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Speed Racer

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|} Speed Racer is the title of an English adaptation of the Japanese anime Mach Go Go Go which centered around automobile racing. The series is an early example of an anime becoming a successful franchise in the United States. It was also notable for being the first to use the bullet time effect, in the shot at the end of the title sequence: as Speed leaps from the Mach 5, he freezes in mid-jump, and then the camera does an arc shot from top to sideways.

Background

Trixie
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Trixie

The characters and storylines originated in Japan as the manga and anime series Mach Go Go Go (マッハGoGoGo) from the anime studio Tatsunoko Productions.

Pops Racer
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Pops Racer

Mach Go Go Go was first created by anime pioneer Tatsuo Yoshida (19331977) as a manga series in the 1960s and made the jump to TV as an anime series in 1967. The central character in the anime and manga was a young race car driver named Gō Mifune (三船剛 Mifune Gō). Yoshida selected the names and symbolisms in his creation very carefully. The M logo on the hood of his race car and the front of his helmet stood for his family name Mifune, an homage to Japanese film star Toshiro Mifune (and not "Mach 5" as the dub would suggest). His given name Go is also a Japanese homonym for the number 5 (the number on his race car). This is also represented by the letter G embroidered on his shirt. The names themselves constitute a clever multi-lingual wordplay of the kind that started become part of the Japanese popular culture of the time. As a proper name, Go is the equivalent of the English name Quentin.

The English rights to Mach Go Go Go were immediately acquired by American syndicator Trans-Lux. The main character Go Mifune was given the name "Speed Racer" in the English version. A major editing and dubbing effort was undertaken by producer Peter Fernandez, who also voiced many of the characters, including Speed Racer himself. Fernandez was also responsible for a retooling of the theme song's melody and its subsequent English lyrics. When the series emerged before U.S. TV audiences as Speed Racer, fans were quickly drawn to its sophisticated plots involving fiendish conspiracies, violent action, hard-driving racing, and soulful characters with sparkling eyes. In an effort to squeeze the complicated plotlines into existing lip movements, the frenetic pace of the dubbing made Speed Racer famous for its quirky "fast" dialogue.

Car

Mach 5 Steering Wheel Hub
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Mach 5 Steering Wheel Hub

Sparky repairing the Mach-5
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Sparky repairing the Mach-5

Spritle & Chim-Chim
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Spritle & Chim-Chim

Main article: Mach Five
The Mach Five, the car Speed Racer drove in the series (known as the "Mach Go", or simply the "Mach" in the Japanese version), is a technological marvel containing useful pieces of equipment. These gadgets were easily deployed by pressing buttons marked 'A' through 'G' on the steering wheel hub. The "chyock chyock" sound effect played whenever the car jumped through the air is instantly recognizable to the show's fans.

The Buttons had the following functions:

Characters

Racer X
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Racer X

Rex Racer (a.k.a. Racer X)
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Rex Racer (a.k.a. Racer X)

Mom Racer
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Mom Racer

Speed Racer had a younger brother named Spritle (Kurio Mifune, 三船くりお Mifune Kurio) who along with his pet chimpanzee Chim-Chim (Senpei) constantly got into mischief and hid together in the trunk of the car.

Other regular characters included Sparky (Sabu サブ), the company mechanic; Speed's father, Pops (Daisuke Mifune, 三船大介 Mifune Daisuke); and his mother, (Aya Mifune, 三船アヤ Mifune Aya); and also Speed's girlfriend Trixie (Michi Shimura, 志村ミチ Shimura Michi). She flies around in a helicopter during each race and advises Speed Racer via a radio link to the Mach Five.

A frequent recurring character, driving car number nine (the "Shooting Star"), is the enigmatic "Racer X" (覆面レーサー Fukumen (Masked) Racer), a mysterious soldier of fortune whose secret identity is that of Rex Racer (Ken'ichi Mifune), Speed's older brother, who years earlier had a falling out with the family and exiled himself.

Voices

Japanese version

American version

Speed Racer X Japanese

Speed Racer X English

Legacy

Speed Racer was the first truly successful anime franchise in the United States. The pivotal episode in which Racer X reveals his identity to Speed was selected by TV Guide as one of the most memorable moments in TV history. Many real-life race car drivers became fans of the show.

The title character was "interviewed" in a humorous series of promotional ads for auto racing that ran on ESPN. The Speed Racer characters even appeared in an animated commercial for the Volkswagen GTI. In the ad, entitled "Sabotage", Speed drives a GTI to victory after the Mach Five is disabled. The ad also incorporated the Matrix-style rotating freeze frame shot from the cartoon's ending credits, with the GTI replacing the Mach Five in the shot.

Speed, Trixie, Spritle and Chim-Chim currently appear in a North American TV commercial for the car insurance company GEICO. The commercial makes use of the show's original footage.

In the 1977 film Slap Shot, after arriving at their hotel room in Charlestown, one of the Hanson Brothers ask when is Speed Racer on in the area. It should be known that the Hansons, when they're not playing hockey, play with toy racecars.

DVD Releases (Region 1)

Artisan/Lion's Gate released the first 11 episodes of the original series in DVD format in the US and Canada on April 22, 2003 (with one part of a to-be-continued story counting as an episode). This turned out to be the first in a series of DVD re-releases of the shows.

The second volume, containing episodes 12 through 23 was put on sale May 18, 2004. The DVD came in a special package where one could push a button on the cover and the Mach 5's headlights would light up while a portion of the show's English theme song played.

The third volume came out on May 24, 2005 and came with a special cylinder case for the disc. It contains episodes 24 through 36.

Lion's Gate released the fourth volume, which features episodes 37 through 44 on March 14, 2006 and included a die-cast toy Mach 5. The last episode, "Race the Laser Tank" was time-compressed (in other words, sped up to take up less space on the DVD) which upset some fans.

Newer series

Comics

Speed Racer:Born to Race
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Speed Racer:
Born to Race

There was also a 4- issue cross-over between Speed Racer, and the characters of Ben Dunn's Ninja High School in the late 90's.

Toys

Cultural references

External links

 


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