Star Fleet: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(Power Trio ZCE)
(context needed)
Line 18: Line 18:
* [[Anyone Can Die]]: Very unusual in kids shows shown in the UK at the time, probably not so much of a big deal in its native Japan.
* [[Anyone Can Die]]: Very unusual in kids shows shown in the UK at the time, probably not so much of a big deal in its native Japan.
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: By the end of the series:{{spoiler|The good guy wins, the Big Bad is defeated, but Lamia, one of the main characters, has to sacrifice her life in order to restore the peace in the universe.}}
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: By the end of the series:{{spoiler|The good guy wins, the Big Bad is defeated, but Lamia, one of the main characters, has to sacrifice her life in order to restore the peace in the universe.}}
* [[Bug War]]
* [[Bug War]]{{context}}
* [[Combining Mecha]]
* [[Combining Mecha]]
* [[Cool Starship]]
* [[Cool Starship]]

Revision as of 08:51, 29 March 2017

Star Fleet is an early '80s Japanese Sci Fi show with character and mecha designs from Go Nagai. Known in Japan as X-Bomber, the show is notable for using miniatures and marionettes rather than cel animation, giving it a very unique look. Also diffused in France under the title Bomber X.

The year is 2999, and Earth is at peace after a long stellar war. This peace is shattered by the arrival of Commander Makara and her giant Imperial Alliance battlecruiser. After making light work of the Earth Defence Force, they approach Earth and threaten to destroy it unless the Earthlings hand over F-01. The people of Earth have no idea what this even is.

In order to counter the attack the EDF launch the experimental X-Project, consisting of the prototype battlecruiser X-Bomber and three fighter craft that can combine to form the robot Dai-X.

With the attack repelled, the crew of the X-Bomber set out to discover the secret of F-01, a secret they must discover before the Imperial Alliance do, or the universe is doomed.

Not hugely successful in its native Japan, the show was very popular in the UK. The combination of being superficially similar to the much loved Thunderbirds, and the fact that the show didn't shy away from many tropes that were mostly unknown in kids programming in Britain at the time made it a Gateway Series for British kids of a certain age.

Lots more information about the series can be found at the SFXB homepage.

Oh, and this has nothing to do with The Federation Starfleet or the Star fleet.


Tropes used in Star Fleet include: