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The "Anime Space Race" created by Battle Of The Planets
Posted: Mon Mar 30, 2026 8:55 am
by Cure DragonEagle 255
Battle Of The Planets was an iconic show but one of the biggest legacies it has that hasnt been brought up is the "Anime Space Race" it created. When it aired, at the red hot heat of Star Wars it created a bigger demand for outer space shows in the USA. The biggest of these being Star Blazers (Space Battleship Yamato) which had the company that brought it brag "Most Space shows are really repackaged and edited super hero shows (directly criticizing Battle) but our show is outright set on space!"
Re: The "Anime Space Race" created by Battle Of The Planets
Posted: Wed Apr 01, 2026 1:35 pm
by Stardust
Technically we could argue it did have to do with outer space to a degree. It dealt with an alien entity coming to our planet to take over for their planet. Messing with twins and forcing them to merge, and then hanging out for about 15 or so years waiting for said merged twins to grow up some and make the poor mutant his puppet. All while building up Galactor.
Then at the end of it all, he tells Katse see ya, I lied to you, and blasts off into outer space. Only to return and ruin some other poor child's life.
Re: The "Anime Space Race" created by Battle Of The Planets
Posted: Wed Apr 01, 2026 10:21 pm
by Cure DragonEagle 255
Stardust wrote: Wed Apr 01, 2026 1:35 pm
Technically we could argue it did have to do with outer space to a degree. It dealt with an alien entity coming to our planet to take over for their planet. Messing with twins and forcing them to merge, and then hanging out for about 15 or so years waiting for said merged twins to grow up some and make the poor mutant his puppet. All while building up Galactor.
Then at the end of it all, he tells Katse see ya, I lied to you, and blasts off into outer space. Only to return and ruin some other poor child's life.
Too bad Battle cut all of that out lol. Gatchaman has that backstory and ending but not Battle. The only addendum I would tell that Starblazers guy "There is an space alien but the reveal was cut out!"
Re: The "Anime Space Race" created by Battle Of The Planets
Posted: Thu Apr 02, 2026 9:21 am
by Stardust
True enough. At that time having an individual that carried both sex parts and can change at will was just something American minds weren't ready for apparently. Same reason why ten years later Sailor Neptune and Uranus we're dubbed as cousins.
I appreciated it when they re did Sailor Moon and not only took away the cousins crap, but had Uranus be non-binary.
Re: The "Anime Space Race" created by Battle Of The Planets
Posted: Thu Apr 09, 2026 6:02 pm
by The Other Jason
Hi Cure DragonEagle,
Cure DragonEagle 255 wrote: Mon Mar 30, 2026 8:55 am
Battle Of The Planets was an iconic show but one of the biggest legacies it has that hasnt been brought up is the "Anime Space Race" it created. When it aired, at the red hot heat of Star Wars it created a bigger demand for outer space shows in the USA. The biggest of these being Star Blazers (Space Battleship Yamato) which had the company that brought it brag "Most Space shows are really repackaged and edited super hero shows (directly criticizing
Battle) but our show is outright set on space!"
After
Star Wars re-ignited the interest in the genre, there were going to be a lot of space-based follow-up projects no matter what. But Sandy Frank’s
Battle of the Planets beat most of them to air. His unreal sales success was noticed by other North American program buyers, as well as where he got his content. It proved Japanese animation was a viable option again.
There was an earlier dubbed version of the
Yamato feature film that got syndicated to some parts of the US in 1978, It beat
Battle to air by more than half a year. But despite its content, it didn’t seem to have created much of a stir. It was offered to the US under different circumstances though, and didn’t have Sandy’s push behind it.
Without
Battle, I really wonder how long it would have taken for anyone else to take notice of things from Japan. Surely, I think Japanese studios would have pushed their space-based programming harder after
Star Wars. So something likely would have happened. But how soon? Without
Battle, would
Yamato have been chosen as the first post-
Star Wars Japanese series to be developed, or would another series have capitalized on it?
If that was an actual statement from the promoters of
Star Blazers… well, they weren’t wrong!

Re: The "Anime Space Race" created by Battle Of The Planets
Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2026 1:48 pm
by LadyMallanox
I’m not sure if the original “Starvengers” (Getter Robo G) is actually a space show or not because I’ve only watched a couple episodes of the original Getter Robo (according to Google it is), but, there’s another 70’s space anime!
The original Getter Robo was actually probably inspired by Gatchaman, it has the whole combining mecha thing (it actually utilizes this idea MORE than Gatchaman) and the 3 guys, one girl, and a little kid team build (though, it mostly focuses on the main 3 guys
and the one more like Ryu dies instead of the guy who’s more like Joe.
)
Re: The "Anime Space Race" created by Battle Of The Planets
Posted: Tue Apr 14, 2026 3:33 am
by Cure DragonEagle 255
The Other Jason wrote: Thu Apr 09, 2026 6:02 pm
Hi Cure DragonEagle,
Cure DragonEagle 255 wrote: Mon Mar 30, 2026 8:55 am
Battle Of The Planets was an iconic show but one of the biggest legacies it has that hasnt been brought up is the "Anime Space Race" it created. When it aired, at the red hot heat of Star Wars it created a bigger demand for outer space shows in the USA. The biggest of these being Star Blazers (Space Battleship Yamato) which had the company that brought it brag "Most Space shows are really repackaged and edited super hero shows (directly criticizing
Battle) but our show is outright set on space!"
After
Star Wars re-ignited the interest in the genre, there were going to be a lot of space-based follow-up projects no matter what. But Sandy Frank’s
Battle of the Planets beat most of them to air. His unreal sales success was noticed by other North American program buyers, as well as where he got his content. It proved Japanese animation was a viable option again.
There was an earlier dubbed version of the
Yamato feature film that got syndicated to some parts of the US in 1978, It beat
Battle to air by more than half a year. But despite its content, it didn’t seem to have created much of a stir. It was offered to the US under different circumstances though, and didn’t have Sandy’s push behind it.
Without
Battle, I really wonder how long it would have taken for anyone else to take notice of things from Japan. Surely, I think Japanese studios would have pushed their space-based programming harder after
Star Wars. So something likely would have happened. But how soon? Without
Battle, would
Yamato have been chosen as the first post-
Star Wars Japanese series to be developed, or would another series have capitalized on it?
If that was an actual statement from the promoters of
Star Blazers… well, they weren’t wrong!
Well, I do know Battle was absolutely iconic and I did see how well it did in ratings. But so far I havent had that "Oh wow this show is HUGE!" flex moment. Like Voltron sold all those those and defined a generation and was a number one hit, but it never occurred to me just how huge until I saw that Disneyland trip WEP did with Make A Wish. That was the moment I KNEW kids absolutely LOVED Voltron.
Also I cant get enough of your wit, Other Jason, you are great. And you are right.