Super Kid
Super Kid | |
---|---|
Directed by | Yi Yong Um |
Screenplay by | Jung Hyun Lee
Yi Yong Um Um Dong Yong |
Music by | Nam-yoon Kim |
Production company | UM Productions |
Distributed by | Korea International (South Korea) MP Consulting International Inc. (Worldwide) Hellas Video (Greece) RocVale Film (Australia) |
Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Super Kid (Syupeochaildeu 슈퍼 차일드, literally translated as Super Child) is a 1994 South Korean science fiction animated film. The movie follows the adventures of a group of super-powered space children who are called upon the emergence of an intergalactic threat. The movie was produced over a period of three years by UM Productions and was released direct to video.[1]
The movie has gained notoriety for its muddled plot, poor film quality and continuity errors, and its similarity to the Dragon Ball franchise.[2]
Synopsis
In the year 2023, a group of super-powered space-faring warrior children called the Super Kids (or "Gokdari Group"), protect the Earth from interstellar monsters. Eunjoo, a reporter, is desperate to get a scoop for her news programme, so she decides to write a report on the Super Kids. Led by 199-year-old child warrior Gokdari, the Super Kids are in the middle of battling two rogue criminals, Wang Do Chi and Bazooka Joe who have captured a renowned scientist. The Super Kids' fight against the two criminals largely consists of torture and humiliation, resulting in Bazooka Joe losing his clothing and Wang Do Chi losing his teeth.
After collecting a reward for the capture of the two criminals the Super Kids are visited by the police chief and captain of planet Delta who brief them on their next mission. They are ordered to arrest Judowgi, the most violent monster in the galaxy who sold his family for a box of gold and causes anyone who hears his name to recoil in fear. The kids board a robot-shaped spaceship bound for the planet X7 (or Ligel, depending on the character), with Eunjoo sneaking on board. After landing on the swamp planet and searching for their bounty on a flying carpet, the Super Kids encounter a group of the planet's native inhabitants, blasting a group of them before realising they are a friendly species. The natives tell Gokdari and the Super Kids of their enslavement to Judowgi, having to make regular sacrifices to the creature to feed him. The team then stage a plan to lure out Judowgi, disguising Gokdari as a sacrifice while Eunjoo documents the entire spectacle. Judowgi comes out of hiding as planned but the kids' attempts at capturing him fail, as Judowgi's protege Maio suddenly appears and battles the Super Kids. One by one the Super Kids are defeated by Maio, while Judowgi kidnaps Eunjoo and escapes. Maio warns Gokdari that the Captain's warrant for Judowgi is merely a ruse, and warns of Cacuruse, Judowgi's rival who merely waits for his defeat so he can take Judowgi's fortune for himself. He also tells Gokdari that the Captain is Cacuruse in disguise and that the Super Kids must defeat him before trying to battle Judowgi again.
Gokdari and Rockpile leave for the planet Delta, while Big Boy and Samachi remain on X7 to look for Judowgi and Eunjoo. On Delta, the Captain reveals his true identity to the Chief before attempting to impale him with a robotic arm, before Gokdari and Rockpile appear in time. Cacuruse transforms into his monstrous form and a fight ensues between the three with Rockpile destroying Cacuruse's teeth and Gokdari making him dizzy. The fight ends with the two torturing Cacuruse into submission with his only weakness (ants), before capturing him with Gokdari's staff.
Back on X7, Big Boy and Samachi rescue Eunjoo from Judowgi's cave, waking Judowgi from his sleep. Big Boy and Samachi attempt to take on the monster but are beaten and captured by Judowgi's vine tendrils. Before Judowgi can finish them off, Gokdari arrives in time with the rest of the Super Kids and join the two. The four battle Judowgi in a high-speed chase across the planet, before the beast transforms into a tree-like humanoid monster, captures the Super Kids and destroys Gokdari's staff. Maio reappears, and announces he is tired of all his service to Judowgi, and wants to help the Super Kids because Gokdari resembles his long-deceased son. The Super Kids watch as Maio and Judowgi battle, which culminates in Maio extracting a red orb from Judowgi's body, supposedly rendering him powerless. Maio destroys the orb, killing himself in the process and causing Gokdari's staff to magically re-materialise for no explained reason. Judowgi attacks the Super Kids once again (despite his power orb being destroyed), before Gokdari grows into a giant and the team beat the monster into submission, finally being captured by Gokdari's staff.
The Super Kids leave X7, with Eunjoo having recorded the battle in time for the next news broadcast and return to Earth. Back at the Super Kids' headquarters, the accountant has misplaced all the reward money the Super Kids had earned from their recent adventures, only to discover Gokdari had donated it to an orphanage.
English Cast
- Cathy Weseluck as Gokdari
- Ward Perry as Maio
- Saffron Henderson as Joo Eun-Joo
- Jason Gray-Stanford as Big Boy
- Scott McNeil as Judogwi
- French Tickner as Tul Tul
- Paul Dobson as Cacuruse
- David Kaye as Narrator
Background
Following the end of Japanese rule in 1945, the South Korean government created a law which banned Japanese media, including Japanese manga and anime. Throughout the 1970s, South Korea's own animation industry began to flourish, which borrowed heavily from the Japanese anime style. Many Korean animated films also integrated unauthorized usages of Japanese anime characters and likenesses. With the super robot genre developing in Japan in the 1970s with Mazinger Z, Robot Taekwon V borrowed heavily from the titular mecha's likeness.
In the late 1980s with the relaxation of government censorship in cinema and South Korean films achieving international audiences for the first time, the South Korean animation industry intended to gain a major foothold in the market alongside the United States and Japan. Production began on Super Kid in 1991, and was produced with the intent for worldwide distribution and eventual franchise expansion.[3]
The ban on Japanese anime and manga was lifted incrementally from 1998 to 2004.
Release
Super Kid was released in South Korean theatres on July 23, 1994.[4][5] The English dub was by the Ocean Group, and was released in 1995.
A 52-episode animated series developed by Alex Massis and Rosie & Lee Studios was to follow the movie, but was soon abandoned.[6] [7]
The movie was released on VHS and as of 2017, no DVD or Blu-Ray release of Super Kid has been released.
Criticism
Super Kid fell into obscurity for years after its video release, but the movie has gained notoriety since the movie surfaced on YouTube. It has been criticized as a rip-off of Dragon Ball, with main character Gokdari resembling young Goku, Eunjoo resembling Bulma, and Samachi resembling Piccolo.[8][9] The mecha ship the Super Kids travel in closely resembles the titular ship from Mazinger Z.[10]
Criticism has also been aimed at the contradictory and mean-spirited nature of the main characters.[2][11] In a scene introducing the main characters, Gokdari's sense of chivalry is noted, but he is shown to be expecting rewards whenever he delivers criminals to the authorities. In a scene where the Super Kids discover a villain's weakness is an ant, Gokdari mercilessly bullies the villain with the offending insect.
See also
External links
- Super Kid on Internet Movie Database
- Super Kid on Korean Movie Database (Korean)
- The Film Source: Super Kid
References
- ^ donjobo (2014-07-20). "Ooo, Who's Bad? Anime Sludge: Super Kid (1996)". The Overencumbrance Blog. Retrieved 2017-04-02.
- ^ a b BobSamurai Anime Reviews (2015-12-03), Super Kid - THE WORST ANIME? - Anime Review #104, retrieved 2017-04-02
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20100617172115/http://www.umlee.com/ani-characters-e.htm
- ^ http://www.animated-divots.net/chrn1994.html
- ^ https://www.anisearch.de/anime/2965,super-kid
- ^ https://variety.com/1997/film/news/support-org-changes-with-times-adds-tv-component-1116676630/
- ^ "Á¦¸ñ ¾øÀ½". 17 June 2010. Archived from the original on 17 June 2010.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "Ten Crazy Korean Cartoon Ripoffs - The Robot's Voice". 15 August 2013.
- ^ "Anime Abandon: Super Kid". 9 August 2017.
- ^ "(만화 리뷰) 수퍼 차일드 (슈퍼 차일드)". 31 July 2012.
- ^ "SUPER KID - Fiction Addiction". 1 May 2017.