I’ll just leave this right here.
Author: Greg Tyler
Where to Find Voltron Programs: October 2017
In response to a tweet asking how to watch Voltron: Defender of the Universe programs, here is a current guide to how to get more Voltron TV in your life.
Voltron: Defender of the Universe
- Select episodes can be watched on the official Voltron YouTube channel (Link: https://www.youtube.com/user/WEP/).
- All episodes are viewable on Amazon Video (Link: https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dinstant-video&field-keywords=voltron)
- All episodes are viewable on iTunes (Link: https://www.apple.com/itunes/).
- Since March 2017, twelve episodes have been available on Netflix (Link: https://www.netflix.com/Kids/search?q=voltron%2084) as part of a “series” called Voltron 84. Each episode is introduced by a cast or crew member from Voltron: Legendary Defender. These episodes are in no particular sequence, as I described here: https://lionsandpilotsandbots.com/2017/03/26/voltron-84-survival-guide/
- All episodes were also released on now out-of-print DVDs.
Voltron: The Third Dimension
- Select episodes can be watched for free on the official Voltron YouTube channel (Link: https://www.youtube.com/user/WEP/).
- All episodes are viewable on Amazon Video (Link: https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dinstant-video&field-keywords=voltron)
- All episodes are viewable on iTunes (Link: https://www.apple.com/itunes/).
Voltron Force
- Every episode can be watched for free in a playlist on the official Voltron YouTube channel (Link: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC2AE7309029E7CD6).
- Voltron Force is occasionally available on Netflix, although it’s not available as of this writing.
- All episodes were also released on now out-of-print DVDs which were sold only in Australia.
Voltron: Legendary Defender
- All episodes of Voltron: Legendary Defender are available on Netflix (Link: https://www.netflix.com/Kids/search?q=voltron%20legendary%20defender).
- The first two seasons are also available on Amazon Video and iTunes. (Thanks to @vldnews for the reminder!)
Beast King Golion
- All episodes can be watched for free on Crunchyroll (Link: http://www.crunchyroll.com/go-lion) (Thanks to @JSM01L for the reminder!)
- Select episodes can be watched for free in a playlist on the official Voltron YouTube channel (Link: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8a43NIMO5q-TZsmqVoklqk_-nbcUrFiy).
- All episodes were also released on now out-of-print DVDs.
Armored Fleet Dairugger XV
- As of this writing, the only way to watch Armored Fleet Dairugger XV is through now out-of-print DVDs.
Voltron Legendary Defender Season Four Is Now on Netflix!
The six-episode fourth season of DreamWorks Voltron Legendary Defender is now available on Netflix!
Link: https://www.netflix.com/Kids/search?q=voltron%20legendary%20defender
Queen Ariella And the Voltron Lions (Voltron: The Third Dimension)
Each Voltron television program tells a different tale about the origin of Voltron and Princess Allura’s royal lineage. In Voltron: The Third Dimension, Allura and her father, King Alfor, are descendants of a fascinating and unique character: Queen Ariella. Ariella had a special connection with the Voltron Lions.
In the episode “The Troika Moons,” the Galaxy Garrison destroys the Voltron Lions. Yes, that happens! Just after the Lions are destroyed, a Lion-colored beam of light shoots from each destroyed Lion up to the sky. Then there is a flash of light, and the beams disappear and are replaced by a swarm of five Lion-colored “spheres” of light. The lights flicker and vanish.
In the next episode, “Queen Ariella,” Coran takes Allura to a previously unseen room near the thousand-year-old Lion Archive beneath the Castle of Lions. The chamber was that of Queen Ariella. Coran explains to Allura that Ariella was the first queen of Arus, and that the Castle of Lions had been built during her reign. After Allura and Coran enter Ariella’s chamber, Ariella’s ghost appears before them.
Portrayed by legendary voice actor Tress MacNeille, Queen Ariella explains some of the mysterious history of Planet Arus, and we are treated to images that accompany Ariella’s tale. Ariella had come to Arus in an imperial spacecraft from what Ariella called “the farthest reaches of the universe.” An explosion on the ship forced the vessel to crash-land on Arus. The only survivor of the crash was Ariella, then an infant, who was ejected in an escape pod that landed safely in a forest and near the crash site.
A Green Lion – a living, breathing, mane-less, green lion, whom Ariella described as “the lion of life” – approached the escape pod. Other organic lions followed: Yellow Lion, “the lion of the earth;” Red Lion, “the lion of fire;” Blue Lion, “the lion of water;” and Black Lion, “the lion of air and space.”
The lions were gentle, and they raised the baby Ariella to adulthood. Ariella learned “the way of the lion,” which was “the way of the heart.” When Ariella mentions to Allura that she had learned to fly, a flashback showed her sitting on the back of Yellow Lion as it flew in the air. Eventually Ariella became the queen and the protector of Arus’ people, who helped her to build the Castle of Lions. Ariella dedicated the Castle of Lions to her five lion companions, and the lions vowed that they would forever protect the Castle and Arus’ royal line.
Ariella’s ghost tells Allura that the lions have always been with Allura. When Allura speaks with her heart, the lions hear her. Ariella then raises her arms, and five glowing spheres appear – seemingly the spheres that had exited the wreckage of the destroyed Voltron Lions in the previous episode. The spheres then change into five, semitransparent lions. These are the spirits of the lions that had saved Ariella after she had crashed to Arus one thousand years ago. Inside each lion spirit is a glowing point of light where the heart would be. Surrounded by the lion spirits, Allura states that she had always felt that the lion spirits existed, but she had not spoken of it before.
In the following episode, “The Voltron Force Strikes Back,” Ariella’s ghost reiterates to Allura that the lion spirits have always been with her, and they still are. The lion spirits reappear once more and stand around Allura. Ariella tells Allura that the lion spirits had guided Allura in the way of the lion. We then see images from Allura’s childhood as Ariella tells Allura that the lion spirits were with her when she was a young girl, alone, following the destruction of the Castle of Lions.
The lion spirits were also with her when she trained to become a Galaxy Alliance pilot. We see images of the young girl Allura, sitting in the shuttle that would take the grown-up Allura to Blue Lion, and we then see the Blue Voltron Lion ascending past the rebuilt Castle of Lions and all the way to space, followed by blue lion spirit. Ariella’s ghost then states once more that the lions have pledged to protect Arus’ royal line in times of need – and that Allura is of that royal line.
At that moment, the rest of the Voltron Force enters Ariella’s chamber. Ariella’s ghost and the five lion spirits disappear, leaving Allura to wonder if she had imagined them. Lotor contacts the Castle and tells Coran that he has launched an attack fleet that will arrive at Arus in five minutes. If Allura doesn’t agree to marry him, she’ll be killed in the attack. Allura hears a lion roar, and she states that she can feel the presence of the lion spirits. She runs to the top of the Castle and calls to the lions. Allura then sees five beams of colored light emanate from the ground beyond the Castle mote and arc back down to the dens of the Voltron Lions. Allura hears Ariella’s voice saying that they have never let Allura down. The rest of the Voltron Force emerges on the roof, and the five pilots observe something happening at each den. The Voltron Lions have been “resurrected,” and they exit their dens, flying on their own for the first time.
Allura tells the rest of the team that, while the Voltron Lions’ bodies had been destroyed, their spirits are indestructible. The lion spirits had created the Voltron Lions long ago, and the lion spirits had created them again. After the Voltron Lions approach the Castle, and Allura tells the Lions to meet them at the nearby airfield. At the airfield, the pilots enter their Lions, insert their keys into the Lions, and launch into action once more.
This is all that we learn of Queen Ariella and her part in the legacy of Voltron, but our glimpse at the back story of the first queen of Arus, and the Voltron Lions, is a fascinating one!
Voltron Legendary Defender Official Season Four Trailer
Today Entertainment Weekly (website) premiered the official trailer to the fourth season of Voltron Legendary Defender!
Voltron Legendary Defender Bedding Collection Now Available
Now you can rest like a lion with Voltron Legendary Defender bedding items, which have recently been listed on Target’s website.
Target listing: https://www.target.com/p/voltron-bedding-collection-universal-174/-/A-52707598#lnk=newtab
Let’s Voltron Reviews Voltron Legendary Defender Shiro, Keith, Lance, Cannon Fire Voltron Action Figures
Just posted to the Let’s Voltron podcast’s YouTube channel (link) is a video review of four new Voltron Legendary Defender basic action figures: Shiro, Keith, Lance, and Cannon Fire Voltron! I had fun making this video, and I hope you enjoy watching it! And happy hunting for these new action figures!
Watch the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zacy5t4pVu0
Voltron Legendary Defender Vlog 1: Coran
The DreamWorksTV YouTube channel (link) has released its first “Voltron Vlog,” by none other than Coran from Voltron Legendary Defender!
Out of Order: Voltron vs. Golion and Dairugger
When I first watched Voltron: Defender of the Universe in weekday syndication between 1984 and 1986, I had no idea that the show had been adapted from the anime programs Beast King Golion and Armored Fleet Dairugger XV. I first learned this in the late 1980s, in an issue of Starlog magazine, in an article about what was then called “Japanimation.”
When Media Blasters released the Voltron: Defender of the Universe DVD box sets, I noticed something as I thumbed through the episode synopses that had been packaged in the box sets: the episode numbers and the original air dates often seemed… off. For example, Lion Force episode eight, “The Stolen Lion,” originally aired eight days after episode seven, “The Lion Has New Claws.” This seemed odd, since the program ran in weekday syndication. Barring reruns, I would expect two consecutive episodes to air no more than three days apart — the earlier episode airing on a Friday, and the later episode airing on the following Monday.
But things got even weirder. Lion Force episode 14, “Yurak Gets His Pink Slip,” originally aired ten days before episode 13, “The Witch Gets a Facelift.”
As a Star Trek fan, I knew that many episodes of the 1960s television series had originally aired out of production sequence. The first episode to air, “The Man Trap,” was the eighth episode to have been produced. Still, with Voltron: Defender of the Universe having been adapted from two already produced programs, it seemed strange that its episodes would have been adapted out of sequence.
It turns out that the episode numbers in the Voltron DVD box sets correspond to the original air date sequences of the original anime programs. Episodes 1-52 correspond to episodes 1-52, respectively, of Beast King Golion. Episodes 73-124 correspond to episodes 1-52, respectively, of Armored Fleet Dairugger XV. (Episodes 53-72 are the 20 Lion Force episodes that had been animated specifically for Voltron. The “Fleet of Doom” feature episode was sold as a separate DVD.)
For this article, I decided to see just how out of order Voltron: Defender of the Universe is with respect to Beast King Golion and Armored Fleet Dairugger XV.
Here is a comparison of the original air date sequence of all 52 Golion episodes with the original air date sequence of the first 52 Lion Force Voltron episodes.
As you can see…
- The first eleven Lion Force Voltron episodes originally aired in the same order as the corresponding Golion episodes.
- The last three Lion Force Voltron episodes originally aired in the same order as the corresponding Golion episodes.
- The episodes between the first eleven and the last three are a jumbled mess!
Here is a comparison of the original air date sequence of all 52 Dairugger episodes with the original air date sequence of all 52 Vehicle Team Voltron episodes.
From this graph, we can see that…
- Even the first several Vehicle Team Voltron episodes are out of sequence with respect to Dairugger.
- The only long stretch of Dairugger-sequenced Vehicle Team Voltron episodes are episodes 42-51, which correspond to Dairugger episodes 43-52, respectively.
- The final Vehicle Team Voltron episode was the 15th episode of Dairugger!
Even this isn’t the whole story of how out of order Voltron was compared to the original anime programs. Let’s put all of the data together, but first, let’s keep in mind that:
- The first 52 Lion Force episodes of Voltron: Defender of the Universe are considered the program’s “first season.”
- The 52 Vehicle Team episodes are considered the “second season.”
- The “extra 20” Lion Force episodes — that is, the episodes that were animated specifically for Voltron — are considered the “third season.”
- “Fleet of Doom,” the feature-length, animated-for-Voltron episode that often aired in two parts, is generally considered an “extra” episode. (It is not shown in the chart below.)
The first several Vehicle Team episodes originally aired scattered throughout the first 52 Lion Force episodes! It’s likely that these Vehicle Team episodes were repeated again at the beginning of the long stretch of Vehicle Team episodes. There’s a large enough time gap after the first 52 Lion Force episodes for this to have occurred. Still, this is kind of strange.
So what happened? Here is my guess:
- The first several Voltron episodes to be produced were Vehicle Team episodes. This is only speculation, but the pilot episode screened at the NAB conference in February 1984 featured Vehicle Team Voltron (then called Voltron I), and much of the early Voltron marketing materials featured only Vehicle Team Voltron.
- Sometime before Voltron debuted on television in September 1984, someone at World Events Productions decided that the Lion Force episodes adapted from Golion were better than the Vehicle Team episodes. A decision was made to air the Lion Force episodes first.
- After several Vehicle Team episodes of Voltron had been produced, the show makers transitioned into producing all 52 Lion Force episodes adapted from Golion.
- When Voltron premiered in September 1984, Lion Force episodes were broadcast.
- Unable to produce Lion Force episodes quickly enough to keep up with weekday airings, occasional, already completed Vehicle Team episodes were broadcast from time to time.
- After production of all 52 Lion Force episodes adapted from Golion had been completed, the remaining Vehicle Team episodes were produced.
- The Vehicle Team “batch” of episodes aired first with reruns of the already aired Vehicle Team episodes, followed by the ones that had not yet aired.
- After production of all 52 Vehicle Team episodes had been completed, 20 all-new Lion Force episodes, plus the “Fleet of Doom” special, were produced.
- After all of the Vehicle Team episodes had aired, the all-new Lion Force episodes, plus “Fleet of Doom,” were broadcast.
As for why the Voltron episodes aired out of sequence relative to Golion and Dairugger, I suspect the writers did not recognize the serialized nature of the anime programs. This is understandable, given the frantic pace of production, coupled with the anime episodes being in Japanese and lacking English subtitles. In addition, the Voltron episodes might not have been aired in the order in which they had been written or completed. Since the show’s original head writer, Jameson Brewer, died in 2003, we will likely never know for certain.
What are the take-aways from all this? First, it takes a lot of time to produce an animated television series — even one for which the animation was pre-produced. Second, creative and logistical decisions are made at all points in the production process. Third, the popularity of Voltron in the 1980s, and even today, is a testament to the dedication and ability of everyone who worked on Voltron, Golion, and Dairugger. Finally, it took a bit of work to be a Voltron fan in the 1980s, but I already wrote about that, didn’t I?
Ausfans Radio Network Interview with Greg Tyler
Yours truly was recently interviewed by Alan R. Ryan on Ausfans Radio Network!
Check out the minicast interview here: http://ausfansradionetwork.podbean.com/e/ausfans-radio-minicast-voltron-catch-up-with-gregory-tyler/
Check out Ausfans Radio Network here: https://ausfansradionetwork.podbean.com/
Thanks to Alan for the fun and impromptu conversation! We must do it again sometime!