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Ultraman Blazar (ウルトラマンブレーザー, Urutoraman Burēzā) is a Japanese tokusatsu drama produced by Tsuburaya Productions, released to coincide with the company's 60th anniversary. [3] It is the 35th entry to the Ultraman Series, the fifth installment in the Reiwa era and the first series to lean towards serious hard science ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Ultraman_Blazar_episodes&oldid=1172669591"
Ultraman Arc (ウルトラマンアーク, Urutoraman Āku) is a Japanese drama series produced by Tsuburaya Productions. It is the 36th entry of the Ultraman series, released to both commemorate the 15th anniversary of Ultraman Zero [ 7 ] [ 8 ] and the 10th anniversary of the New Generation Heroes series.
Space Samurai Zangill (宇宙侍 ザンギル, Uchū-zamurai Zangiru, 16, 17): First appeared in episode 17 of Ultraman Blazar. He is voiced by Mitsuru Karahashi (唐橋 充, Mitsuru Karahashi). Abyssal Monster Gedos (深海怪獣 ゲードス, Shinkai Kaijū Gēdosu, 17): First appeared in episode 2 of Ultraman Blazar.
The Ultraman series is centered on a race of aliens nicknamed the "Ultras". As revealed in Mega Monster Battle: Ultra Galaxy, they are a technologically advanced civilization originating from a planet within the M78 nebula (M78星雲, Emu-Nanajūhachi seiun), [a] three million light years away from Earth (not to be confused with the Messier 78 nebula)—colloquially called the Land of Light ...
Ultraman R/B (ウルトラマン R/B (ルーブ), Ultraman Rūbu) [a] is a Japanese tokusatsu superhero television series produced by Tsuburaya Productions. It is the 30th entry to the Ultra Series overall, the sixth entry to the "New Generation Heroes" lineup and the last entry to the series released in the Heisei era .
Ultraman Trigger was announced by Tsuburaya Productions on April 15, 2021. According to director Koichi Sakamoto, the series is intended to be Ultraman Tiga recreated in the modern day interpretation for the current generation of audience to enjoy, in addition to those grew up watching Tiga.
United Artists Television picked up the rights for Ultra Q and Ultraman in the fall of 1966, two months after the first episode of Ultraman aired. Ultra Q was dubbed but never broadcast in the United States due to American TV stations preferring color shows over black-and-white shows. Ultraman ran in and out of syndication until the early 1990s ...