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Which Kamen Rider that is likely to be Main Focus for Kamen Rider Ghost V-Cinema?
Hikaru Ohsawa AKA Akari Tsukimura did a Weekly Playboy Magazine Interview and she was teasing about Kamen Rider Ghost V-Cinema being planned which I assumed to be released for April. My bet will be Makoto Fukami/Specter since Alain/Necrom got his own mini-series. Do you think Makoto will be MAIN focus for Kamen Rider Ghost V-Cinema? I kindly enjoy the concept of Kamen Rider's V-Cinema because it can also explore some of stuffs that didn't get explore for the show like Who was Lock Dealer Sid and Yoko Minato's past life before getting involved with Yggdrasil. I wonder if Kamen Rider Ghost V-Cinema might explore the stuff that didn't get explore on the show? |
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Although I wouldn't be surprised if Kamen Rider Onari somehow becomes a thing. |
I hope Amazons does well enough in the west and Toei sees enough of an interest to at least have Kamen Rider DVDs and Blu-rays in the west. It'll take baby steps to get Kamen Rider to a level of interest to start selling them though. Look at Gundam, it took a long time for them to starting releasing DVDs in the states again.
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I would sooo watch that, too... |
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Okay, I'm 45, a life long nerd and can tell you that your use of the word "always" is so fast and loose it just about skidded off your post and crashed into the "MORE NEW POSTS" box! Anime and manga were a popular thing among hardcore nerds until the late 80's when shows like Voltron, Tranzor Z, Thundercats and Silverhawks (American funded, Japanese designed) made the American style of action cartoon quaint and, soon enough, extinct. But it still wasn't until fairly recently (late 90's / 2000's) that genuine anime and, to a lesser extent, manga became mainstream. Granted, not knowing your age, that very well may be the entirety of your "always" but, in truth, that wasn't always the case. I remember kids complaining that manga and anime looked "cartoony" and that "everyone looks like a girl" right up until Fist of the North Star, AKIRA, DBZ and hentai (Urotsukodoji, mostly) made people get over that stuff. So non-PRangers tokusatsu just needs it's DBZ. |
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Nozama Peston Service leave Nozomi and Mamoru in the main junkyard where the killer, not an Amazon but just a plain ol' psycho, beats the living piss out of them, with the plan the gut them both. The team swoop in for the save but, even though this guy has clearly killed numerous people and was about to kill their teammates, NPS decide "no" because the killer is a human, not an Amazon, so that's out of their job description. What? To make matters even more stupefying - they just leave! No anonymous calls to the police, no vigilante justice, just "our bad, thought you weren't human - happy hunting, bro!". Of course, the police rarely appear, if ever, in Amazons so... maybe there aren't any? Despite this, I still love the show. I like what they've set up, it's pretty crazy: Kamen Rider Omega, the "hero" is fighting for the Amazons, while Kamen Rider Alpha, the "villain" fights for humanity. It's gonna be good! |
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I think the only other viable option to making a western Kamen Rider is filming them at the same time at the same locations so the footage would line up, at least for the action scenes. If I were to pick one series from the past few years to use the costumes/theme of it would either be Wizard or Drive. The theme of Gaim is just too weird to start out on and Ghost is too eastern with it's selection of historical figures. As for Dragon Knight, I've never seen it but I feel it's main problem was it was just on a strange channel for a kids show. I had honestly never heard of "The CW4Kids" before I got into Kamen Rider nor had I ever seen any toys for it. It really wasn't set up to succeed. |
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We're saying just do an entirely American adaptation of a Kamen Rider script / concept (a common enough practice, see the American version of the British original The Office). Or what Switchblade is suggesting, use the bones of a Kamen Rider series (in his, Black) and put it into a format that is 'easy to understand' (wandering hero). But have it produced, top to bottom, stateside. An aside: even as a seven year old, I found the Incredible Hulk to be repetitive and boring. You can only watch the Hulk beat up corrupt construction workers or hired thugs so many times! |
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