|
ULTRAFORCE ANIMATED SERIES
Date: 1995
Publisher: Malibu Comics
Description
George Pérez (who was the artist on ULTRAFORCE) did the animated series' design and layouts.
Cover scan and information from TV Tome &
Yesterdayland
Malibu Comics > Ultraforce >
|
Recent Announcements
-
George Perez to benefit Linda Blair's charity, WorldHeart Foundation
From Vu
WORLDHEART FOUNDATION AUCTION (Clan McDonald Comics) (06 Mar 2021)
Auction
You can win a George Perez custom pencil/ink art, to benefit Linda Blair's animal rescue organization, WorldHeart Foundation. Minimum bid is $1,000. Auction starts March 6, 2021... Unfortunately details are hidden behind a private Clan McDonald's Facebook page. Details from theconventioncollective.com: Thanks to The Artist’s Choice a LOT of comic book artists will be doing 11×17 (A3) commissions with all proceeds benefiting Linda Blair’s WorldHeart Foundation. Some of the artists will include such notable names as Bill Sienkiewicz, Walt Simonson, John Romita Jr., Bob Layton, David Finch, and many more artists. The full list is below along with the type ...
Posted Feb 28, 2021, 4:41 PM by Vu Nguyen
|
Related
ULTRAFORCE ANIMATED SERIES
(1995)
Malibu Comics
|
|
>>>
January 19, 2003 | UltraForce Cartoon (1995) |
|
From TV Tome &
Yesterdayland
ULTRAFORCE CARTOON Synopsis
Malibu Comics' UltraForce had a slightly different premise than
many of its comic book competitors. Instead of one guy here getting bit
by a radioactive spider, another guy there using his billions to avenge
his parents’ deaths, and a handful of others building elaborate gizmos
to take over the world, suppose hundreds of people suddenly,
unexplainably got super powers all at once? Naturally, some of them
would use these powers for evil, and ordinary humans would live in fear.
Like its comic predecessor, the animated UltraForce detailed what
happened next. Faced with hundreds of evil “Ultras” and a panicky
population, reluctant hero Hardcase banded together his own group of
Ultras to fight crime and restore order. Aside from its bright blonde
leader, Ultraforce included Prime, Prototype, Topaz, Contrary,
and the scary-looking Ghoul. This handful of heroes fought the likes of
Rune, Lord Pumpkin, Sludge, and several others, gradually calming down
the human populace.
UltraForce debuted in syndication during the second season of the
two-hour package Amazin’ Adventures II, but despite its clever premise
and techno theme song ("Ultrafooooorce!!"), the show ran for only
thirteen original episodes. After one year in syndication, the reruns
moved to cable's USA Network for another season.
Release History
1995 syndicated
Episode # |
Prod # |
Original
Air Date |
|
Episode Title |
Season 1 |
1. |
1-1 |
256-101 |
15-Oct-1995 |
|
Wrack & Rune |
2. |
1-2 |
256-102 |
22-Oct-1995 |
|
Prime Time (1) |
3. |
1-3 |
256-103 |
29-Oct-1995 |
|
The Stuff of Heroes (2) |
4. |
1-4 |
256-104 |
05-Nov-1995 |
|
Armageddon (3) |
5. |
1-5 |
256-107 |
12-Nov-1995 |
|
Night and the Nightman |
6. |
1-6 |
256-105 |
19-Nov-1995 |
|
Lord Pumpkin's Pie |
7. |
1-7 |
256-106 |
|
|
You Can't Go Home Again |
8. |
1-8 |
256-110 |
26-Nov-1995 |
|
Pump It Up |
9. |
1-9 |
256-108 |
03-Dec-1995 |
|
Prime Ambition |
10. |
1-10 |
256-109 |
10-Dec-1995 |
|
A Veiled Threat |
11. |
1-11 |
256-111 |
17-Dec-1995 |
|
Primal Scream |
12. |
1-12 |
256-112 |
24-Dec-1995 |
|
Everything That Rises Must Converge |
13. |
1-13 |
256-113 |
31-Dec-1995 |
|
Jumpin' at the Boneyard
|
|
|
|