Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight

Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight

Logo
Created by Shotaro Ishinomori
Developed by Steve Wang
Starring Stephen Lunsford
Matt Mullins
Aria Alistar
Opening theme "Kamen Rider Dragon Knight" by Cage9[1]
"DIVE INTO THE MIRROR" by Defspiral (Japanese version)
Ending theme "ANOTHER WORLD" by Kit×Len (Tatsuhisa Suzuki & Satoshi Matsuda) (Japanese version)
Composer(s) Tony Phillips
Country of origin United States
Japan
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 40[2] (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Yasuo Matsuo
Fumio Sebata
Aki Komine
Producer(s) Steve Wang
Mike Wang
Roy McAree
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) Adness Entertainment
Toei Company
Distributor MarVista Entertainment
Release
Original network The CW (The CW4Kids)[3]
Picture format 480i (SDTV)
720p (HDTV)
Original release December 13, 2008 (2008-12-13) – December 26, 2009 (2009-12-26)

Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight is an American Independent[4] television show that originally aired on The CW during its CW4Kids programming block from December 13, 2008 to December 26, 2009. It is an adaptation of the Japanese tokusatsu show Kamen Rider Ryuki and is the second Kamen Rider show to be adapted and completely produced by an American TV production company, the first being Saban's Masked Rider. It was brought to television by Steve and Michael Wang and produced by Jimmy Sprague through Adness Entertainment. The series had a sneak premiere on December 13, 2008 and began official broadcasting on January 3, 2009,[5] then continued throughout the year. Adness chose to adapt Ryuki over the other Heisei Rider shows as it has a large number of characters (Ryuki had 13 Riders in total) as well as a female Rider.[6] The CW had dropped Dragon Knight at the end of the year before its final two episodes aired in the US.[7] The final episodes were uploaded to the 4Kids TV website on December 18, 2009. In 2012, all of the episodes were removed from the 4Kids TV website.

In 2010, Dragon Knight was nominated for[8] and won[9][10] the Daytime Emmy Award for "Outstanding Stunt Coordination", a category introduced to the Daytime Emmys that year.

Plot

While searching for his missing father, Kit Taylor finds an Advent Deck—a special card deck that allows the carrier to transform into a Kamen Rider and utilize unique weapons and powers—and uses it to become Kamen Rider Dragon Knight. He butts heads with Len, who serves as Kamen Rider Wing Knight, but the pair join forces after Kit learns that an alien warlord named General Xaviax is responsible for his father's disappearance and intends on abducting him and the entire human race to gain power and rebuild Xaviax's homeworld. Xaviax tricks people on Earth into working for him by promising them whatever they want, or in some cases, by exploiting their fears and desperation. Kit wonders why Xaviax has to trick them and why he doesn't just find bad guys to do the work for him. Len tells Kit that the decks were only made for one person, and that only a person with an exact DNA match to the original Ventaran rider could use it. This is why Kit is able to use the Dragon Knight Deck: he is the exact Mirror Twin of Adam, the original Dragon Knight, who betrayed the original team. One of the new Earth Riders, Chris Ramirez (serving as Kamen Rider Sting and tricked by Xaviax into believing he is working in a special ops government program to fight alien invaders), joins forces with Kit and Len when he discovers he has been deceived, but is Vented—a process which traps defeated Riders in the "Advent Void" between dimensions forever and removes their Advent Decks—along the way. Kit vents Albert Cho, brother of Danny Cho, in retaliation. This leads to a personal hatred between Danny and Kit, as Danny seeks to avenge his brother against Xaviax's orders.

Later, Kase, a fellow survivor of Ventara like Len, joins forces with Len and Kit to fight Xaviax. In addition to training Kit as a Kamen Rider, Len and Kase tell Kit all about the twelve Riders who banded together as the protectors of Ventara—a world opposite to our own—to take Xaviax down. However, due to the unintentionally–traitorous actions of Kit's predecessor, Adam, General Xaviax vented most of the Riders. Furthermore, Xaviax continues to send out Riders who fight to eliminate Kit, Len, and the other Riders who oppose him. After Kit is Vented, Xaviax recruits Adam to once again become Dragon Knight. Unlike when Xaviax convinced Adam to 'betray' the Riders by playing to his desire to remain with the girl he loved, Xaviax now uses a combination of blackmail and using Adam's girlfriend as a hostage in order to force Adam to work for him.

Meanwhile, Len uses his Advent Deck to awaken the Advent Master Eubulon—who brings back the Ventaran Kamen Riders from the Advent Void—and Kit, who becomes Kamen Rider Onyx. He also brings back Kase, though Eubulon is forced to briefly reassign the Advent Deck to Maya Young while Kase is trapped in the Advent Void. Once Kase is better, Maya gives back the deck and the Riders head for Xaviax's base to destroy him. In the end, all the Ventaran Riders regain their decks, while all the Earth Riders (except Kit) have been released from the Advent Void & have their memories erased and returned to their normal lives, leaving Kit as the true owner of the Dragon deck after the previous owner Adam retires his deck thus officially becoming Kamen Rider Dragon Knight & the only active Earth Kamen Rider, leaving the Onyx deck inactive. But as the remnants of Xaviax's army and other dangers continue to threaten Ventara & Earth, Kit, along with Len, Kase and the other riders continue to protect both planets.[11]

Episodes

Pre-show pilot

A pre-show pilot was filmed in 2006, featuring Matt Smith as Kit and Kandis Erickson as Maya. It was produced as a proof-of-concept piece to pitch the show to Toei and American networks.[4] The pre-show pilot was eventually leaked online in December 2008.[12]

Cast

Guest stars featured Kathleen Gati as Kit's foster mother, Victoria Jackson as Aunt Grace, and T. J. Storm as Grant's master.

Production

Development

In July 2006, producer Aki Komine received special permission from Toei to produce a pre-show pilot for an American production of Kamen Rider. Komine approached filmmaker and long-time Kamen Rider fan Steve Wang and his brother Michael Wang to help develop, write, and direct a pre-show pilot. Komine subsequently obtained the rights after Toei was pleased with the pre-show pilot. The show then received independent financing from Komine and his partner Fumio Sebata.[4] According to early licensing information for the series, Adness Entertainment had intended to also film a feature-length movie for Dragon Knight.[13] In an interview, Steve Wang stated that they had written a story for a film, but that Adness was now raising money to bring over another Kamen Rider for broadcast in the US rather than a film or a second season of Dragon Knight.[14]

Writing

Komine chose to adapt Kamen Rider Ryuki for merchandising purposes due to the amount of Kamen Riders and monsters the show had. Steve employed his brother Michael and long-time friend Nathan Long to write the show. Long and the Wang brothers wrote the story and structure of the show to connect with the action/effects footage of Kamen Rider Ryuki, a technique done in previous Americanizations such as Godzilla, King of the Monsters!, Power Rangers and Saban's Masked Rider. Some key elements and minor characteristic traits from Kamen Rider Ryuki were kept but other elements had to be remade to meet the standards and practices for American children's programming. Bandai initially pushed the filmmakers to aim the show for five-year-old children but Steve wished to aim the show towards a young adult audience.[4]

Title

Toei has officially marketed the Kamen Rider franchise as "Masked Rider" for foreign markets.[15] However, Wang convinced Toei to keep the title of the show as Kamen Rider instead of Masked Rider, stating, "Growing up, I never watched ‘Masked Rider’… it was always KAMEN RIDER and seeing it called ‘Masked’ always felt strange. I’m just not a fan of using descriptions to name a character such as ‘Masked’. That’s like calling Darth Vader 'Armored Sith Lord'. It’s silly to me."[4] This decision was also made to distance the series with Saban's earlier Masked Rider TV series (an adaptation of Kamen Rider Black RX).

Filming

Akihiro “Yuji” Noguchi choreographed the action sequences of the show. Due to the show using a majority of the action/effects footage of Kamen Rider Ryuki, pre-planning was established so that the new footage matched the backgrounds and stunts of the Japanese footage however, the crew shot a majority of new footage to use less of the Japanese footage on some episodes. The suits for the Kamen Riders and monsters were re-fabricated and sent by Toei. The costume department was always on-set to have the suits camera-ready due to taking "abuse" not only from the American production but the previous Japanese production. The suit for General Xaviax was the only original design from the American production, designed by Steve Wang.[16]

International broadcasts

Dragon Knight was shown in Brazil on Rede Globo during its TV Globinho programming block before being replaced by a re-run of Dragonball in September 2009[17] (due to the early and daily exhibition); Brazil's Cartoon Network was then the only venue airing the show until it came back to TV Globinho as a part of its Saturday Morning timeblock in January, 2010. The show was aired in Mexico on Televisa[18] and in Venezuela on Venevisión. It also aired in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein on RTL II.[19] but RTL II cancelled the show after 17 episodes due to low ratings.[20] The dubbed version of the series also aired on Indonesian's free-to-air TV channel Indosiar on Sunday mornings at 6:00 am (UTC+07:00). There were plans in 2009 to air the series in Colombia on Caracol TV,[21] in Italy on Mediaset,[22][23] in Latin America on Cartoon Network,[24] and on other Cartoon Network affiliates in Southeast Asia, the Philippines, India, Pakistan, and Australia.[25][26] On the Australian digital free-to-air channel GO! the show airs on Tuesday mornings at 7:30 am.[27]

It was also broadcast in Japan on Toei's satellite subscription channel Toei Channel in the fall of 2009 as part of the Heisei Kamen Rider series 10th Anniversary project.[28] Voice actors brought onto the project include Tatsuhisa Suzuki as Kit/Kamen Rider Dragon Knight, Hiroki Takahashi as Richie Preston/Kamen Rider Incisor, Hiroshi Kamiya as Chris Ramirez/Kamen Rider Sting, Hideo Ishikawa as Vic Frasier/Kamen Rider Wrath and Takahiro Sakurai as Danny Cho/Kamen Rider Axe. The dub was then aired again on TV Asahi in 2010.

Previous actors from the Kamen Rider franchise who lend their voices to the cast include:

On TV Asahi affiliate broadcasts of the Japanese-dubbed Dragon Knight, the song "Dive into the Mirror" by defspiral, is used as the opening theme. The group also performed as Wilma-Sidr for Kamen Rider W. The song "ANOTHER WORLD", sung by Tatsuhisa Suzuki and Satoshi Matsuda under the pseudonym "Kit×Len", was used as the ending theme.

International DVD releases

In addition to airing outside the United States, Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight is available on DVD in certain countries. In Brazil, 13 DVD Volumes containing all 40 episodes were released by PlayArte Home Video even though their site only lists the first two.[29][30] In Germany, Season 1 – Vol. 1 and Season 1 – Vol. 2 were released on DVD by EuroVideo and m4e (Made For Entertainment) in February 2010,[31][32][33] but no other volumes were released due to the show's cancellation over there. On July 21, 2010, Toei released the first DVD box set of Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight containing the first 20 episodes along with a DVD release of the Special Event that took place on January 2010 in Japan. Throughout the summer of that year, Toei released 10 DVD Volumes of all 40 episodes as well as a second box set with the last 20 episodes.[34] In most parts of Asia, 10 DVD Volumes and 2 DVD box sets of all 40 episodes were released by MediaLink.[35]

Video games

Developer(s) Natsume (Nintendo DS)
Eighting (Wii)
Publisher(s) D3 Publisher
Distributor(s) Adness Entertainment
Bandai Namco Games
Platform(s) Nintendo DS
Wii
Release date(s)
  • NA: November 17, 2009

[36]

Genre(s) Fighting
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer (Wii only)

A fighting game based on the series was released for the Nintendo DS and Wii platforms by D3 Publisher on November 17, 2009.

Nintendo DS version

The Nintendo DS version of the game was developed by Natsume. The player uses Advent Cards to perform special attacks based on how much the Advent Gauge is filled up, with the Final Vent being used when all three bars are full. The Advent Gauge is charged by touching and holding the Rider until all three bars are full. The player must select two different cards before each battle, with Final Vent, the Rider's Contract Beast, and the Rider's primary weapon (sword vent or strike vent, etc.) automatically in each Rider's deck. Contrary to the show, the cards Copy Vent, Steal Vent, Freeze Vent, Confine Vent, and Strange Vent can all be used by any character.

The game's "Ventara Mode" is a series of missions where the player must fight Advent Beasts and other Riders, with a chance of unlocking them (as well as more Advent Cards) in a certain mission. Xaviax is the final boss for all players except Wrath, who fights Dragon Knight as the final boss due to Wrath being possessed by Xaviax as in the show, and defeating Xaviax yields a different game ending for each of the playable Riders. Xaviax himself becomes a playable character in "Duel Mode" and "Advent Master Mode" (an arcade-style mode) once all 13 Riders are unlocked and the player has defeated every mission (including defeating Xaviax himself) available in the "Ventara Mode" for each Rider. In addition to the 13 Riders and Xaviax, twelve of Xaviax's assorted monsters from the show can be used as playable characters in the "Duel Mode"

Despite being a fighting game, it only supports single player.

Wii version

The Wii version was developed by Eighting and uses a modified engine based on Kamen Rider: Climax Heroes for the PlayStation 2, which was also developed by Eighting. The two games use the same stages and music. Similarly, Dragon Knight and Onyx's character models were recycled from Ryuki and Ryuga's character models. Play mechanics for Dragon Knight, however, were changed significantly. The Rider Gauge (now Advent Gauge) does not charge and can only be filled by attacking the opponent without special attacks. Depending on how much the Advent Gauge is filled up, the player can perform special attacks by using an Advent Card, with the Final Vent being used when the gauge is full. The player can select any Advent Card before each fight. Contrary to the show, each Rider has access to the Advent Cards "Confine Vent," and "Return Vent," which- respectively- disable an opponent's card and counteract the effects of Confine Vent. Each Rider is allowed to have five Advent cards at once and each card can only be used once per round. Final Vent is always in a player's arsenal and cannot be removed.

Unlike the DS version, the player can only unlock the rest of the Riders in Arcade Mode and "Mirror World" modes. Xaviax is only a non-playable boss in both Arcade and "Mirror World".

The game's "Mirror World" mode is a feature not in Climax Heroes and is a series of missions where the player not only fights against other Riders in one-on-one battles, but also defeats Advent Beasts in beat 'em up-like stages, which were not featured in the Climax Heroes series until Climax Heroes OOO for the PSP and Wii, with more stages and kaijins. As the player progress, not only is he able to use other Riders, but he gains Rider Points to buy more Advent Cards in Card Mode.

Unlike the single player-only DS version, the Wii version supports up to two players.

References

  1. "Cage9 – Bio". Retrieved March 6, 2012.
  2. "FACTOID". Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  3. "「Kamen Rider Dragon Knight」全米放映決定! | 東映[テレビ]". Retrieved June 11, 2008.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Johnson, Bob. "Kamen Rider Returns to US Television!". Scifi Japan. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  5. "'Kamen Rider Dragon Knight comes to CW4Kids at the beginning of the New Year". Retrieved November 17, 2008.
  6. "仮面ライダーが米国で製作中 新たな"クール·ジャパン"? – 日経トレンディネット". Retrieved April 23, 2008.
  7. "Kamen Rider Dragon Knight officially canceled after episode 38 | gaijINside". December 12, 2009. Archived from the original on December 15, 2009. Retrieved December 12, 2009.
  8. "NOMINATIONS: 37th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards". May 12, 2010. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
  9. "WINNERS: Daytime Entertainment Creative Arts Emmy Awards (won for Outstanding Stunt Coordination)". June 26, 2010. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
  10. "「KAMEN RIDER DRAGON KNIGHT」第37回デイタイム・エミー賞において最優秀スタントコーディネーション賞を受賞! | 東映[テレビ]". June 29, 2010. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
  11. "KASW Schedule". Titan TV. Retrieved November 8, 2009.
  12. "Kamen Rider Dragon Knight". Power Rangers Gateway. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  13. "The story, as presented at the 2007 Licensing Show". Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved June 19, 2007.
  14. "Steve Wang interview of Way Above Top Secret". January 4, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  15. "Toei Official English Title List". Scifi Japan. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  16. Johnson, Bob. "Kamen Rider Dragon Knight Wins the Emmy!". Scifi Japan. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  17. "Kamen Rider Heads to Brazil". AWN. January 16, 2009. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  18. "Adness Licenses Kaman Rider Dragon Knight To Televisa". AWN. August 21, 2008. Retrieved April 19, 2009.
  19. "Kamen Rider Dragon Knight". m4e. Retrieved August 22, 2009.
  20. "Quotencheck: "Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight"". Quotenmeter.de. February 2, 2010. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  21. "Adness Entertainment: Televisa Schedules Debut Date for Kamen Rider". Brand Licensing. July 31, 2009. Retrieved August 9, 2009.
  22. "Adness Secures New Broadcast Deal for Kamen Rider". AWN. February 10, 2009. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  23. "Adness Entertainment Amps Up Sales For Kamen Rider Dragon Knight". Brand Licensing. February 10, 2009. Retrieved August 11, 2009.
  24. "Adness Strikes New Latin Sale for Kamen Rider". WorldScreen. September 2, 2009. Retrieved September 4, 2009.
  25. "Kamen Rider Dragon Knight Secures Asian Cartoon Network Slot". WorldScreen. January 6, 2010. Retrieved January 7, 2010.
  26. "Dragon Knight spreads its wings". C21Media. January 6, 2010. Retrieved January 7, 2010.
  27. http://www.yourtv.com.au/guide/event.aspx?program_id=250213&event_id=36314345&region_id=81. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  28. "仮面ライダードラゴンナイト:「龍騎」原作の米ドラマ 日本語版にオリジナルの松田悟志も(まんたんウェブ) – 毎日jp(毎日新聞)". Retrieved September 1, 2009.
  29. "Kamen Rider vol.01 – Grupo PlayArte". Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  30. "Kamen Rider vol.02 – Grupo PlayArte". Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  31. "Kamen Rider Dragon Knight – m4e – made for entertainment". Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  32. "EURVIDEO – That's Home Entertainment – Filme, Videos, DVDs, Blu-ray – Kamen Rider Dragon Knight". Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  33. "EURVIDEO – That's Home Entertainment – Filme, Videos, DVDs, Blu-ray – Kamen Rider Dragon Knight". Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  34. "DVD 「KAMEN RIDER DRAGON KNIGHT」特集". Toei Video. January 11, 2010. Archived from the original on January 24, 2010. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
  35. "MediaLink_Kamen Rider". Retrieved September 8, 2010.
  36. "Unleash Your Final Vent with All 13 Kamen Riders in the Kamen Rider Dragon Knight Video Game Available Now". Business Wire. November 17, 2009. Retrieved November 17, 2009.
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