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Digimon: Digital Monsters

  • TV Series
  • 1999–2007
  • Tous publics
  • 24m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
24K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,897
486
Digimon: Digital Monsters (1999)
Trailer for Digimon: Digital Monsters - The Official First Season
Play trailer1:01
1 Video
99+ Photos
Adventure EpicAnimal AdventureAnimeHand-Drawn AnimationIsekaiQuestShōnenSuperheroTeen AdventureTeen Fantasy

A group of young teens is unexpectedly sent to the mysterious Digital World and paired up with their own powerful, morphing monster called the Digimon. Together the entire group set out on a... Read allA group of young teens is unexpectedly sent to the mysterious Digital World and paired up with their own powerful, morphing monster called the Digimon. Together the entire group set out on an adventure to fight evil and save the world.A group of young teens is unexpectedly sent to the mysterious Digital World and paired up with their own powerful, morphing monster called the Digimon. Together the entire group set out on an adventure to fight evil and save the world.

  • Stars
    • Steve Blum
    • Mona Marshall
    • Tifanie Christun
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    24K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,897
    486
    • Stars
      • Steve Blum
      • Mona Marshall
      • Tifanie Christun
    • 109User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes205

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    Videos1

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

    Photos293

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    Top cast82

    Edit
    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
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews109

    7.424.4K
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    Featured reviews

    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.
    TheEvilNiffler

    Digimon, now and forever

    I was just reading the comment that totally ragged on Digimon, saying that Pokemon was better.... I'm laughing hysterically right now. Alright, ya, I guess a lot of people like Pokemon, me NOT being one of them, but I'm not here to complain about that show; I'm here to say how great Digimon is!

    To me, Digimon began, and ended with the first season.... The others after just weren't the same. Digimon: Digital Monsters was my very first Anime, and I totally fell in love with the main characters(Matt!!), their digimon (Gabumon and all his forms!!), and the bad guys(Myotismon!!!) It was one of the most realistic shows I'd watched (excluding the monsters and other world parts) because the kids had problems like normal kids do.

    Even though I've grown up a lot since the first season ended, I still can find nothing bad to say about it. I have no regrets about spending a few years halfways obsessed with it, and I'm looking on the internet to buy all the episodes. I think it's a must see for everyone, and I do NOT think Pokemon will ever measure up to the standards Digimon has set within the minds and hearts of kids and teens everywhere (dumb, i know, but i felt like saying that, lol) So, yeah, watch this show if you ever have the chance!!
    aznchickawdp

    Digimon vs. Pokemon

    wow this is very......... interesting I've imaged a whole different story on these comments well people have a lot of courage spitting out their inner thoughts about digimon.. Anyways about digimon at first I thought it was very boring and almost took every animated character to redesigned into a new one or it just ran out of ideas and couldn't think of a better way then instead they added a bunch of crap and made it horrifying. But I always thought Pokemon was #1, not until I went to my best friends house that's when she said Matt was cute, I was in shock, I thought she was crazy, so I decided to check out these lame wannabes digimon and see why she liked so much, afterwards I look through the show a couple of times, and thought the Digi-vovling was GAY, but after that I realized that the story was pretty good, even though the:

    Characters animated kinda sucked (need a little more artistic emotions to the body) Scripts (HORRIBLE) (the voice of the english version is so bad, they couldn't think of another way to speak) MON (they couldn't think of anything, and they put MON?) Digi-vovling, Digi-Evolution, and Spirited Evolving (What the heck is that, it takes up the whole show just by EVOLVING)

    I've heard alot about these things and I've realized what it's really about, but you have got to reach inside the story not because of it's characters (names, look, and act), it's the purpose of what they are doing..... (ummm interesting, I sounding like my teacher.....) and accomplishing something ( besides getting a whole bunch of badges or whatever...) But anime is for entertainment for little kids not for a judgemental purpose, but If u think pokemon or digimon is that bad, let me see u do a better job at making characters up,( lets c if u can beat 12 years of drawing...that's how long it took me to accomplish) well that's it....
    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.
    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.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      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.
    • Quotes

      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.

    • Crazy credits
      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.
    • Alternate versions
      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".
    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of Les Digimon (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Digimon
      (Greek version theme song)

      written by Argiris Pavlidis and Katerina Giannikou

      Performed by Magda Giannikou (uncredited)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 2, 2000 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official sites
      • Disney
      • Fox Kids
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Digimon 02
    • Production companies
      • Toei Animation
      • Bandai
      • Fuji Television Network (Fuji TV)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 24m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
      • Stereo
      • Mono

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