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Revision as of 10:55, 1 February 2018
Tsuburaya Productions (円谷プロダクションTsuburaya Purodakushon[1]) is a Japanese special effects studio founded in 1963 by special effects wizard Eiji Tsuburaya and was run by his family, until October 2007, when the family sold the company to advertising agency TYO Inc. The studio is best known for producing the original Ultraman TV series, as well as the Ultra Series. Since 2007, the Head Office has been located in Hachimanyama, Setagaya Tokyo.
History
First established in 1963, it was responsible for the creation of such classic shows as Ultraman (and its many sequels), Kaiju Booska and many other spectacular Tokusatsu family/children's shows.
The company's current logo was originally the arrow-like logo from their 1968 TV series, Mighty Jack, designed by that show's art director, Tohru "Tohl" Narita.
The company, when first formed in 1963, was called Tsuburaya Special Effects Productions
. In 1968, Toho Company Ltd. forced the company to change the name to just "Tsuburaya Productions," not only because they thought Eiji acted as though only he can do special effects, but they also felt that his own TV shows were becoming a strong competition to the movies he was doing for them. Although Eiji had strong political power at Toho, he and the company were at odds with each other until his death in 1970.Their more recent work includes the "Ultra N-Project" (Ultraman the Next and Ultraman Nexus) and Bio Planet WoO, based loosely on an unused concept which was planned before the production of Ultra Q, but never filmed.
World Record
In 2001 Tsuburaya's Ultra Series was awarded by the Guinness Book of World Records for the most amount of television spin offs. In 2013, the record has continued to be upheld for a total of 12 years. In the 2014 edition of the book, the Ultra Series was still listed as having the world record for the most spin-offs. The certification counts the 27 spin off series which were made at that time. This excludes remakes like Heisei Ultra Seven, one off specials (movies), summaries and home releases. Although technically many of the shows were not originally meant to be sequels, they were retconned to be in a single multiverse.
Spin off Series Listed in the Record
- Ultraseven (1967)
- Ultra Fight (1970)
- Return of Ultraman (1971)
- Ultraman Ace (1972)
- Redman (1972)
- Ultraman Taro (1973)
- Ultraman Leo (1974)
- The★Ultraman (1979)
- Ultraman 80 (1980)
- Andro Melos (1983)
- Ultraman Kids proverb story (1986)
- Ultraman Kids mother asked the 30 million light years (1991)
- Ultraman Tiga (1996)
- Ultraman Dyna (1997)
- Ultraman Gaia (1998)
- Ultraman Cosmos (2001)
- Ultraman Boy's Ultra Coliseum (2003)
- Ultraman Nexus (2004)
- Ultraman Max (2005)
- Ultraman Mebius (2006)
- Ultraseven X (2007)
- Ultra Galaxy Mega Monster Battle (2007)
- Kanegon KANEGON (2008)
- Ultra Galaxy Mega Monster Battle: Never Ending Odyssey (2008)
- Ultraman Retsuden (2011)
- Ultra Zone (2011)
- Ultraman Ginga (2013)
Non-Ultra Series
These are all of the series Tsuburaya has produced that isnt the Ultra Series and is a form of tokusatsu.
- Kaiju Booska (November 1966 - September 1967)
- Mighty Jack (April 1968 - June 1968)
- Fight! Mighty Jack (July 1968 - December 1968)
- Kaiki Daisakusen (September 1968 - March 1969)
- Chibira-kun (March 1970 - September 1971)
- Mirrorman (December 1971 - November 1972)
- Redman (April 1972 - October 1972)
- Triple Fighter (July 1972 - December 1972)
- 10-4, 10-10 (July 1972 - December 1972)
- Fireman (January 1973 - July 1973)
- Kyofu Gekijo Unbalance (January 1973 - April 1973)
- Jumborg Ace (January 1973 - December 1973)
- Mirror Fight (April 1974 - September 1974)
- Army of the Apes (October 1974 - March 1975)
- Pro-Wres no Hoshi Azteckaiser (October 1976 - March 1977)
- Dinosaur Expedition Born Free (October 1976 - March 1977)
- Dinosaur Great War Izenborg (October 1977 - June 1978)
- Star Wolf (April 1978 - September 1978)
- Dinosaur Squadron Koseidon (July 1978 - June 1979)
- Bokura Yakyu Detective Team (April 1980 - September 1980)
- Andro Melos (February 1983 - April 1983)
- Denkou Choujin Gridman (April 1993 - January 1994)
- Superhuman Samurai Syber-Squad (September 1994 – April 1995) (co-production with DiC Entertainment)
- Booska! Booska! (October 1999 - June 2000)
- Bio Planet WoO (April 2006 - August 2006)
Buyout from TYO
In October 2007, due to rising production costs, the Tsuburaya family sold the company to Japanese advertising agency TYO Inc., which now has an 80% stake in the company, with Tsuburaya itself owning 68%. Bandai, the main licensor of merchandise for the Ultra Series, acquired a 33% stake. As a result, the old Kinuta Office used by Tsuburaya as its Head Office has been razed, and the company has moved to newer facilities. Many fans felt this to be the end of an era. Kazuo Tsuburaya, Eiji's grandson, is staying with the company on its board of directors.
Gallery
Photos
Videos
References
- ^ a b The Official Tsuburaya Productions English Webpage company profile
- ^ If only 'Ultraman' was here to stop the wrecking ball Asahi Shimbun February 7, 2008 (English website)
- ^ 円谷プロの“聖地”にお別れ MSNSankei news February 6, 2008 (Japanese website)
- ^ Japanese book: The Man Called the "God of Special Effects" 特撮の神様と呼ばれた男 ISBN 4-901006-21-5
- ^ Japanese book: Eiji Tsuburaya: The Inheritance Left in the Japanese Film World 円谷英二 日本映画界に残した遺産 ISBN 4-09-681421-0
- ^ Sci-Fi Japan: Tsuburaya Productions Sold