The New Adventures of Zorro (1997 TV series)

For the 1981 series see The New Adventures of Zorro (1981 TV series)

The New Adventures of Zorro (1997)
Genre Animation
Action
Adventure
Science fantasy
Written by Doug Molitor
Jeffrey Scott
David Wise
Directed by Darren Campbell
Voices of Michael Gough
Jeannie Elias
Earl Boen
Tony Pope
Pat Fraley
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of episodes 26
Production
Producer(s) Fred Wolf
Production company(s) Warner Bros. International Television
Fred Wolf Films Dublin
Zorro Productions, Inc.
Carrignton Productions International
Harvest Entertainment
Release
Original network Syndication
Original release 1997 – 1998

The New Adventures of Zorro was the third animated television series to feature the character of Zorro. The show was on the air for one season, in 1997.

Plot

The show starred Michael Gough as Zorro/Diego Dela Vega, with Earl Boen as Captain Montecero, the lead villain. Pat Fraley played Diego's father Don Alejandro Dela Vega and Tony Pope was the bumbling Sergeant Garcia who was popularized by Henry Calvin on the 1950s Disney live-action series. This series added elements of science fiction and fantasy to the Zorro legend, with the hero battling supervillains who used steampunk gadgets or magic. Zorro employed similar equipment designed by his mute manservant Bernardo, and was aided by the magic of the Native American wise woman Grey Owl.

Episodes

Season 1:

  1. "To Catch a Fox" (September 20, 1997) - Zorro is caught in the middle when he must prevent the corrupt Montecero from using pilfered blasting powder, while Isabella sets out to learn the masked vigilante's true identity.
  2. "Sting of the Serpent God" (September 27, 1997) - Zorro must prevent Montecero from stealing gold belonging to a Mayan.
  3. "Night of the Tolchen" (October 4, 1997) - Sergeant Garcia and his men accidentally release the Tolchen when they take his totem.
  4. "The Beast Within" (October 11, 1997) - Zorro must save a young boy from a curse that turns him into a monster.
  5. "The Enforcer" (October 18, 1997) - Montecero hires a cyborg hit man to kill Zorro.
  6. "Two Zorros Are Better than One" (October 25, 1997)
  7. "Tar Pit Terror" (November 1, 1997)
  8. "A King's Ransom" (November 8, 1997) - Don Alejandro is kidnapped by a masked man, who is revealed to be a renegade soldier he once stopped from overthrowing the king of Spain.
  9. "The Pirates of San Pedro" (November 15, 1997)
  10. "The Anti Zorro" (November 22, 1997)
  11. "Valley of the Manbeast" (November 29, 1997)
  12. "The Iron Man" (December 12, 1997)

Season 2:

  1. "The Samurai and the Sorcerer" (September 19, 1998)
  2. "The Poison Pen" (September 26, 1998)
  3. "Vision of Darkness" (October 3, 1998)-In the vein of It's a Wonderful Life, Zorro is shown what life would be like without him if he had never taken his path in life.
  4. "The Case of the Masked Marauder" (October 10, 1998)
  5. "Return of the Conquistadors" (October 17, 1998)
  6. "The Hunter" (October 24, 1998)
  7. "The Raiding Party" (October 31, 1998)
  8. "The Four Horsemen" (November 7, 1998)
  9. "The Nightmare Express" (November 14, 1998)
  10. "The Ice Monster Cometh" (November 21, 1998)
  11. "The Secret of El Zorro" (November 28, 1998)
  12. "The Nordic Quest" (December 5, 1998)
  13. "Adios, Mi Capitan" (December 12, 1998)

Cast

Additional voices

Crew

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.