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IMDbPro

Space Battleship Yamato

  • TV Series
  • 1979–1984
  • 22m
IMDb RATING
8.4/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Space Battleship Yamato (1979)
Alien InvasionAnimeHand-Drawn AnimationSpace Sci-FiActionAdventureAnimationDramaSci-Fi

In the year 2199, a starship must make a dangerous voyage to the distant planet Iscandar and back to save Earth from an alien invasion.In the year 2199, a starship must make a dangerous voyage to the distant planet Iscandar and back to save Earth from an alien invasion.In the year 2199, a starship must make a dangerous voyage to the distant planet Iscandar and back to save Earth from an alien invasion.

  • Stars
    • Eddie Allen
    • Michael Bertolini
    • Amy Howard Wilson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.4/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Eddie Allen
      • Michael Bertolini
      • Amy Howard Wilson
    • 27User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes77

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    TopTop-rated1979

    Photos96

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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Eddie Allen
    Eddie Allen
    • Dashell 'Dash' Jordan…
    • 1979
    Michael Bertolini
    Michael Bertolini
    • Homer Glitchman
    • 1979
    Amy Howard Wilson
    • Nova Forrester
    • 1979
    Lydia Leeds
    • Queen Starsha…
    • 1979
    Kenneth Meseroll
    Kenneth Meseroll
    • Derek Wildstar
    • 1979
    Tom Tweedy
    • Mark Venture
    • 1979
    Gordon Ramsey
    • Orion Sr.…
    • 1979
    Mike Czechopoulos
    • Gamilon Colonel Vulgar
    • 1979
    Christopher Collins
    • Comet Empire General Dire…
    Morgan Lofting
    • Princess Invidia
    John Bellucci
    • Derek Wildstar
    Peter Fernandez
    Peter Fernandez
    • Mark Venture
    Jack Grimes
    • Galman General Gustaf
    Corinne Orr
    • Nova Forrester…
    Earl Hammond
    • Voices
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    8.41.6K
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    Featured reviews

    moneybagzz

    Way ahead of its time

    The show was a refreshing break from all cartoons about critters dropping pounds of TNT on one another and assorted silliness. It rode the heels of the popularity of Star Wars and Battlestar Galactica, despite the fact that, in Japan, it preceded them.

    The greatest flaw was that it was not properly marketed, and has been confined to a niche category.

    Disney made an attempt a few years ago to resurrect and modernize the property, but it seems to be stuck in dev-hell. From what I understand about the script, it should stay there until a better script makes its way through the bowels of Hollywood.
    tdarwish2

    Watched it at age 10......still watching it at age 34.

    I think another (maybe the first) reviewer said it best: "I can't believe there aren't more reviews here!" The original Japanese title for this show is "Uchuu Senkan Yamato" (Space Battleship Yamato). I believe it came out in 1974 in Japan, but was Americanized and released in the US in 1979. Be that as it may, this is, has been, and probably will be my favorite anime series of all time. Not only do I like it because it brings back great after-school memories of congregations of neighborhood kids, but it has a very believable and emotional storyline. Not many series I know of devote an ENTIRE episode to having an emotional goodbye to families before the Argo (Yamato) leaves the Solar System. There are so many well-developed sub-plots...you'll just have to see for yourself if you've never heard of this. It is a GEM, and if you like sci-fi at all, you will not be disappointed. Of the 3 series, my personal favorite is the "Quest for Iscandar." Rent it, buy it, or borrow it if you can. With VHS tapes becoming obsolete, you can get them cheaply on e-bay. I own all the VHS tapes, and the American DVDs recently put out by Voyager Entertainment. But I must say to the purists who aren't aware of this: get the 9-DVD set from www.sundevildvd.com. I am not affiliated with them in any way, but they offer a "Star Blazers DVD Bundle." It is the ENTIRE 78-episode series (Quest for Iscandar, The Comet Empire, and The Bolar Wars) for less than $100. One catch: the language is Japanese, but if you can bear the not-perfect-but-acceptable English subtitles, that's the way to go. All of these episodes are COMPLETELY UNCUT, and you'll see just how much footage was cut from the American versions! Desslok with his original Japanese voice sounds as cool as Mr. Eddie Allen doing his voice in English.

    They just don't make 'em like this anymore. Watch one, and you'll be hooked.....I can just about guarantee it. Enjoy.
    StlBlade

    The best American Translation so far

    I remember this series only too well. It was only slightly cut for American audiences, leaving out only the actual deaths of characters (Mostly redshirt types, excepting Captain Avatar) when they were shot, blown up, or other. The characters were exceedingly well realized with backstories and CHANGES to the characters as their characters developed. Compared to the pitifully slaughtered 'Battle of the Planets' (Gatchaman, later re-translated into G-Force which managed to be better) or anything American animated series were planning on doing (He-Man, Bravestarr, etc ad nauseum), this series really shone. Only the 'Robotech' series came close, and that one suffered from trying to combine 3 Japanime series into one.

    Looking at the coming attraction scenes made me realize that some editing was done in the last episode of the 1st season. In it, a Gamilon was rushing into the cargo bay where Nova was trying to activate the CosmoDNA (The Gamilon boarding party was using a radioactive gas) Starsha had given them and Sandor was protesting that it might not be safe. In the actual ep, Sandor and Nova both turn to see the Gamilon enter, but we never actually see him, and Nova ends up wounded for no readily apparant reason other than the aforementioned gas. I am certain that Sandor shot the encroaching Gamilon, but too late to prevent Nova from being hit.

    There were several episodes where bodies were seen, if not the causes for their deaths. This marked it apart from anything else being shown 'for children' at this point. Considering that American animation seemed to be following the same rules that American comics were following (No death, sex, excessive violence, excitement, things of interest, plot development, etc) it isn't really a surprise that so many of us rushed home to watch it. (While at a meeting for my high school band, I came across several of the 'cool kids' singing the theme song together.)

    In my area only the first 2 seasons were shown, but my wife reports that she not only got just the first, but it didn't include the final episode where they return to Earth, never mind the whole Comet Empire season. After hearing that, I didn't feel so bad about missing the 3rd season.

    Just as a clarifying point for my faithful readers, though one of the crewmembers reported that Sgt. Knox had returned in another fighter, it was dubbed in. He died destroying the power center on the Comet Ship (In fact, none of the Marines they brought aboard survived the season). According to a later movie, Orion the engineer also died in the final ep of the 2nd season (Much to my sadness, I liked him). Also the chief pilot, Conroy died fighting the Comet Empire, but was replaced by his identical younger brother in the 3rd Japanese series, though the American series considered him to be the same character. (Nevermind that he was using a urinal when he spotted the Andremeda coming after them in the 2nd season's 5th episode. I wouldn't expect American TV to show that).

    I hope that the various petitions are successful in returning Star Blazers to television. While there are several interesting animated shows, with the exception of Roughnecks; the Starship Troopers Chronicles, that are merely interesting, Star Blazers was actually engrossing.
    NolanSorrento

    This was the show that introduced me to Anime!

    I'm really suprised this anime doesn't have a stronger following, this is one the first animes that was brought to the US that had an actual ongoing storyline. It also is the anime that upped my expectations of cartoons, after this series I was much more skeptical and demanding of how cartoons where done. Unlike Superfriends, characters ability's didn't change with the demand of the situation in each episode of Starblazers, I really recommend anybody who wants to see a good ongoing anime series to go out and try to rent this series, you won't regret it.
    el_nickster

    Seminal anime. Classic.

    This was the best animated series of its time. Star Blazers was made at a time when American cartoons were trite junk like "The Super Friends" and "The Brady Kids." When Star Blazers hit syndicated TV in America in the early 1980s, it was still categorically more engrossing than any American cartoon, any American science fiction... heck, it was better than 90% of American TV period.

    In case you missed the plot summary: hostile Aliens (the Gammalons) attack Earth and defeat all of her military might. The Gammalons then proceed to launch a years-long nuclear attack against Earth which renders the entire surface unfit for life. Cowering in caves, humanity awaits its final extinction...

    Until a message is received from the Planet Iscandar, offering aid. Iscander can provide "Cosmo DNA," which can resuscitate the Earth's entire ecosphere. Iscander also provides the blueprints for a powerful interstellar propulsion system: the wave motion drive. Desperate beyond measure, Earth refits one single starship, the Argo, with the wave motion drive, and sends her and her brave crew to cross 100,000 light years of Gammalon territory to reach Iscandar.

    Right away, one can see that this cartoon has a much more intelligent plot than any shows intended for kids and adolescents. It is also notable that this series is a serial: each episode is part of a larger, evolving story. It would be decades before any American shows that are not "soap operas" would develop this format (like Buffy the Vampire Slayer). The plot is also dead serious: the world is ending, and ending in a way that was plausibly frightening to Japanese kids in the wake of Hiroshima and American kids in the wake of Three Mile Island. This didn't so much scare me as a kid, but it made the show totally riveting.

    On top of the smart and emotional plot, the series had some other virtues. The "cinematography" was great, with good drawing and well-composed scenes. The lessons of the episodes were more serious and adult than typical kids shows, focusing on duty, loyalty, teamwork, and honor. The episodes themselves got a bit formulaic in the middle of the first season, usually ending in a desperate battle with Gammalon ships which can be won only be use of the wave-motion gun.

    Sorry to be so long winded. If you like anime and you like sci-fi, you should watch at least the first season. Its better than a lot of anime than came after, and much more original than most anime. The second season was very good, too, although it was even more serious.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Initially canceled in Japan due to low ratings, the series gained a new lease of life there after Star Wars: Épisode IV - Un nouvel espoir (1977) was released.
    • Quotes

      [First season opening theme]

      Chorus: We're off to outer space / We're leaving Mother Earth / To save the human race / Our Star Blazers / Searching for a distant star / Heading off to Iscandar / Leaving all we love behind / Who knows what dangers we'll find? / We must be strong and brave / Our home we've got to save / If we don't in just one year / Mother Earth will disappear / Fighting with the Gamilons / We won't stop until we've won / Then we return and when we arrive / The Earth will survive with our Star Blazers!

    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of Uchû senkan Yamato (1974)
    • Soundtracks
      Uchuu Senkan Yamato
      by Isao Sasaki & the Royal Knights

      Opening Theme

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    FAQ26

    • How many seasons does Star Blazers have?Powered by Alexa
    • How many episodes did this series have?
    • What additional Yamato properties exist beyond those that were dubbed as Star Blazers?
    • How does Star Blazers differ from Yamato?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 17, 1979 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Spanish
      • Japanese
      • Portuguese
    • Also known as
      • Star Blazers
    • Production companies
      • Yomiuri-TV Enterprise
      • Mainichi Broadcasting System (MBS)
      • Office Academy
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 22m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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