Psycho Armor Govarian
Psycho Armor Govarian | |
サイコアーマー ゴーバリアン (saiko āmā gōbarian) | |
---|---|
Genre | Mecha |
Created by | Go Nagai |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Seiji Okuda |
Written by | Yoshihisa Araki |
Music by | Tatsumi Yano |
Studio | Knack Productions |
Licensed by | |
Original network | MegaTON (TV Tokyo) |
Original run | July 6, 1983 – December 28, 1983 |
Episodes | 26 |
Manga | |
Written by | Go Nagai |
Illustrated by | Tatsuo Yasuda |
Published by | Shogakukan |
Magazine | Yoiko |
Demographic | Children |
Original run | August 1983 – February 1984 |
Psycho Armor Govarian (サイコアーマー ゴーバリアン, saiko āmā gōbarian, also romanized as Psycho Armor Gobarian and Psychoarmor Govarian) is a Japanese anime television series created by Go Nagai. It was produced by Knack Productions and TV Tokyo. The series was originally broadcast from July 6, 1983 to December 28, 1983 in Japan.[1][2] Besides Japan, it was also broadcast in South Korea in 1988 by MBC where it was known as 사이코아머 고바리안 or 싸이코 아머 고바리안. It is also known as 海王星戰士 in Taiwan and 超能裝甲哥巴里安 in Hong Kong. The anime is considered a mix of Genma Taisen, Mazinger and Gundam.[3]
Premise
[edit]The Garadain Empire has exhausted the primary resources of their native planet, so they send different space expeditions to find a new world where to live. One of their main objectives is planet Earth. However, Zeku Alba, an alien scientist, decides to rebel against the imperial rule and flees towards the Earth, where he gathers a group of children gifted with the power of "psychogenesis", an ability that consists of creating solid matter from psychic energy.
The most gifted of the squadron is Isamu, a young orphan whose family was killed in the first attack of the Garadain Empire. He is able to generate the powerful robot Govarian, an armor with which he can battle the alien monsters and is able to regenerate thanks to the psychic energy of the pilot. Helped by two other robots created by his teammates, Isamu, aboard the robot Govarian, defends the Earth in the long war against the alien invaders.
Episodes
[edit]# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate |
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | "Warrior Born In Flames" "honō no naka senshi tanjō" (炎の中戦士誕生) | Directed by : Seiji Okuda Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Yoshihisa Araki | July 6, 1983 |
02 | "Psychic Power Warrior First File" "chōnōryoku senshi fāsuto fairu" (超能力戦士ファーストファイル) | Directed by : Kazuya Miyazaki Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Yoshihisa Araki | July 13, 1983 |
03 | "Warrior Woman Meria’s Passionate Hatred" "josenshi meria no atsui nikushimi" (女戦士メリアの熱い憎しみ) | Directed by : Hiroshi Yoshida Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Yoshihisa Araki | July 20, 1983 |
04 | "Battleground Merry-go-round" "senjō no kaiten mokuba" (戦場の回転木馬) | Kazuya Miyazaki | Hideki Sonoda | July 27, 1983 |
05 | "Mischievous Twins Melody" "wanpaku sōko no merodī" (わんぱく双児のメロディー) | Tatsuya Kasahara | Katsuhiko Taguchi Yoshihisa Araki | August 3, 1983 |
06 | "Rampaging Space Rider" "uchū no bōsō raidā" (宇宙の暴走ライダー) | Makoto Nagao | Yuji Watanabe | August 10, 1983 |
07 | "Our Battle" "ore tachi no tatakai" (俺たちの戦い) | Yasuo Ishikawa | Yoshihisa Araki | August 17, 1983 |
08 | "Buster, Vanished with the Rainbow" "niji ni kie ta basutā" (虹に消えたバスター) | Kazuya Miyazaki | Hideki Sonoda | August 24, 1983 |
09 | "Loving and Hating Family" "ai to nikushimi no famirī" (愛と憎しみのファミリー) | Directed by : Yuji Asada Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Katsuhiko Taguchi | August 31, 1983 |
10 | "The Springtime of Atlas’s Youth" "atorasu no seishun" (アトラスの青春) | Directed by : Yoshinori Nakamura Storyboarded by : Makoto Nagao | Yuji Watanabe | September 7, 1983 |
11 | "Front Line in Hyperspace" "akūkan saizensen" (亜空間最前線) | Tatsuya Kasahara | Hideki Sonoda | September 14, 1983 |
12 | "Pursuit of Domson’s Army" "tsuigeki domuson gundan" (追撃·ドムソン軍団) | Directed by : Hiroshi Negishi Storyboarded by : Makoto Nagao | Yuji Watanabe | September 21, 1983 |
13 | "Fierce Battle at the Space Colony" "gekisen supēsu koronī" (激戦·スペースコロニー) | Directed by : Isao Harada Storyboarded by : Mitsukazu Yamatani | Yoshihisa Araki | September 28, 1983 |
14 | "Demondos Blows Up" "gaika demondosu dai bakuhatsu" (凱歌·デモンドス大爆発) | Directed by : Kazuya Miyazaki Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Sayumi Mizunaga | October 5, 1983 |
15 | "Garadain’s Palace in the Mysterious Dimension" "you jigen garadain shiro" (妖次元·ガラダイン城) | Directed by : Takao Motohashi Storyboarded by : Kiyomu Fukuda | Hideki Sonoda | October 12, 1983 |
16 | "Escape! Love Left Behind" "dasshutsu! nokosa reta ai" (脱出!残された愛) | Toshio Kinoshita | Hideki Sonoda | October 19, 1983 |
17 | "Giant Fortress Daingaram" "kyodai yousai daingarāmu" (巨大要塞ダインガラーム) | Yasuo Ishikawa | Yuji Watanabe | October 26, 1983 |
18 | "Beyond the Battlefield" "aika senjō no kanata" (哀歌·戦場のかなた) | Kazuya Miyazaki | Yoshihisa Araki | November 2, 1983 |
19 | "Hellfire on the Moon" "tsuki jigoku no honō" (月·地獄の炎) | Directed by : Kazuya Miyazaki Storyboarded by : Hiroshi Negishi | Masato Nishio | November 9, 1983 |
20 | "Dark Death Match" "ankoku desu macchi" (暗黒デス·マッチ) | Kazuyuki Okasako | Yoshihisa Araki | November 16, 1983 |
21 | "Explosion on the Moon’s Surface/Daingaram" "getsumen bakuha daingarāmu" (月面爆破·ダインガラーム) | Directed by : Kazuya Miyazaki Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Tsukasa Takahashi | November 23, 1983 |
22 | "The Ghost Fortress, Glonn Deathroam" "yōma no toride guron desurōmu" (妖魔の砦グロン·デスローム) | Directed by : Takao Motohashi Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Hideki Sonoda | November 30, 1983 |
23 | "Dimensional Invasion Fort" "jigen shinryaku yōsai" (次元侵略要塞) | Makoto Nagao | Yuji Watanabe | December 7, 1983 |
24 | "Mortal Combat South Pole Blizzard" "shitō kyokuten no burizādo" (死闘極点のブリザード) | Directed by : Kazuya Miyazaki Storyboarded by : Kazuyuki Okasako | Hideki Sonoda | December 14, 1983 |
25 | "The Final Operation Begins/Meria Versus Christo" "saishū sakusen kaishi meria tai kurisuto" (最終作戦開始-メリア対クリスト-) | Yasuo Ishikawa | Yoshihisa Araki | December 21, 1983 |
26 | "Annihilation? Earth’s Dimensional Teleportation" "kaimetsu? chikyū jigen idō" (壊滅?地球次元移動) | Directed by : Ryo Mizushiro Storyboarded by : Satoru Kumazaki | Yoshihisa Araki | December 28, 1983 |
Production
[edit]The head of the main mecha of the series, Govarian, is similar to the head of Mazinger Z and Great Mazinger. This was done on purpose by Go Nagai and Dynamic Planning in accordance with the demand of production company Knack. In South Korea, it was presented as being part of the Mazinger series along with Groizer X.[3] Other than that, Psycho Armor Govarian has no real relationship to any of the Mazinger series.
Staff
[edit]- Airtime: Wednesday, 19:30-20:00 hrs.
- Network: TV Tokyo
- Production: TV Tokyo, Knack
- Original work: Go Nagai, Dynamic Planning
- Planning: Seiichi Nishino (Knack)
- Producer: Hyota Ezu (TV Tokyo), Hirofumi Toida (Knack)
- Series organization: Yoshihisa Araki
- Series director: Seiji Okuda
- Animation director: Gen Fukuda, Yuki Kinoshita
- Script: Hideki Sonoda, Katsuhiko Taguchi, Yuji Watanabe, Tomomi Minahaya, Masato Nishio, Tsukasa Takahashi
- Original character: Go Nagai
- Character design: Gen Fukuda
- Mechanic design: Sawaki Tateba
- Art director: Morishige Suzuki
- Photography director: Yoichi Shimizu
- Music: Tatsumi Yano
- Theme song performance: Neverland
Theme songs
[edit]- Opening theme: "Lonely journey" (孤独の旅路~LONELY JOURNEY~, kodoku no tabiji Lonely Journey), lyrics by Tomoaki Taka, composition by Shunji Inoe, arrangement by Neverland & Hiroki Harada (chorus), song by Tomoaki Taka.
- Ending theme: "Lullaby" (ララバイ, rarabai), lyrics by Tomoaki Taka, composition by Shunji Inoe, arrangement by Neverland, song by Tomoaki Taka.
- Insert song: "It's LOVE" (It's LOVE ~それは愛~, It's LOVE ~sore wa ai~), lyrics by Tomoaki Taka, composition by Shunji Inoe, arrangement by Tatsumi Yano, song by Tomoaki Taka. This theme is used in the last episode.
- Insert song: "Yuhi no Omoi" (夕陽の想い, Yūhi no Omoi, translated as "Thought of the sunset"), lyrics by Tomoaki Taka, composition by Shunji Inoe, arrangement by Tatsumi Yano, song by Tomoaki Taka.
"Lonely Journey" and "Lullaby" have been used in several music collections in arranged versions sung by Hironobu Kageyama.
Media
[edit]Home video
[edit]The series was released in VHS format during the 1980s in 6 volumes by RCA Columbia Pictures Home Video Japan.[6] In 2006-03-25 a DVD-box set containing the whole series was released by the company Japanese company BM3 with the standard number OHK-27.[7][8] During Otakon 2018 on August 12, Discotek Media announced a 1-disc SD on BD release of the entire series for a future release.[9]
Picture books and manga
[edit]Besides the main TV series, two series of picture books were released, one by Shogakukan and the other by Asahi Sonorama.[10] Also a short manga serialization, with the art of Tatsuo Yasuda (another pen name of Tatsuya Yasuda), was published in the children's manga magazine Yoiko published by Shogakukan from August 1983 to February 1984 .[10][11]
Toys
[edit]Some toys and action figures based in the robots of the series were released, including several South Korean bootleg versions.[12] The official figures were made by the company Poem.
Soundtracks
[edit]Four vinyl records were released during 1983 by King Records. The first one, an EP called Psycho Armor Govarian - Lonely Journey, contains the opening and ending theme, both of them performed by the Japanese group Neverland.[13] The second EP, called Psycho Armor Govarian - It's LOVE, contains the themes "It's LOVE" and "Yuhi no Omoi". Also performed by Neverland, both themes have lyrics by Tomoaki Taka, composition by Shunji Inoe, arrangement by Tatsumi Yano and are sung by Tomoaki Taka.[14][15] The last two are full LP album containing the BGM of the series and the opening and ending themes.[16][17][18][19]
Title | Type | Artist | Standard number | Release date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Psycho Armor Govarian - Lonely journey | EP record | Neverland | K07S-3052 | July 1983 |
Psycho Armor Govarian BGM Vol.1 | LP album | Tatsumi Yano | K22G-7144 | September 1983 |
Psycho Armor Govarian - It's LOVE | EP record | Neverland | K07S-3063 | October 1983 |
Psycho Armor Govarian BGM Vol.2 | LP album | Tatsumi Yano | K22G-7173 | December 1983 |
The opening and ending songs of the series are included in several CD compilations of anime series.
Title | Label | Standard number | Release date |
---|---|---|---|
Nagai Go Hero Densetsu: Kotetsu Majin Hen | First Smile Entertainment | FSCA-10204 | January 17, 2002 |
Nagai Go Hero Densetsu: Kijin Sugosen Hen | First Smile Entertainment | FSCA-10210 | February 20, 2002 |
Super Robot Tamashii The Best Vol.1: Super Robot Hen | Be! Smile | BSCH-30001/2 | October 22, 2003 |
Super Robot Tamashii The Best Vol.2: Super Robot Hen 2 | Be! Smile | BSCH-30003/4 | November 19, 2003 |
Getter Densetsu + 10: The Legends of GETTER | Be! Smile | BSCH-30013 | March 10, 2004 |
Kageyama Hironobu Best & Live | Be! Smile | BSCH-30014 | April 7, 2004 |
Super Robot Tamashii The Instrumental: Super Robot & Real Robot Hen Vol.1 | Be! Smile | BSCH-30030 | December 1, 2004 |
Super Robot Spirits Shudaika Best Collection | Be! Smile | BSCH-30037 | July 6, 2005 |
Nagai Go Dynamic!! The chronicle | Be! Smile | BSCH-30040 | December 21, 2005 |
The Best!! Super Robot Spirits: Super Robot Studio Recordings | Be! Smile | BSCH-30063/6 | July 11, 2007 |
Super Robot Spirits: Non stop mix Vol.3 | Be! Smile | BSCH-30086 | July 9, 2008 |
The Best!! Super Robot Spirits: The Best Karaoke songs | Be! Smile | BSCH-30094/7 | December 10, 2008 |
Appearances in other media
[edit]Besides its series related media, Govarian has appeared in other media. The most prominent is its appearance in the Dynamic Super Robots Soshingeki!! (ダイナミックスーパーロボット総進撃!!, dainamikku sūpā robotto sōshingeki) clips that were included at the end of the DVDs of Shin Getter Robot tai Neo Getter Robot. Govarian appears alongside Great Mazinger, Venus A, Getter Robot G, Kotetsu Jeeg, God Mazinger and Groizer X to rescue Mazinger Z and Aphrodite A, but are defeated and in turn saved by Shin Getter Robot and Grendizer just before the arrival of Mazinkaiser.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "TV Hoei List" (in Japanese). Japan: The World of Go Nagai. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ a b "Psycho Armor Govarian - allcinema" (in Japanese). Japan: allcinema. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ a b "BaronBlog - It's Psycho Armor Govarian DVD Box!!" (in Japanese). Japan: BaronBlog. 2006-03-26. Archived from the original on 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "TV televising list" (in Japanese). www.geocities.co.jp. Archived from the original on May 6, 2009. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian". RetroCrush. Retrieved 2021-12-26.
- ^ "Video recording contents" (in Japanese). www.geocities.co.jp. Archived from the original on October 24, 2008. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian DVD-Box product description" (in Japanese). Japan: Seven and Y Corp. Archived from the original on 2013-09-05. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian DVD-Box product description" (in Japanese). Japan: Amazon.com, Inc. Archived from the original on 2012-11-04. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian is coming to SD-BD! It's from Knack Productions… the Chargeman Ken people! Which means you're in for a great time! This series is one of two super robot TV series that Go Nagai created after leaving Toei". Twitter. August 12, 2018. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
- ^ a b "Picture book". Psycho Armor Govarian (in Japanese). Japan. Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Kokusai Kodomo Toshokan e". Go Hon Tankyu Nisshi (in Japanese). Japan: Go book quest. 2003-08-19. Archived from the original on 2012-09-29. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian / CollectionDX". CollectionDX.com. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian - Anison Generation" (in Japanese). Japan: Anison Generation. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian - It's LOVE" (in Japanese). Japan: Anison House. Archived from the original on 2012-02-24. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian (It's love) - Anison Generation" (in Japanese). Japan: Anison Generation. Retrieved 2009-08-18.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian BGM" (in Japanese). Japan: Anison House. Archived from the original on 2012-02-24. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian". Yano Tatsumi - Ongaku e no Tabidachi (in Japanese). Japan. Archived from the original on 2012-11-30. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian BGM Vol.1 - Anison Generation" (in Japanese). Japan: Anison Generation. Retrieved 2009-08-18.
- ^ "Psycho Armor Govarian BGM Vol.2 - Anison Generation" (in Japanese). Japan: Anison Generation. Retrieved 2009-08-18.
External links
[edit]- Psycho Armor Govarian (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Psycho Armor Govarian (in Japanese) at allcinema
- Psycho Armor Govarian (in Italian) at the Enciclo'Robopedia website