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Hyper Combat Unit Dangaioh | |
破邪大星ダンガイオー (Haja Taisei Dangaiō) | |
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Genre | |
Original video animation | |
Directed by | Toshiki Hirano |
Written by |
|
Music by | Chumei Watanabe Tatsuyuki Ōhara Kaoru Mizutani |
Studio | AIC & Artmic[a] |
Licensed by | |
Released | September 28, 1987 – July 25, 1989 |
Runtime |
|
Episodes | 3 |
Manga | |
Muteki Shōjo Ramii | |
Written by | Ken Ishikawa |
Illustrated by | Toshihiro Hirano |
Published by | Tokuma Shoten |
Published | July 1989 |
Volumes | 1 |
Video game | |
Developer | Technopolis Software |
Publisher | Technopolis Software |
Genre | Adventure |
Platform | PC-8801 |
Released | April 1990 |
Hyper Combat Unit Dangaioh (破邪大星ダンガイオー, Haja Taisei Dangaiō) is a Japanese anime OVA series produced and animated by AIC and Artmic and released in Japan in 1987. Dangaioh featured character designs by creator Toshiki Hirano, mechanical designs by Shoji Kawamori, and animation direction by Masami Ōbari.[1]
Brought together by the mysterious Dr. Tarsan, four powerful psychic warriors Mia Alice, Lamba Nom, Pai Thunder, and Roll Kran can unite four powerful planes to form Dangaioh (ダンガイオー/彈劾凰, Dangaiō)—the most powerful weapon in the universe. Using their combined psionic force, the Dangaioh team alone can stop the bloody tyranny of Captain Galimos and Gil Berg.
The team hopes their psychogenic wave will be strong enough to destroy Galimos's evil henchman, the notorious Gil Berg, who has sworn by the taking of his right eye to utterly destroy the Dangaioh Team. Along with the threat of Gil Berg, the Dangaioh Team must also avoid falling foul of Galimos's trickery, which finds weakness in their forgotten pasts.
# | Title | Release Date | |
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1 | "Cross Fight!!" Transliteration: "Kurosu Faito!!" (Japanese: クロス・ファイト!!) | September 28, 1987 | |
Mia Alice, Roll Kran, Lamba Nom, and Pai Thunder are four teenagers brainwashed and reconditioned as ESPers by Dr. Tarsan, who intends to sell their services to the Bunker Space Pirates. The quartet, however, escapes from Dr. Tarsan's ship, infuriating Bunker leader Captain Galimos. Gil Berg, Dr. Tarsan's cyborg assistant, offers his services to Galimos to capture the teenagers. He heads to Earth to lure the teenagers, as Mia is originally from the planet. Following an encounter with two of Dr. Tarsan's other creations, Pai regains her memories and heads to the Bunker's capital ship, taking an unconscious Roll with her. She reveals herself to Galimos as her daughter Barius, but she quickly renounces her birthright before rejoining her teammates and head to Earth with Dr. Tarsan, who also develops a change of heart. Upon their arrival to Tokyo, the teenagers combine their Dan-Mechanics to form Dangaioh and defeat Gil. They offer to spare his life, but he chooses to go down with his destroyed mecha instead. Despite returning to Earth, Mia chooses to stay with the team, as she has no memories of her past life. | |||
2 | "Spiral Knuckles in Tears" Transliteration: "Namida no Supairaru Nakkuru" (Japanese: 涙のスパイラルナックル) | October 25, 1988 | |
As the Dangaioh Team continues their training, they encounter a trio of assassins sent by the Bunker to eliminate them. During the fight, Mia and Pai mentally discover that Shazarla, the leader of the assassins, has a personal grudge on Lamba. After the assassins retreat, the team learns that Lamba was a member of the royal family of the planet Lilith, and that Shazarla was her former servant. Thinking that Shazarla was brainwashed by the Bunker, Lamba ventures through the snowy forest alone, but after being captured by the assassins, she discovers that Shazarla blames the Nom family for surrendering to the Bunker before Lilith was plundered of its resources and destroyed. Taking Lamba with them, the assassins attack Dr. Tarsan's ship, but the Dangaioh Team counterattacks and recovers Lamba. Dangaioh is sortied to battle the assassins' mecha Aizam the Third. As the assassins have the upper hand, Lamba apologizes to Shazarla for her family's misgivings, but she chooses to fight for the lives lost in Lilith. When Lamba's power fully recharges Dangaioh, the team traps Aizam the Third in a Psychic Wave before Lamba offers to execute the death blow. Back at the Bunker's capital ship, Gil Berg is revealed to have been resurrected. Note: The episode begins with an 11-minute summary of episode 1. | |||
3 | "The Demonic Revenge of Gil Berg" Transliteration: "Fukushū Oni Giru Bāgu" (Japanese: 復讐鬼ギルバーグ) | July 25, 1989 | |
The Dangaioh Team travels to Roll's home planet of Latecia to assist the resistance group's war on the Bunker, but Roll is haunted by fragments of his past. He reunites with the resistance, who are not thrilled with his return after having disappeared years ago. After the masked mercenary Skeleton convinces the resistance to trust Roll, they plan to storm through the Bunker's base, which uses captured soldiers as lifeblood of a bio-mechanical computer. Meanwhile, Dr. Tarsan reveals to the rest of the team that Roll was previously murdered by members of the resistance; hence his fear of death. Upon arriving at the Bunker base, Roll discovers that he has fallen into a trap set by his former comrades Burst and Flash, along with Skeleton-who reveals himself as Gil Berg. Using Roll as bait, Gil requests for Mia to meet with him alone to spare her teammate's life. As Gil tortures Mia, Roll conquers his fear of death and breaks free to save her before they regroup with the Dangaioh Team. Dangaioh kills Burst and Flash in a mecha battle before destroying Commander Dartilla and the Bunker base, but Gil emerges in the Gil Gear and attacks Dangaioh and severely damages Dr. Tarsan's ship. A critically damaged Dangaioh uses its remaining power to destroy Gil Gear with one final Psychic Wave. Dr. Tarsan fires a warp beam to teleport Dangaioh away before he goes down with his ship. Gil survives the battle and is promoted as one of Captain Galimos' generals. Elsewhere, the four cockpits of Dangaioh with their unconscious pilots are seen drifting in space. |
The score for episodes 1 and 2 was composed by Chumei Watanabe, while episode 3's score was composed by Kaoru Mizutani. The soundtrack for episode 1 was released by Nippon Columbia on CD on April 21, 1987, and on LP and cassette on August 21, 1987.[2][3][4] It was reissued on March 21, 2007 as No. 169 of Nippon Columbia's "Animex 1200" series.[5][6] The soundtrack for episodes 2 and 3 was released by Platz on CD on July 21, 1989.[7]
The first opening and ending themes were released as a 7" vinyl single on July 21, 1987.[8]
Episode 1 of Dangaioh was first released in North America on subtitled VHS format by U.S. Renditions in 1990 as Dangaio. It was infamously known for a subtitling error towards the end of the episode. Dangaioh's final attacks "Psychic Wave" and "Psychic Sword" were misspelled as "Side-kick Wave" and "Side-kick Sword." Episodes 2 and 3 were released in 1992 with a different translation staff behind the subtitling production.
Following the demise of U.S. Renditions in the mid-1990s, Manga Entertainment re-released Dangaioh in 1996 as Dangaioh: Hyper Combat Unit, which was an English-dubbed compilation of episodes 2–3. Episode 1 was omitted from this release, as episode 2 begins with a summary of the episode. This version was released on DVD on January 28, 2003.[9]
In Japan, Dangaioh was released on DVD by Bandai Visual on January 25, 2002.[10] It was reissued on September 24, 2010 as part of the "Emotion the Best" DVD line.[11] Dangaioh was released on Blu-ray by King Records on April 27, 2016. For the Blu-ray release, episodes 1–2 were remastered in 1080p HD from the original 35mm negatives, while episode 3 was upconverted from the DVD source to 1080i using Q-tec's FORS (Faithful Original Source) system. [12][13]
Kaiyodo released Dangaioh in the Revoltech action figure line in 2007.[14] Studio Half Eye released a fully transformable Dangaioh model kit in 2014; it was then released as a completed toy in 2021.[15] In May 2021, Good Smile Company released a model kit of Dangaioh as part of the Moderoid line.[16] King Arts released a diecast toy of Dangaioh, based on the Moderoid kit.[17]
A new 13-episode series named Great Dangaioh ran from April 5, 2001 through July 5, 2001 on TV Asahi in Japan. The series was created and directed by Hirano, and produced by AIC. Hirano's wife, Narumi Kakinouchi, was the animation director. Originally perceived as a completely different story, the series was revealed halfway as the sequel to the OVA series.
The series was licensed in North America by Viz Media, featuring an English dub produced in the Philippines by Telesuccess Productions.
An Dangaioh adventure game was released for the PC-8801 in Japan in April 1990. Dangaioh's characters, mecha, and storyline elements appeared in Banpresto's Super Robot Wars games. They initially appeared in Super Robot Wars Compact 2 (Parts 1, 2, and 3) for the WonderSwan game system, and later in its PlayStation 2 remake, Super Robot Wars Impact, as well as the Nintendo DS game, Super Robot Wars K. Impact notably features voice acting from the original Japanese voice actors.
The Nintendo 64 and Dreamcast video game Bangai-O contains various references to the series.