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IMDbPro

Kurasshâ Jô

  • TV Mini Series
  • 1989
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
130
YOUR RATING
Michael Brady in Kurasshâ Jô (1989)
AnimeHand-Drawn AnimationActionAnimationSci-Fi

Two missions for the crushers. In "The Ice Prison", Joe and his team are assigned to adjust the orbit of a prison located on an ice asteroid before it disintegrates as it falls onto the plan... Read allTwo missions for the crushers. In "The Ice Prison", Joe and his team are assigned to adjust the orbit of a prison located on an ice asteroid before it disintegrates as it falls onto the planet Kirius. The prison is filled with political prisoners contrary to the autocracy of Kiri... Read allTwo missions for the crushers. In "The Ice Prison", Joe and his team are assigned to adjust the orbit of a prison located on an ice asteroid before it disintegrates as it falls onto the planet Kirius. The prison is filled with political prisoners contrary to the autocracy of Kirius consequently rising the suspicion of the crushers. In "The Final Weapon: Ash", the team... Read all

  • Stars
    • Noriko Ohara
    • Kiyoshi Kobayashi
    • Run Sasaki
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    130
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Noriko Ohara
      • Kiyoshi Kobayashi
      • Run Sasaki
    • 2User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes2

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    TopTop-rated1 season1989

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    Top cast67

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    Noriko Ohara
    Noriko Ohara
    • Ricky
    • 1989
    Kiyoshi Kobayashi
    Kiyoshi Kobayashi
    • Talos
    • 1989
    Run Sasaki
    Run Sasaki
    • Alfin
    • 1989
    Hiraku Takemura
    • Joe
    • 1989
    Issei Futamata
    Issei Futamata
    • Dongo
    • 1989
    Yoshiko Sakakibara
    Yoshiko Sakakibara
    • Tanya
    • 1989
    Kenji Utsumi
    Kenji Utsumi
    • Mardo
    • 1989
    Kiyoyuki Yanada
    • Jimenez
    • 1989
    Victor Vicere
    Victor Vicere
    • Wheeler
    • 1989
    Mikio Terashima
    • Ergano
    • 1989
    Jordan Rhodes
    Jordan Rhodes
    • Barney
    Stacia Crawford
    Stacia Crawford
    • Matua
    Tony Schnur
    • Communications Officer
    Shaun O'Rourke
    Shaun O'Rourke
    • Ricky
    Juliet Cesario
    Juliet Cesario
    • Alfin
    Masako Katsuki
    Masako Katsuki
    • Female Newscaster
    Iemasa Kayumi
    • Hume
    Daisuke Gôri
    • Figaro
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews2

    6.7130
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    10

    Featured reviews

    BrianDanaCamp

    The continuing adventures of the Japanese animated space hero

    CRUSHER JOE, the 1983 theatrical animated feature from Japan, introduced to audiences a group of characters created by Haruka Takachiho—-a team of "Crushers," independent civilian contractors hired out for dangerous space work, led by 19-year-old Joe and including 17-year-old blonde female Alfin, 15-year-old Ricky and, for muscle, the massive middle-aged cyborg, Talos. The team returned in two 1989 hour-long OAV (original animated video) episodes, "The Ice Prison" and "The Ultimate Weapon: ASH." Both are available in the U.S., along with the movie, as part of a 2-disc DVD set released by AnimEigo.

    While the movie was long enough (130 min.) to allow us to spend time with the characters and follow their often humorous interactions and offered a sprawling story with endless twists and turns that went all over the galaxy, the OAVs are concentrated more on narrowly focused plots which tend to take place in one locale and deal with confrontations putting our heroes in tense life-or-death situations. They're well-written, offer excitement and genuine suspense and are marked by high quality animation and design that's as good as any theatrical space anime we've seen.

    "The Ice Prison" starts out on a planet run by an autocrat ruler who sends dissidents to an orbiting icy asteroid used as a penal colony which is then knocked out of orbit by a laser "accident" and threatens to plunge to the planet's surface. Crusher Joe and his team are called in to set things right but soon find they've been set up in a power play by the corrupt regime. "The Ultimate Weapon" finds a female army officer, Major Tanya, who is cuffed to a case containing a life-destroying new secret weapon, held hostage on a deserted planet by renegade officers seeking to undermine a peace process set to end an ongoing conflict between two warring systems. The Crushers are assigned to rescue Major Tanya and destroy the weapon. On the planet, not only do they have to fight the military but a hidden menace as well. Thousands of "Cloakers" appear-—basketball-sized killing machines left over from an abandoned research project, which are self-replicating and target any and all humans.

    The first episode mixes a compelling sci-fi premise—-how to stop an asteroid from hitting a planet—-with conspiracy-type political intrigue and climaxes with rousing space combat that's as good as anything of its type seen in, say, the Gundam and Macross animated space series. The second episode is virtually nonstop action and suspense and is just so masterfully done that one wonders in frustration why no more Crusher Joe stories were ever animated and why there's been so little fan praise of these films, which rank with the best of anime space opera. Crusher Joe himself is a worthy successor to the whole Flash Gordon/Buck Rogers tradition of space-hopping pulp heroes, but with significant differences. He's younger, more quick-tempered, a bit more arrogant and money-hungry and notably reluctant to engage in noble heroics for their own sake (although he always does). In short, he's more human.

    The production crew includes character designer Yoshikazu Yasuhiko (who directed the Crusher Joe movie, as well as ARION and VENUS WARS), mecha designer Shoji Kawamori ("Macross Plus") and composer Keiichi Oku, whose sweeping, full-bodied orchestral themes might recall the work of John Williams.
    8TooKakkoiiforYou_321

    Awesome continuation of the main movie

    With top notch, stellar animation, interesting plotlines that remind without sounding like a cheap knockoff of other sci-fi IPs like predator, Command and Conquer and Star Wars (notice the rendition they do of the ending theme of A New Hope at the end of the second OAV) and well done action sequences. Highly recommended to all anime/Sci-fi afictionados. A worthy 8,5.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Connections
      Follows Kurasshâ Jô (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Hishou (Never End)
      Lyrics by Fujiwara Tsukihiko

      Music by Nishimatsu Kazuharu

      Arranged by Aragon

      Performed by Nishimatsu Kazuharu (of Aragon)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1989 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Crusher Joe The OVAs
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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