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Iron Kid

Iron Kid
Russian DVD cover
Also known asEon Kid
Genre
Country of origin
  • South Korea
  • Spain
Original languages
  • Korean
  • Spanish
No. of episodes26 (25 in U.S. broadcast)
Production
Running time23 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network
ReleaseApril 6 (2006-04-06) –
September 28, 2006 (2006-09-28)

Iron Kid (or Eon Kid) is an animated television series produced by Daewon C.I. and Design Storm in South Korea and BRB Internacional and Televisión Española in Spain.

The series is known as Iron Kid (Korean: 아이언 키드) in South Korea, and is broadcast under that name in Spain,[1][2] South Africa, the United Kingdom and Ireland.[citation needed] It is broadcast as Eon Kid in the United States[1] and other English-speaking countries.[citation needed]

The series premiered in Korea on KBS2 on April 6, 2006, and on TVE in late 2006. In the United States, it is distributed by Manga Entertainment and premiered on The CW's Saturday morning Kids' WB block on September 22, 2007.

Characters

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Eon family

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The Eon family is the legendary family that defeated the General. Only Eon, Marty, and his father have been mentioned, but all members are great warriors and martial artists. The General's forces wiped out the family through the years, leaving Marty as the sole blood heir to the family legacy. Their ancestral home is a huge fortress surrounded by a bamboo forest. Underneath the home is the family's ancestral training ground that includes wood training drones and tests to hone the family's martial arts skills. The home has fallen into great disrepair since the death of Marty's father.

Marty's friends

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Government Central Defence Federation (CDF)

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The ace squadrobots — A squadron of robots for the CDF that can turn into mini planes with rockets.

The General's forces

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Other villains

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Others

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Voice cast

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History

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Manga Entertainment announced the show as Iron Kid on September 8, 2005, and its initial coproduction partners Daewon C.I. (Korea), animation studio DesignStorm (Korea) and BRB Internacional (Spain).[3] Screen21 and TVE were added as coproduction partners by January 2007. In January 2007, BRB Internacional signed Jetix Latin America to carry Iron Kid after Jetix had picked up the show for France and Spain. Famosa picked up toy licensing rights for the Iberian Peninsula, while Portugal video rights went to LNK.[4]

As of 2019, the show has been airing on the free Pluto TV service in the United Kingdom until 2021. In the United States, it is viewable on Plex, Vudu, and Roku Channel. The entire series is also available on YouTube as "Iron Kid"

Carriage

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Country
/Market
Channel Premiered
Spain[1] Clan
TVE2
TVE June 2006
Jetix (Spain) November 18, 2006 [5]
France[1] Jetix (France)
France 3
South Korea KBS April 6, 2006
Latin America Jetix (Latin America)[4]
US Kids' WB September 22, 2007 [1]
UK Disney XD (UK and Ireland) 2009
Hong Kong
Macau
TVB Kids September 17, 2008
Pakistan Cartoon Network (Pakistan) 2007
India Cartoon Network (India) 2008
Japan Animax (Japan) December 10, 2010 [6]
The Netherlands Nicktoons (Dutch TV channel)
Australia Network 10 September 23, 2008
Middle East Spacetoon
Colombia Canal TRO 2019
Ireland The Den (RTE2 block)
Romania Megamax
Russia Carousel
Slovenia Pop TV
Portugal SIC K 2013
Italy Italia 1
Belgium Nickelodeon (Dutch TV channel)
Chile Telecanal 2020
Hungary Megamax
Serbia TV Ultra

Merchandise

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Eon Kid toys were produced by the company Playmates in the United States in the year 2007 in the form of action figures. Famosa picked up the license for toys and action figures that were sold in Europe and the company NewBoy in the Middle East. In the Middle East, a confectionery company called Sweetoon promoted and marketed Iron Kid in the form of cereal and milk products. Books were also released in South Korea by Daewon C.I. A video game was also released in South Korea on the Game Boy Advance.

Home video releases

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Anchor Bay Entertainment released Eon Kid on DVD in the United States and Australia. DVDs were also released in Spain, Brazil, the Netherlands, Hungary and the Middle East. The series was also streamed on Netflix in the United States and Canada. It is now streaming on Amazon Video in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom (where it is known as Iron Kid). Episodes have also been streamed on YouTube on Animakids, a channel owned by BRB Internacional who made the show. The show was released on DVD in South Africa by Impact Video.

Live stage show

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There was a live musical show based on Iron Kid that was performed from August 4, 2006, to August 20, 2006, in South Korea.

Episodes

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There are 26 episodes

  1. - The Legendary Fist (Korean: 전설의 철권)
  2. - The Heir to the Fist (Korean: 전설의 계승자)
  3. - The Journey Begins (Korean: 여정의 시작)
  4. - Strength Isn't Everything (Korean: 마티의 카운터펀치)
  5. - Ally's Secret (Korean: 40인의 폭주단)
  6. - Orange Mama (Korean: 지하도시 오랜지벨리)
  7. - The Grand Wrestling Tournament (Korean: 대사막 지하격투대회)
  8. - Marty the Iron Kid (Korean: 폭주왕 투야)
  9. - Escape From the Orange Valley (Korean: 오랜지벨리 탈출작전)
  10. - The Maxes Attack (Korean: 맥스단의 역습)
  11. - Confronting Fate (Korean: 마티의 비밀)
  12. - The 18 Woodenmen (Korean: 비밀수련장의 18봉인)
  13. - A Hero is Born (Korean: 탄생 철권의 전사)
  14. - To the Iron Tower (Korean: 탄생 철권의 전사)
  15. - Hang On, Ally! (Korean: 초거대병기의 부활)
  16. - Fall of the Tower (Korean: 아이언타워를 향하여)
  17. - Nightmares (Korean: 초거대병기의 부활)
  18. - Out of Control (Korean: 아이언타워의 함락)
  19. - The Four Lords of (Korean: 악몽)Invincibility
  20. - The Temple of the Iron Soul (Korean: 철권의 폭주)
  21. - The General Awakes (Korean: 하얀 수도승)
  22. - The God of the Glacier (Korean: 권신의 탄생)
  23. - The Revolt of Kahn (Korean: 설원의 거신 아이거)
  24. - To the Iron Tower! Charge!(Korean: 칸의 반란)
  25. - The Last Battle, I (Korean: 총진격 아이언타워)
  26. - The Last Battle, II (Korean: 최후의 결전(전편))

Reception

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Common Sense Media gave the show 3 out of 5 stars and the disclaimer: "Robotic arm points to adventure, fantasy violence."[7]

Soundtrack

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Javier Mellado composed and orchestrated the music.[8] The theme song for the version broadcast in Europe is called Wonder Boy by Erik Nilsson. While in the Korean version, the theme song is known as Run to the Sky and is performed by M.C the Max. The Italian theme song titled "Iron Kid" was performed by Antonio Di Vincenzo.

Video game

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A video game adaptation of the same name was released for the Game Boy Advance in 2007 exclusively in South Korea.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Ball, Ryan (23 October 2007). "BRB's Eon Kid Pulls Ratings". Animation Magazine. Archived from the original on 7 June 2019. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  2. ^ "Jetix estrena "Iron Kid", la última superproducción española - mundoplus.tv". Archived from the original on 2020-07-24.
  3. ^ "Manga Entertainment Announces International Partnership for Iron Kid". Anime News Network. Manga Entertainment. September 8, 2005. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  4. ^ a b Rolfe, Pamela. "Jetix grabs 'Iron Kid' for Latin America". The Hollywood Reporter. AP. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  5. ^ "Iron Kid - Ficha eldoblaje.com - Doblaje". www.eldoblaje.com. Archived from the original on 2023-10-24. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
  6. ^ "韓国発、世界的人気アニメ! 世界20カ国以上で、1億人以上の世界の子供たちが視聴 「鉄拳戦士アイアン・キッド」12月10日より日本初放送開始". Toei Animation. 2010-12-03. Archived from the original on 2024-09-29. Retrieved 2019-10-29.
  7. ^ "Eon Kid". Common Sense Media. Archived from the original on 2023-05-16. Retrieved 2023-05-16.
  8. ^ "Iron Kid - Catalan Films & TV". Catalanfilmsdb.cat. Archived from the original on 2016-02-02. Retrieved 2016-10-01.
  9. ^ "game boy advance iron kid". Archived from the original on 2020-11-23.
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