Here's a mix of good and bad news for Japanese toku fans. I discovered that Ultra Q, Ultraman, and Ultraseven have been removed from Shout Factory TV's online streaming service. You can still purchase the DVD sets however. Ultra Q is available for individual episode purchase at $2/ep on
Amazon Instant Video, Ultraman is
similarly available, or you can purchase the entire season for $63, or it can also be streamed through a CONtv channel subscription on top of an Amazon Prime subscription. (I am not a fan of these extra cost "channels" on Amazon Prime) Ultraseven is
also available for individual purchase.
With the DVD box sets of these going for modest rates there's really no reason to buy them episodically unless you just want a taste of what you're getting into or you're already a fan and want to own specific episodes to watch wherever and whenever.
Also in the realm of Ultra Series licensing,
the Toku channel is avaialable on some premium cable and satellite packages, and has apparently been airing Ultraman Neos, Nexus, Max, and Ultraseven X, with plans to air Ultraman Cosmos and the Ultraman Anime soon. They
also have an
Amazon Channel you can subscribe to where some of those shows that have aired on their TV channel will be uploaded starting sometime this month.
This is on top of all the shows currently available for streaming on
Crunchyroll: Ultraman Leo, 80, Gaia, Nexus, Max, Mebius (strongly recommended just FYI), Ginga, Ultraman X, and Ultraman Orb. They haven't made a formal announcement yet but I'm willing to bet that they will have the streaming rights to Ultraman Xead (or Geed, however it's supposed to be spelled) when that premieres on July 8th. We'll see.
BUT WAIT THERE'S MORE!Shout Factory TV is now streaming
Kyoryu Sentai Zyuranger,
Gosei Sentai Dairanger, and
Ninja Sentai Kakuranger, AKA the shows that were adapted into Mighty Morphin Power Rangers and Alien Rangers. There is no information on how long these shows will be available for streaming, I'd estimate a year or two before they're cycled out for newer content. Chouriki Sentai Ohranger and Gekisou Sentai Carranger are now available on DVD, with Denji Sentai Megaranger announced. The releases show no sign of stopping, although we are leaving the realm of seasons that are nostalgic to older Power Rangers fans and Megaranger will be the last series that was adapted into a Zordon Era season of Power Rangers, so we'll see how Gingaman and beyond fare. I'm optimistic, these releases didn't get by on PR hype alone.
One last bit of streaming news before I move on:
Garo is now airing on HiDive! Maybe you're familiar with the anime of the same name about golden wolf knights, now you can watch the first series of the live-action show that (eventually) kicked off a successful franchise. One caveat, it's only releasing at one episode per week, every Friday at 1 PM. At this time the first 5 episodes are viewable and the season will conclude on November 17. It is also getting an
official Blu Ray release (unsure about DVD) with the first volume releasing on October 17.
WARNING: unlike the other shows discussed so far, Garo is not suitable for children. It is for teenagers and adults. It is a mature series featuring horror elements, dark and violent themes, graphic monster designs, and some nudity and sexuality.
In less substantial news, we know now that the next Kamen Rider series will be called Kamen Rider Build. There is some very preliminary information available right now, basically a few silhouettes that have people speculating away. You can find that on your own. But this new show comes with a
shift in broadcast time for the first time since Kamen Rider Kuuga revived the franchise in 2000. Formerly the Sunday morning kids' block was comprised of an anime for young children at 7 AM, then Sentai at 7:30, Kamen Rider at 8, and an anime for young girls at 8:30, which has been the Precure series since 2004. Starting in October and presumably coinciding with the conclusion of Kamen Rider Ex-Aid and the current 7 AM show Heybot!, a news talk show will come on at 5:50 AM and run until 8:30 AM. The new kids' block schedule will now start with Precure at 8:30, then Kamen Rider at 9, Super Sentai at 9:30, and at 10 AM the block will conclude and a concert show will air. In summary, the block is being reduced by 30 minutes as one currently airing series ends and is not replaced, Precure will continue at its usual time, then Kamen Rider will air before Sentai, being shifted an hour and two hours respectively from their previous timeslots. No formal explanation for this change has been given that I can see, but my personal speculation is that it is an attempt to recover from the block's viewership decline over the last few years. Year over year, fewer people have been tuning in each week, even with some surges from show popularity and new premieres. Perhaps they want to delay the block until more children and families are awake. This may be useless information because I think I'm the only one here who watches the shows live each week, but I thought I'd put it out there anyway.
Additionally, it was announced this week that 2009/2010's Kamen Rider W
is getting a manga sequel.
Finally, at Anime Expo on Sunday, Studio Trigger held a panel where they made some special announcements. Trigger is the company responsible for the anime Kill la Kill, Little Witch Academia, and Space Patrol Luluco, and their chief creative staff worked on Gurren Lagann and Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt under GAINAX before splitting off. They announced three new projects and a sequel at their panel, with the relevant project for this thread being
SSSS Gridman. Denkou Choujin Gridman was a 1993 toku series by Tsuburaya, the company that makes Ultraman, which combined elements of Ultraman and Super Sentai-esque giant robot elements. It was adapted into 1994's Superhuman Samurai Syber Squad, which is presumably what the "SSSS" in this new series stands for or alludes to. Trigger previously animated a
Gridman short in 2014. This series will hopefully begin airing next year.
And that's a wrap!