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G-Force: Guardians of Space (1986) is the second American animated television adaptation of the Japanese anime series Science Ninja Team Gatchaman (1972), following Sandy Frank Entertainment's initial 1978 effort Battle of the Planets and preceding ADV Films' 2005 attempt, known merely as Gatchaman. [1]
Entitled G-Force: Guardians of Space, this adaptation consisted of 85 episodes, spanning episodes 1–87 but skipping episodes 81 and 86. The series aired internationally beginning in 1987, but would not air in its entirety in the U.S until its run on Cartoon Network in 1995 & Air on toonami's midnight run in 2000.
Battle of the Planets episodes are listed below in their intended viewing order, recommended by the distributor Sandy Frank Entertainment.The first column on the right lists the production numbers for the original Japanese version Science Ninja Team Gatchaman, while the second column on the right lists the transmission numbers for the original U.S. broadcast of the series.
Wolf Like Me (Peacock): Season 2 dropped Oct. 19; fate TBD Wolf Pack (Paramount+): Finale dropped. March 16; fate TBD Wonder Years, The (ABC): Cancelled. Yellowjackets (Showtime): Return date TBD
Battle of the Planets cast five young people as G-Force, consisting of Mark, Jason, Princess, Keyop, and Tiny. G-Force protects Earth from the planet Spectra and other attacks from beyond space. The most prominent field commander of the Spectra forces was a villainous, masked individual known as Zoltar.
G-Force: Guardians of Space (1986, Science Ninja Team Gatchaman adaptation, US/Japan, animated) Eagle Riders (1996–1997, Gatchaman II and Gatchaman Fighter adaptation, US/Australia/Japan, animated) Gatchaman Crowds (2013, Japan, animated) Gate Keepers (2000, Japan, animated) Generator Gawl (1998, Japan, animated) Generator Rex (2010–2013 ...
Because Season 5 of Yellowstone was split into two parts, Season 5, Part 1 is currently streaming on Peacock. But Season 5 Part 2 (also called Season 5B) does not have an official streaming date yet.
That reported $120 million price tag is $10 million more than what NBC Universal paid to broadcast the Kansas City Chiefs-Miami Dolphins wild card game this past season — the first time the NFL ...