Street Fighter (TV series)
Street Fighter | |
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Created by | Capcom |
Based on | Street Fighter by Capcom |
Voices of |
Michael Donovan Donna Yamamoto Scott McNeil Richard Newman Tong Lung John Payne Paul Dobson Kathleen Barr Lisa Ann Beley |
Composer(s) | Andrew Dimitroff |
Country of origin |
United States Japan |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 26 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Jun Aida Daniel S. Keltzky Jim Graziano Stephanie Graziano |
Producer(s) |
Michael Hack Billy CC Yang Kenzo Tsujimoto Masao Maruyama Tatsuhiko Urahata Yasuaki Iwase |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Production company(s) |
InVision Entertainment Madhouse Sunrise Graz Entertainment USA Studios |
Release | |
Original network | USA Network (Cartoon Express and Action Extreme Team) |
Original release | October 21, 1995 – May 14, 1997 |
Street Fighter is an animated television series produced by InVision Entertainment[1] based on the Street Fighter video game franchise by Capcom. The series aired as part of the USA Network's Cartoon Express and Action Extreme Team lineups. It lasted two 13-episode seasons which aired from 1995 to 1997, for a total of 26 episodes. The show is closely based on the Street Fighter II series, but also borrows plot elements and characters from the live-action Street Fighter film and the first two Street Fighter Alpha games.
Plot
Colonel William F. Guile is the leader of the "Street Fighters", an international undercover peacekeeping force composed of martial artists from around the world. They often face off against the ruthless General Bison and his Shadaloo criminal empire. They follow a code of honor involving the keywords "discipline", "justice" and "commitment".
All 17 fighters from Super Street Fighter II Turbo, along with Captain Sawada from the live-action movie, appeared in some form throughout the entire series, with Guile, Chun-Li, Blanka, Ryu, Ken and Cammy serving as the show's primary characters. Since the arcade version of Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams was only recently released when the show began airing, most of the new fighters that were introduced in that game only make a cameo in one episode ("The Medium is the Message") during the first season. The second season (which aired after the release of Street Fighter Alpha 2) would feature the Alpha roster more prominently, with characters such as Rose and Sakura being the focus of certain episodes, while another episode would adapt the plot of Final Fight (whose characters were featured in the Alpha series, with Guy, Sodom and Rolento having appeared as playable fighters at this point). Some non-playable characters from the games were also featured in the show such as Cammy's Delta Red compatriots and Gouken. In contrast, Guile's wife and daughter from the games (Jane and Amy) were omitted in favor of giving him a new love interest in the form of his ex-fiancee Cindy.
While the series references the events of the live-action movie, adopting some of its story elements such as the full names and occupations of certain characters (e.g. William F. Guile, Chun-Li Xiang) and the character of Blanka being an amalgamation of himself and Guile's war buddy Charlie, it also deviated from the film in other aspects, particularly in regards to Balrog's and Dee Jay's respective allegiances (switching them back to how they were in the actual games), as well as Zangief's own allegiance (who still works for Shadaloo in the series, despite leaving the organization to join Guile's group by the end of the movie).
Voice actors
- William F. Guile (voiced by Michael Donovan)
- Chun-Li Xiang (v.b. Donna Yamamoto)
- Carlos Blanka (v.b. Scott McNeil)
- Ken Masters (v.b. Scott McNeil)
- Ryu Hoshi (v.b. Tong Lung)
- Cammy (v.b. Lisa Ann Beley)
- E. Honda (v.b. Paul Dobson)
- T. Hawk (v.b. Paul Dobson)
- M. Bison (v.b. Richard Newman)
- Zangief (v.b. Michael Donovan)
- Victor Sagat (v.b. Robert O. Smith)
- Vega (v.b. Mark Hildreth)
- Balrog (v.b. Paul Dobson)
- Birdie (v.b. Paul Dobson)
- Rolento (v.b. Scott McNeil)
- Andore (v.b. Paul Dobson)
- Sodom (v.b. Robert O. Smith)
- Thrasher "Damnd" (v.b. Michael Dobson)
- Belger (v.b. Robert O. Smith)
- El Gado (v.b. Bill Corkery)
- The Great Oni (v.b. Scott McNeil)
- Burke (v.b Garry Chalk)
- Rory (v.b. Scott McNeil)
- Celia (v.b. Janyse Jaud)
- Satin Hammer (v.b. Lynda Boyd)
- Guy (v.b. Jim Byrnes)
- Cody (v.b. Michael Dobson)
- Mike Haggar (v.b. Richard Newman)
- Jessica (v.b. Donna Yamamoto)
- Gouken (v.b. Robert O. Smith)
- Akuma (v.b. Dale Wilson)
- Fei Long (v.b. Paul Dobson)
- Dhalsim (v.b. Garry Chalk)
- Rose (v.b. Teryl Rothery)
- Sakura (v.b. Saffron Henderson)
- Sawada (v.b. Michael Dobson)
- Dr. Lucinda "Cindy" Davila (v.b. Kathleen Barr)
- Wo Fat (v.b. Scott McNeil)
- Lord Zing (v.b. Scott McNeil)
- Escher (v.b. John Payne)
- La Lupa (v.b. Venus Terzo)
- Raymond Wang (v.b. Mark Hildreth)
- The Crimson Crawdad (v.b. Michael Donovan)
- Holly Wood (v.b. Mark Hildreth)
- The Warrior King (v.b. Michael Dorn)
Episodes
Season 1
# | Title | Writer(s) | Original airdate | Production order |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Adventure Begins" | Michael Edens, Julia Lewald, Eric Lewald | October 21, 1995 | 101 |
While working undercover for the Street Fighter operation, Guile gets contacted by Escher. Bison had just stolen a biological virus from Guile's old flame, Lucinda (or "Cindy") and that the virus itself can kill an infected person from within 24 hours of instant contact. Guile assembles a team consisting of Chun-Li, Ryu, Ken, and Blanka and heads to the jungle to put an end to Bison's scheme. Unfortunately, both Ryu and Blanka contract the virus and that the group must race against the clock in order to get the antidote needed to save their friends. | ||||
2 | "The Strongest Woman in the World" | Richard Stanley | October 28, 1995 | 102 |
Bison commandeers a nuclear facility in China, which is coincidentally situated near Chun-Li's own birthplace which Bison had destroyed years prior. Guile assembles Blanka and Chun-Li for the mission to stop Bison. However, Chun-Li is only focused on getting her revenge against Bison and cares little whether the nuclear plant is destroyed. Eventually, Guile's scolding gets through to her and she lets Bison escape so that innocent people wouldn't be harmed. | ||||
3 | "Getting to Guile" | Mark Onspaugh | November 4, 1995 | 103 |
Dee Jay relays to Escher and Chun-Li that he and Guile were ambushed by Bison and Zangief and that Guile himself was captured. Bison hooks Guile into a mind-probing device to find his Achilles heel so that he can brainwash and reprogram Guile into destroying the rest of the Street Fighters. Chun-Li rallies Blanka, Dee Jay, Ryu, and Ken to help rescue Guile and infiltrate Bison's stronghold. After battling many mutants, the team saves Guile and reminds him of the Street Fighter code: Discipline, justice, and commitment. | ||||
4 | "No Way Out" | Bruce Reid Schaefer | November 11, 1995 | 104 |
Sagat uses his vast army to wage war on a U.S. embassy in Shadaloo, all the while a young boy named Kip is trapped in the building while it's being evacuated. Blanka, Chun-Li, and Guile head the rescue operation, but Guile gets trapped in the building along with Kip as well. Both Guile and Kip try to escape Sagat's patrolling forces and were able to gain access to some secret computer files, which were very important. | ||||
5 | "Demon Island" | Francis Moss, Ted Pederson | November 18, 1995 | 105 |
Bison steals a top secret military plane that can turn invisible at the push of a button, so it's up to Guile, Dee Jay, Cammy, and Blanka to get it back. They arrive on a mysterious island where Bison currently has set up shop and unfortunately, Zangief is patrolling the area in a hovercraft. Dee Jay blames Zangief for ruining his fighting career, and they begin to fight while Guile fends off Bison. The Street Fighters eventually steal the plane back just as the island explodes. | ||||
6 | "Desert Thunder" | Jeremy Cushner | December 2, 1995 | 106 |
Escher receives word that a new military laser was stolen by the female cyborg, the Satin Hammer and her cohort, T. Hawk. While T. Hawk was originally supposed to be undercover in order to monitor the Satin Hammer's activities, Escher believes that T. Hawk has switched sides. He charges Guile and Blanka to get to the bottom of the situation. They eventually confront T. Hawk, who still maintains that he's on their side, even though it's clear he's sympathetic towards the Satin Hammer. Eventually however, T. Hawk throws himself into the Satin Hammer's computer system and destroys it in an instant, even though the Satin Hammer manages to escape capture from him and the others. | ||||
7 | "Dark Heart" | Matt Edens | December 9, 1995 | 107 |
The millennium comet is on its scheduled 1000-year voyage in the skies over Earth, but Bison uses his magnetic chi powers to redirect the comet towards the planet and threatens to rip apart the continent of the U.S. through the comet's own crash unless he gets a huge sum of money. Guile, Blanka, Ryu, and Ken go the Himalayas to stop Bison, but the group gets separated by an avalanche. Blanka meets up Dhalsim while in the mountains and blames him for his monstrous appearance. With Dhalsim's help, Guile and Blanka manage to stop Bison's plan while saving Ryu and Ken from within the process. | ||||
8 | "The Medium is the Message" | Matthew Malach | December 16, 1995 | 108 |
A Street Fighter tournament is being held in India and Escher sends Guile and the rest of the Street Fighters to compete. Bison is attending as well, and has a double threat of a plan; use his new mutant combatants to destroy the Street Fighters, or have Balrog create a false video of the Street Fighters defiling a Hindu temple. Both of Bison's plans fail when Guile saves the captured scientist and performs a Flash Kick on a time bomb. | ||||
9 | "Eye of the Beholder" | Doug Booth | December 30, 1995 | 109 |
Word comes in that a scientist in Hawaii is concocting a serum that could help Blanka revert into his human form. Vega also hears of this serum and wants to use it to make himself eternally young. Vega captures the scientist and holds him for ransom. Blanka is forced to give Vega the cure, in exchange for the doctor's life. Vega drops the vial of serum from within the situation, losing his only chance for immortality. | ||||
10 | "The Hand That Feeds You" | Steve Cuden | January 6, 1996 | 110 |
Ryu's cousin, Sachi goes missing in Hong Kong while the Street Fighters are investigating a local drug operation. Action star Fei Long says he'll show Guile the secrets of the city if Guile teaches him how to use Chi energy attacks. Eventually, Ryu and Ken get captured by the drug runners and it's up to Guile and Fei Long to save them. | ||||
11 | "Keeping the Peace" | Matt Edens | January 20, 1996 | 111 |
A small city near Shadaloo is in chaos as rare diamonds have been found to be rich in the region. Sagat and many other warlords are lurking about as each faction wants a piece of the pie. Guile is asked by Escher to check out the situation on behalf of the Street Fighters. Meanwhile, Sawada has taken over Guile's former position in the Allied Nations (AN) and is currently in charge of the military presence. Hostilities run high as Guile manages to defuse several bombs in the area, with the help of his Sonic Boom attack. | ||||
12 | "Chunnel Vision" | Len Wein | January 27, 1996 | 112 |
Bison finally gets captured at the hands of Cammy's former British teammates, Delta Red. While the world thinks that Bison's capture is the first step to Shadaloo's destruction, Bison's supporters randomly start blowing up locations in England and threatens that it will continue until Bison is released, along with a 2 billion pound payoff. Zangief places bombs in a specific tunnel that connects a train track between England and France, so it's up to Guile, Dee Jay, Honda, and Cammy to prevent the tunnel's destruction. | ||||
13 | "Strange Bedfellows" | Bruce Reid Schaefer | February 3, 1996 | 113 |
A mysterious warrior starts destroying both Bison's strongholds as well as those under Street Fighter jurisdiction. Both sides blame the other and it eventually comes down to Bison and Guile meeting on a volcano island for a final showdown. However, clumsy clues were given to both warriors which lead them to the location of the battle by none other than Akuma himself. Akuma wants both Bison and Guile to fight each other to death, where Akuma will then destroy the winner and steal their chi. Bison and Guile are forced to work together and eventually attack Akuma. Despite Bison and Guile's reluctant teamwork, Akuma is able to escape via teleportation and that both Bison and Guile decide to postpone their own battle and head their separate ways, much to the shock and disbelief of their own teammates. |
Season 2
# | Title | Writer(s) | Original airdate | Production order |
---|---|---|---|---|
14 | "The Hammer Strikes" | Jeremy Cushner, Will Meugniot (story) | September 21, 1996 | 201 |
Needing the help of the Street Fighters, Dhalsim summoned them to his remote mountain temple by causing Blanka considerable mental pain. It seems that the Satin Hammer had returned and wanted to steal an atomic bomb that Dhalsim currently had in his possession. Guile brought Blanka, T. Hawk, and Sawada along with him for the mission, even though personal feelings still existed between T. Hawk and the Satin Hammer. Eventually, the Street Fighters stopped the Satin Hammer's plot when Dhalsim deactivated the atomic bomb's countdown timer. | ||||
15 | "Cammy and the Bachelor" | Len Wein, Will Meugniot (story) | September 28, 1996 | 202 |
A crime wave has taken over London, and Bison is thought to be the one responsible for it, so Guile, Cammy, and Honda join forces with Delta Red to take down Bison, Birdie, and Sodom. During the fight, Bison seemingly takes over Cammy's mind, and she immediately switches allegiances. With a backup plan in full readiness, Bison and Cammy manage to escape. | ||||
16 | "New Kind of Evil" | Bruce Reid Schaefer, Will Meugniot (story) | October 5, 1996 | 203 |
Chun-Li is attacked by mysterious mutant assailants, as well as having her TV crew kidnapped. She calls for Guile and Blanka's help to track them down, which leads to a search in the sewers. They soon find out that a former scientist of Bison's named Quinn who is continuing mutant research and mutated 3 thugs into half-man/half eel/alligator/bat warriors. In the ensuing battle, Blanka receives a mega-dose of mutagen ooze, which turns him even more feral. Note: This episode is where Blanka became Evil Blanka. | ||||
17 | "The World's Greatest Warrior" | Steve Englehart, Will Meugniot (story) | October 12, 1996 | 204 |
While visiting their master Gouken, Ryu and Ken are challenged by the evil Akuma, who claims to have stolen Gouken's chi and will do the same thing to them. Akuma gives Ryu and Ken time to train so they might stand a chance against him. During the course of their sparring sessions however, Ken injures Ryu's left arm, which leaves Ryu in a bad state during the time of the fight's progression. Akuma uses this advantage to easily defeat Ryu, only to get defeated himself by Ken's Flaming Dragon Punch (Shoryuken), freeing Gouken and Ryu's chi. Despite his apparent defeat, Akuma vows that he'll return and attempt to steal more chi. | ||||
18 | "So, You Want to be in Pictures" | Marv Wolfman, Will Meugniot (story) | November 5, 1996 | 205 |
Ryu and Ken are asked to help Fei Long with his latest movie project. Investors in the film however pull funding from out of the movie, which leaves Fei Long with no way to raise awareness about the evil crime boss, Wo Fat. Ken is forced to ask his father to re-invest in the film, so it can continue. Ken gets creative license for the script, and writes himself in as the star instead of Fei Long. Both men have a climatic showdown which results in the entire movie studio burning down. | ||||
19 | "Face of Fury" | Steve Perry, Will Meugniot (story) | November 15, 1996 | 206 |
Guile and Blanka take a trip to the Middle East to cool hostilities between the Arabs and the Israelis, but Blanka's temper gets the best of him, and he attacks them all. Vega, watching this drama unfold on a prison TV set, swears revenge against Blanka for destroying his face. Vega easily escapes, and flies to Hawaii for a final battle while taking Mei Lei, Blanka's love interest, hostage. Blanka almost manages to kill Vega, but with the combined efforts of Mei Lei, Guile and Chun-Li, they were able to prevent Vega's death at the hands of Blanka. | ||||
20 | "Cammy Must Die!" | Len Wein, Will Meugniot (story) | November 23, 1996 | 207 |
Bison charges Cammy and his cybernetic creation La Lupa to steal a priceless Kali statue for him. The statue has meditative powers that Bison hopes will help him heal his wounds from his previous battle with Guile. The Street Fighters team up with Delta Red to help get to the bottom of Cammy's switched allegiances and during the battle, Cammy gets knocked on the head which frees her from Bison's mental control. Cammy then takes the Street Fighters and Delta Red to Bison's hideout, where she betrays them once more. Bison and Cammy are then able to escape. | ||||
21 | "The Flame and the Rose" | Steve Englehart, Will Meugniot (story) | December 9, 1996 | 208 |
The mystical psychic known as Rose senses that many powers in the world are fluctuating wildly out of control. She blames Ken and Blanka for this sudden energy spike and believes that they are the catalysts to the end of the world. Rose kidnaps them both and forces them to fight against one another, only to realize that they are not evil at all. With their help, she tracks down Bison, who is the true manifestation of evil she had sensed. She then attacks Bison in the mental world just as Ken and Blanka destroy the kali statue, which destroys Bison's entire castle. Mysteriously, everyone in uninjured, and Bison eludes capture once more. | ||||
22 | "The Warrior King" | Kat Likkel, Will Meugniot (story) | January 4, 1997 | 209 |
The powerful Warrior King has defended his country from the evil Mages for years, but when his Orb of Power is flung into a vortex, he follows it as well. The orb lands in a nation close to Shadaloo, and Bison claims it as his own. The orb has the power to control all weather, and Bison threatens the world with its power. The Street Fighter team is assembled, and Chun-Li is the first to confront Bison. The Warrior King magically appears, and fights Bison's minions with Chun-Li's help. The two quickly fall in love until another vortex appears, and the Warrior King is forced to leave Chun-Li forever. This episode was part of a crossover storyline that spanned the other shows in USA Network's "Action Extreme Team" lineup (Savage Dragon, Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm, and Wing Commander Academy). | ||||
23 | "The Beast Within" | George Bloom | February 18, 1997 | 210 |
Blanka searches the jungle for a mysterious healing plant that could revert him back to his normal form. Guile and Lucinda go to track him down, and hear the same story of the plant from the jungle natives. Blanka then encounters a wild jungle boy who swears revenge against the natives for killing his family. The boy is actually an alien who had crash-landed on Earth along with his family. Blanka befriends the boy, and along with Guile and Lucinda, they defeat the evil natives and the boy returns to his home planet. | ||||
24 | "Second to None" | Kat Likkel, Will Meugniot (story) | April 11, 1997 | 211 |
Ryu is a legend in Shadaloo and Sakura is his most adamant admirer, but when Sagat patrols the streets regularly making sure to burn down any building with posters of Ryu in it, Sakura leaps into action. She has gone to New York (not shown) to go see her idol, who had just been visiting Ken in the hospital, as Ken had swallow some bugs in water while fighting Ryu earlier. Ryu meets Sakura, and she convinces him to come to Shadaloo along with Guile, to defeat Sagat once more. Sagat welcomes the challenge, and he and Ryu have another epic confrontation. | ||||
25 | "Final Fight" | Larry Parr, Will Meugniot (story) | April 27, 1997 | 212 |
The plot of this episode is based on the arcade game with the same title. The new Mayor of Metro City, Mike Haggar, finds himself in a tough situation when his daughter Jessica is kidnapped by a ruthless street gang known as Mad Gear, so it's up to Ryu and Ken to save her, along with Jessica's boyfriend Cody and fellow friend Guy. Escher, Guile, and Haggar devise a plan to put Ken and Ryu undercover to infiltrate the gang and discover the whereabouts of Jessica, but Cody takes exception to this as he constantly screams at everyone in protest, nearly jeopardizing the entire plan. The four fighters encounter the Mad Gear gang's leader, Belger from within the group's headquarters and an intense fight soon happens. Ryu and Ken, along with Cody and Guy, are able to fight against Belger and his minions and in the end, the quartet defeats Belger and saves Jessica from the imminent danger while Haggar himself enters into the situation at the very end by breaking a door down. | ||||
26 | "Cammy Tell Me True" | Will Meugniot | May 14, 1997 | 213 |
Bison captures Delta Red in a brief battle and the British government are adamant about getting them back, as they know critical government secrets. Bison compiles doomsday codes, which are the launch protocols for every known nuclear bomb on Earth, and plans to not take over the world, but to destroy it. Guile and Chun-Li are given a package from Sagat, containing the secret of Cammy's past, as Sagat does not want the world destroyed by Bison. They infiltrate Bison's base and everyone, including a reformed Cammy, Sagat, and Delta Red team up to stop Bison and destroy his computer console with one second left on the doomsday timer. Bison dies when he is consumed by the computer. Afterward, Cammy rejects Guile's offer to return to the team, opting to go on her own path. |
Home release
ADV Films has released the complete series on Region 1 DVD. The first set, Street Fighter: Code of Honor, was released on April 13, 2003 and contains all the Season 1 episodes; while the second set, Street Fighter: Soul Powers, released on May 13, 2003, and contains all the Season 2 episodes. Both of the DVD sets are now out of print. Discotek Media will re-release the TV series in 2015. A 25th Anniversary Collector's Set of games, which includes a Blu-ray Disc of the entire TV series, was released in North America on September 18, 2012.[2]
Reception
Despite lasting two seasons—the same amount as Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm and Darkstalkers combined—Street Fighter has suffered from predominantly negative reception. 411Mania included the series in a 2010 feature titled "The 8 Worst Street Fighter Franchise Failures" on the grounds that "the animation was sub-Captain Planet, the story was contrived, and the dialogue was wretched."[3] Nick Chester of Destructoid called the show "an abomination" and "spectacularly awful."[4] 1UP.com labeled the series "really crappy" and added, "[W]hile SF fans love to quote the Street Fighter movie ... they are usually less enthusiastic about the Saturday morning cartoon."[5] The site also included the show in their list of the "Top 5 Not-So-Classic Video Game Cartoons" on the basis of the plot. "Do you remember when Guile recruited every character in the game into a secret anti-terrorist paramilitary group? I don't either."[6] While Street Fighter was omitted from GamesRadar's 2010 list of "truly horrendous" video game cartoons, it was still mentioned as "a terrible abomination that would have made our list if Darkstalkers hadn’t knocked it off."[7]
References
- ↑ "InVision Entertainment [us]". IMDb. Retrieved 2008-04-14.
- ↑ http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/interest/2012-05-23/street-fighter-25th-anniversary-set-previewed-in-video
- ↑ Boykin, Josh (April 29, 2010). "The 8 Worst Street Fighter Franchise Failures". 411Mania.com. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
- ↑ Chester, Nick (March 9, 2009). "Remix of USA Street Fighter cartoon is awful...awfully funny!". Destructoid.com. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
- ↑ "20 Things You Didn't Know about Street Fighter II". 1UP.com. 2011. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
- ↑ Sharkey, Scott. "Top 5 Not-So-Classic Video Game Cartoons". 1UP.com. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
- ↑ Winterhalter, Ryan (July 8, 2010). "Five truly horrendous TV shows based on videogames". GamesRadar. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
External links
- Episode overviews
- Street Fighter: The Animated Series at the Internet Movie Database
- Retrojunk Streetfighter intro
- See all episodes in English at Street Fighter RPG Brazil
- Street Fighter (TV series) (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
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