Marine Boy

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:About Template:Infobox animanga/Header Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Game Template:Infobox animanga/Footer

Marine Boy is one of the first color anime to be shown in a dubbed form in the U.S., and later in Australia and the United Kingdom. It was originally produced in 1965 in Japan as Template:Nihongo by Minoru Adachi and animation company Japan Tele-Cartoons. It was sold outside Japan via K. Fujita Associates Inc., with Warner Bros.-Seven Arts Television handling worldwide distribution of the English-language version. The series was distributed in syndication in the United States starting in 1966.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Series

The series follows a gifted boy serving with the Ocean Patrol, an underwater policing agency protecting Earth’s oceans. Set in a future where humanity has fully explored the seas, they host undersea ranches,<ref>episode 4, 17, 22</ref> mineral operations, research centres, and underwater communities.<ref>episode 10, 15</ref>

The Ocean Patrol is a global maritime agency defending all life beneath the waves.<ref>episode 4</ref> It combats criminal and military threats, using submarines, surface warships, and aircraft. Its scientific division, led by Dr Mariner and Professor Fumble, develops advanced weapons, vehicles, and technologies, while its cvil divisions manage undersea farming, research, and industry.

The series centres on the patrol craft P-1, a compact submarine capable of brief flight via retractable wings.<ref>episode 4</ref> P-1 is heavily armed with “rocket torpedoes” and can mount heat beams, missiles, smoke screens, circular saws, sonic cannon, steel nets, power claws, drills, and lasers.

Marine Boy, aged 13–15, is skilled in martial arts, who can communicate with a white dolphin, Splasher, summoned via a whistle in his ring.<ref>episode 2, 4, 16</ref> His wetsuit, designed by Dr Mariner and Professor Fumble, allows hazardous missions, resisting penetration and extreme temperatures. His boots contain propeller packs, retractable flippers,<ref>episode 3</ref> and his helmet has a radio. He breathes using “oxy-gum,” and his main weapon is a folding alloy boomerang capable of cutting metal and deflecting bullets.<ref>episode 24</ref>

History

Terebi Dōga, also known as Japan Tele-Cartoons (JTC), produced a three-episode black-and-white pilot titled Dolphin Prince (ドルフィン王子, Dorufin Ōji), which was broadcast on Fuji TV from 4 April to 18 April 1965.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The pilot was developed into a colour series, Hang On! Marine Kid (がんばれ!マリンキッド, Ganbare! Marin Kiddo), which aired on TBS from 6 October to 29 December 1966, running for thirteen episodes before being cancelled.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Undersea Boy Marine (海底少年マリン, Kaitei Shōnen Marin) aired on Fuji TV from 13 January to 22 September 1969, initially broadcasting thirty-six episodes. The complete seventy-eight-episode series was later shown in 1971 on Nippon TV.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The international version, titled Marine Boy, was dubbed into English and syndicated in the United States by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts Television from late 1967, reorganising the episodes for the English-speaking market.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Main characters

Marine Boy

The teenage protagonist, an exceptionally skilled swimmer, diver and martial artist who serves in the Ocean Patrol. His equipment, developed by his father, includes a red wetsuit with retractable flippers, jet boots and a radio headpiece, enabling underwater travel, rescue and combat.

Dr Mariner

Marine Boy’s father and the Ocean Patrol’s chief scientist. He designs the specialised equipment Marine Boy uses, provides mission briefings and serves as the organisation’s principal technical authority.

The Commander

The strict but fair head of the Ocean Patrol. He enforces discipline and procedure, yet occasionally reveals warmth and pride in Marine Boy’s courage and resourcefulness.

Neptina (Neptuna)

A young mermaid ally who assists Marine Boy using her magic pearl and by communicating with sea creatures.

Splasher

Marine Boy’s loyal white dolphin companion, central to many rescue sequences and missions.

Professor Fumble

An eccentric inventor whose devices alternately aid and complicate Ocean Patrol operations.

Bulton (Bolton) and Piper

Crew of the P-1 patrol boat, providing operational support, local knowledge and occasional comic relief.

Clicli (Cli-Cli)

A boy from an ancient underwater kingdom, cheerful and inquisitive he assists Marine Boy in several episodes.

Villains

Villains generally only appeared in one episode before being defeated. These adversaries include undersea pirates, rogue scientists, monstrous sea creatures, and power-hungry warlords, each posing a threat to Ocean Patrol. Unlike recurring villains in later animated series, most foes are eliminated or neutralised by the episode’s conclusion, seldom returning or being mentioned again. This format created self-contained adventures in which good consistently triumphed, maintaining the show’s moral tone and action-driven narrative.

English characterization

The voice of Marine Boy, Neptina and Clicli <ref>Lannan, Kelly Patrick. (1977 ~ current) Base Koala TX Data Archives
Character has often been listed as "Cli Cli", 'Cli-Cli" or "Clee-Clee". Warner Bros publicity spells the name consistently as "Clicli", which is an accurate translation of the original Japanese character's name.</ref> was that of Corinne Orr, who was also the voice of Trixie and Spritle in Speed Racer. Jack Grimes, who also worked on Speed Racer, was the voice of Professor Fumble and Splasher. Peter Fernandez was the voice of Piper and Dr. Mariner. His other work includes The Space Giants, Ultraman, Star Blazers, many of the Godzilla films, as well as both Speed and Racer X from Speed Racer. Jack Curtis was the voice of Bullton,<ref>Lannan, Kelly Patrick. (1977 ~ current) Base Koala TX Data Archives
Character has often been listed as "Bolton" or "Bulton". Warner Bros publicity spells the name consistently as "Bullton", which is an accurate translation of the original Japanese character's name.</ref> as well as the series' narrator (performing the same duties on Speed Racer).

Episodes

Warner Bros.' 2009 syndication order <ref>Lannan, Kelly Patrick. (1977 ~ current) Base Koala TX Data Archives.
This guide lists the English language syndicated order as supplied by Warner Bros. to broadcasters in both 1967 and 2009, (it is not the same order as the Japanese-language version). Although the 2009 order is identical to that supplied in 1967, the episode synopses differ substantially; see Marine Boy - 1967 episode synopses</ref>

# Title

Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list Template:Episode list

Home media release

The series has been restored and remastered from original elements for DVD release by the Warner Archive Collection.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Season 1 was released on June 18, 2013,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> followed by Season 2 on February 11, 2014.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Season 3 was released on July 2, 2014.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

References

Template:Reflist