasaki - Masahiko Naruse
  • Mukai - Ken Sudo
  • Tabei - Ken Hasebe
  • Higashino - Giichi Sugi
  • Sakai - Koji Sahara
  • Tsunoda - Tokio Kozuka
  • Keichi Kawajima (Inspector) - Rin'ichi Yamamoto
  • Dr. Naito - Hiroshi Katayama
  • Newspaper reporter - Yuji Kitamine
  • Newspaper reporter - Hajime Kubo
  • Phantom's follower - Tsutomu Iwaki
  • Phantom's follower - Kenji Todoroki
  • Phantom's follower - Hiroshi Mihara
  • Phantom's follower - Nobuo Yana
  • Dr. Tateishi (Dr. Fletcher) - Shusuke Sone
  • Mrs. Tateishi - Kaoru Nakano
  • Commander Koda - Akikane Sawa
  • Secretary of Defense Fukuhara - Shiko Saito
  • Major Munakata - Tadashi Minamikawa
  • Colonel Matsuda - Junkichi Orimoto
  • Colonel Watanabe - Junji Masuda

Production credits

  • Writer - Masaru Igami
  • Director - Eijiro Wakabayashi
  • Screenplay - Shin Morita
  • Cinematography - Masahiko Imura
  • Special Effects - Shozo Horai
  • Music - Katsuhisa Hattori

References

  1. ^ CinemaInsomniaTV (1 September 2011). "CINEMA INSOMNIA: Prince of Space". YouTube. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
  2. ^ "Cinema Insomnia, with your Horror Host, Mister Lobo! - SHOW INFORMATION". Retrieved 21 October 2010.
  3. ^ CinemaInsomniaTV (20 October 2010). "YouTube - Candles, Krankor and You". YouTube. Retrieved 21 October 2010.

External links

Mystery Science Theater 3000