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IMDbPro

Digimon

Título original: Digimon: Digital Monsters
  • Série de TV
  • 1999–2007
  • Livre
  • 24 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
24 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
3.411
1.897
Digimon (1999)
Trailer for Digimon: Digital Monsters - The Official First Season
Reproduzir trailer1:01
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
Animação desenhada à mãoAnimeAventura adolescenteAventura animalAventura épicaAventura urbanaFantasia adolescenteIsekaiMissãoShonen

Um grupo de jovens adolescentes é enviado para o misterioso mundo digital e é emparelhado com seu próprio monstro chamado Digimon. Juntos, o grupo inteiro partiu para uma aventura para comba... Ler tudoUm grupo de jovens adolescentes é enviado para o misterioso mundo digital e é emparelhado com seu próprio monstro chamado Digimon. Juntos, o grupo inteiro partiu para uma aventura para combater o mal e salvar o mundo.Um grupo de jovens adolescentes é enviado para o misterioso mundo digital e é emparelhado com seu próprio monstro chamado Digimon. Juntos, o grupo inteiro partiu para uma aventura para combater o mal e salvar o mundo.

  • Artistas
    • Steve Blum
    • Mona Marshall
    • Tifanie Christun
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,4/10
    24 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    3.411
    1.897
    • Artistas
      • Steve Blum
      • Mona Marshall
      • Tifanie Christun
    • 109Avaliações de usuários
    • 6Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Episódios205

    Explorar episódios
    PrincipaisMais avaliados

    Vídeos1

    Digimon: Digital Monsters : The Official First Season
    Trailer 1:01
    Digimon: Digital Monsters : The Official First Season

    Fotos293

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    Elenco principal82

    Editar
    Steve Blum
    Steve Blum
    • J.P. Shibayama…
    • 2000–2003
    Mona Marshall
    Mona Marshall
    • Izzy Izumi…
    • 1999–2003
    Tifanie Christun
    Tifanie Christun
    • Yolei Inoue…
    • 1999–2003
    Steve Prince
    Steve Prince
    • Veemon…
    • 1999–2003
    Philece Sampler
    Philece Sampler
    • Mimi Tachikawa…
    • 1999–2003
    Brianne Brozey
    Brianne Brozey
    • Tommy Himi…
    • 1999–2003
    Michael Reisz
    Michael Reisz
    • Matt Ishida…
    • 1999–2003
    Mari Devon
    Mari Devon
    • Renamon…
    • 1999–2003
    Brian Donovan
    Brian Donovan
    • Narrator…
    • 2000–2003
    Brian Beacock
    Brian Beacock
    • Takato Matsuki…
    • 2001–2003
    Tom Fahn
    Tom Fahn
    • Agumon…
    • 1999–2003
    Michael Sorich
    Michael Sorich
    • Neemon…
    • 1999–2003
    Melissa Fahn
    Melissa Fahn
    • Rika Nonaka…
    • 2001–2003
    Wendee Lee
    Wendee Lee
    • T.K. Takaishi…
    • 1999–2003
    Dave Mallow
    Dave Mallow
    • Angemon…
    • 1999–2003
    Kirk Thornton
    Kirk Thornton
    • Gabumon…
    • 1999–2003
    Laura Summer
    Laura Summer
    • Patamon…
    • 1999–2001
    Dave Wittenberg
    Dave Wittenberg
    • Henry Wong…
    • 2001–2003
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários109

    7,424.4K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8J-Sosa

    Very cool anime! My kids love

    Digimon: Digital Monsters is an English translated version of Digimon: Adventure, it's your typical imported Japanese anime from the late 90's about monsters and children. Critics have criticized it as being a pseudo version of Pokemon, Digimon however is far from being a rip-off it shares common aspects with more popular Pokemon such as children befriending the monsters, the monster evolve, the monsters battle etc. Unlike the lighthearted Pokemon however, Digimon is more of a classic tale of good and evil it's plot is completely different from that of Pokemon. I have seen other anime that follow what I call the Pokemon formula, Digimon is not one of them.

    The Pokemon formula: A character aims to be great at something, goes on a quest, wins things, monsters come out of stuff to battle (cards, toys, balls, etc), usually involves some kind of monster tournament. Beyblade, Yu-Gi-Oh, Bakugan, and others follow this formula more than Digimon. If anything Digimon has more in common with science fiction anime's or Saturday morning American cartoons about action and adventure, than it does with the other monster anime.

    The characters are not your typical one dimensional anime characters, all of the characters seem to have very distinctive personality's with interesting back stories that keep the viewer interested. Even some of the villains and Digimon themselves. The anime is a lighthearted tale of good and evil, with some mature themes mixed in such as losing your parents and death, the anime also teaches kids about teamwork, friendship, and the importance of working together. The anime has great plots and sub plots that are not to complex for children to follow, but are very well written and interesting.

    The English version of Digimon is filled with cheesy puns and comedy to keep kids laughing, and a score composed of cheesy 90's early 00's pop rock to catch their ear. The English version also has some of the more intense scenes removed from the original Japanese version making it more appropriate for kids, without parents having to worry about Digimon being a bad influence on children or to dodge controversial Japanese anime stereotypes. For the older audience who may enjoy anime, the original Japanese version of Digimon Adventure, features a much more serious script (the dialog at times is usually completely different), a beautifully composed score made up of orchestra, electric synths, J- Rock and J-Pop, and features much more as a lot was cut out of the English dub to make it more suitable for western children and western audiences.
    Aardwulf

    Digimon - not a Poke-ripoff

    I'll admit, when I first saw the commercials for "Digimon" a year ago, I automatically thought it was some sort of "Pokemon" spinoff. Sure, the two share some common ground - spunky kids hooking up with cute little monsters that evolve into big, less-cute monsters - but the similarities end there.

    I won't insult anyone's intelligence, most of all my own, by trying to compare the two series point by point - I'm not at all familiar with "Pokemon", though I get the feeling that if you've seen one episode of this series, you've seen 'em all. But "Digimon" simply seems to be a more thoughtful and engaging series than its predecessor: the character designs are inventive, mixing nature with technology; the colour palette is varied, contrasting the brightly-hued Digimon and human kids with comparatively subdued backgrounds; the digital world into which the children stumble is a place full of mystery and wonder, evoking an atmosphere reminiscent of CS Lewis' "Chronicles of Narnia".

    The characters themselves are well-rounded and fully realised, not the cookie-cutter stereotypes one would initially take them for. Not one of the children who leaves the digital world is the same person they were upon arriving there; throughout the numerous cataclysmic battles and far-reaching story arcs, the characters undergo intense changes, becoming stronger, braver, and more mature as they call upon the powers that lie within them. The relationships - among the children themselves and between each child and his digital counterpart - are by turns humorous, intriguing, and heartfelt.

    Of course the show is not without its flaws - the animation is occasionally lacklustre; seeing the same transformation scenes over and over again can grow tiresome; and several episodes suffer from poor writing. But, in my opinion, these problems are outweighed by the tightly-woven plotline and spot-on characterisations.

    Say what you will about "Digimon", but it truly is in a class by itself.
    10SilverKnight

    Digimon vs. Pokémon

    It's really funny because a lot of people think that Digimon is a rip off of Pokémon which is totally wrong and as they say "ignorance is bliss". Just because of the word "Digimon" especially the 'mon' bit, people think that it is immediately a Pokémon rip-off. I happened to have had been one of those people. I refused to watch Digimon when it started because it sounded like a rip off of Pokémon and there was a cactus with boxing gloves on! %( I mean come on, a cactus with boxing gloves thats as stupid as an electric rodent. Anyway I gave it a chance when there was a gap after Pokémon finished (and my nephew loved Digimon so I reluctantly gave it a chance). I ended up loving Digimon as it was alarmingly more adult than Pokémon and they had what many people craved... continuity.

    The Comparisions Digimon follows the story of eight children with their respective Digimon, each with distinctive personalities and traits, working together in heroic situations (many viewers form emotional attachment to the character - I love Gabumon and my girlfriend loves Gatomon) whereas Pokémon centres around three kids who catch and train Pokémon (no matter what I still love Onix & Vulpix). Digimon can speak English whereas Pokémon can only say their name (excluding Meowth & Slowking - also Lapras can mind link with humans as can Lugia & Mewtwo) And finally Digimon follows a storyline where the heroes battle evil continuously, learn about themselves and each other. We also learn about their families, hopes, fears and watch them fight for what is right while Pokémon goes along the same line as Digimon but to a lesser extent and rarely does Pokémon follow up stories from previous episodes.

    So all in all, why can't a person still love Pokémon but also watch Digimon. You may be pleasantly surprised at how different Pokémon and Digimon really are. After all I watch them both (their on rival channels but Pokémon is on half an hour before Digimon... but Digimon is opposite Dragonball Z (what a dilemma!) ;-)
    10celo_cattus

    Unfairly judged

    Right to start off with the usual, "Digimon ain't no Pokemon" rant. I saw the first episodes of Pokemon and thought it was an interesting idea but that was all, there is not plot minus the "Ash wants to be PokeMaster!" which I don't think they are going to resolve anytime soon. Decent enough for kids but not something you would call brilliant. Digimon sucked me in from the first episode; its plot is pretty clear from the off and has to be resolved- seven kids get sucked into another world and meet Digimon but really all they want to do is go home so thats what they try and do. I grant you the dub especially can be annoying- there are lines where you think, "they did not just say that, was that meant to be funny?" but some of it is a big laugh. For example when Tai tries to draw a map of the Island and its terrible, then they get attacked and Agumon accidentally sets it on fire and apoligises to which Tai replies, "thats OK, at least it didn't land into the hands of the enemy!". Still corny but quite funny. Also the digivolving sequences get annoying after the first few times until they get to the point of ridiculousness where it literally spends 5 minutes of the episode showing all the Digimon digivolving. Really annoying but we can bypass. If you look beneath all the corny jokes and pointless digivolving there is something really special there. The characters are really quite realistic. Tai makes mistakes but admits it and tries to fix them. Izzy is obsessed with his computer due to knowing secretly that he is adopted and its the only way he can deal with it. Even the comedic Joe has issues with his parents wanting him to be a Doctor when he doesn't really want to be one. Thats what is good about the show, the digidestined shine beyond most cartoon characters. The plot line is pretty good, especially the Myotismon arc but its pretty much, "defeat bad guy,". Season 2 has a better plot line in my opinion but the digidestined are handled really badly. Davis and Yolei appear to have no issues whatsoever, Cody's only become important near the end, Kari and T.K are just there and Ken remains the only one who comes up to par with the Season 1 cast. Season 3 is great; if you really couldn't stand the jokes in the last 2 then this one will be more your style. The digidestined are up to par again but the Digimon are as well (where before only Gatomon had any interesting development)it's a class season, but does get a bit slow at times where Season 1 is always pretty well paced. Season 4 is best left alone, I didn't enjoy it and wouldn't recommend it. So yes- don't judge Digimon off its name because you are missing out if you do. It might be childish and corny at times but at other times it matures way beyond the maturity of other children programs and into the realm of wondering who it was really aimed at. In my opinion its something I would show my children, it teaches great lessons about friendship and is colourful and fun for them- plus I don't think I'd get bored watching it if they were ^ ^.
    Blue Cat

    So much better than it should be

    I watched a couple of episodes of Digimon near its beginning and dismissed as derivative rubbish. Then, a few months later and rather bored, I turned it on again. I couldn't believe it. This supposed kids' cartoon had one of the most dramatic, engaging, even shocking story arcs I've seen. This programme deals with love and loyalty, life and death, fear and self-doubt. The 'Digi-destined' children fight with their parents, who have trouble understanding the sacrifices their children have to make. One child finds out he's adopted. Characters sacrifice their lives to save others. The children get scared, and doubt their own ability to save the world as they are destined to do. If this had slightly better animation, and was billed as adult animé, no-one would question it once. So much more than just a kids' show.

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    • Curiosidades
      In case the show wasn't a success, the crew made an alternate ending for "The Legend of the DigiDestined" where after Devimon was defeated, Gennai would appear and send the kids back home. If that ending was to happen, Kari would have never existed, and the overall franchise would not have been possible.
    • Citações

      Takeru "T.K." Takashi: When you can't think of anything to say, do you always resort to fighting?

      Ken: I guess...

      Takeru "T.K." Takashi: That's your problem. You don't know when to talk and when to fight. Now's a good time to talk... on the other hand... it's also a good time to fight.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      During the 3rd season of Digimon, Lara Jill Miller is still credited as "Kari" and Brian Donovan is still credited as "Davis", but neither of those characters appear in the 3rd season.
    • Versões alternativas
      In the episode during the second season, Arukenimon creates a Golemon to destroy the dam, the Digimon Analyzer calls it "Rockmon". But the re-runs of this episode have the Digimon Analyzer calling it "Golemon".
    • Conexões
      Alternate-language version of Digimon (1999)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Digimon
      (Greek version theme song)

      written by Argiris Pavlidis and Katerina Giannikou

      Performed by Magda Giannikou (uncredited)

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    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How many seasons does Digimon: Digital Monsters have?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 19 de junho de 2000 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Japão
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Disney
      • Fox Kids
    • Idioma
      • Japonês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Digimon 02
    • Empresas de produção
      • Toei Animation
      • Bandai
      • Fuji Television Network (Fuji TV)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 24 min
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby
      • Stereo
      • Mono

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