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Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot: The Complete Series

4.8 out of 5 stars 823 ratings
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Genre Science Fiction & Fantasy/Television
Format Multiple Formats, Color, NTSC
Contributor Michio Konishi, Toshiyuki Tsuchiyama, Bobbie Byers, Katsuhiko Taguchi, Itaru Orita, Akio Ito, Koichi Chiba, Mitsonobu Kaneko See more
Language English
Number Of Discs 4
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Product Description

Product Description

"Robot, attack! Robot, destroy!" These commands launched a thousand sci-fi fantasies for budding fans of the genre, just as they brought Johnny Sokko's Giant Robot into imminent battle action! Under the voice control of young Johnny Sokko, the massive, flying metal behemoth would bring his fiery breath, laser eyes, finger-launched missiles and, above all, his physical strength into battle with countless menacing monsters bent on destroying the Earth! This epic fantasy series from Toei Studios aired from 1967–1968 and garnered even more fans in after-school reruns throughout the 70s. Collected here for the first time on DVD are all 26 episodes of explosive kaiju battles, nefarious alien takeover plots and mind-blowing heroics from jet-packed Johnny Sokko and his equally airborne friend and protector: Giant Robot!

Bonus Content:
Includes: 24 Page Booklet Featuring In-Depth Essay by Author August Ragone

Amazon.com

A megaton punch of metal-plated, missile-shooting, monster-bashing retro nostalgia awaits former '70s kidvid fans and new viewers alike in Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot, which compiles all 26 episodes of the tokusatsu classic's presentation on American TV. Conceived by Toei Company producer Toru Hirayama (Kamen Rider, Super Sentai Series) and manga artist Mitsuteru Yokoyama, Giant Robo, as the series was known in Japan during its 1967-1968 network run, offered an appealing spin on the premise of Yokoyama's previous creation, Tetsujin 28-go/Gigantor, via a loophole clause that granted complete control over the titular, pharaoh-esque robot to the first person to speak into its remote-control device. That duty falls to young Daisaku Kusama/Johnny Sokko (Mitsunobu Kaneko), who is subsequently inducted into the secret peacekeeping organization Unicorn in order to thwart the Lovecraftian alien Emperor Guillotine, who employs an army of monsters in his plans for world domination. What follows is a heady pop-culture sugar rush that combines Ultraman-style giant monster brawls with Bondian spy thrills and a massive dose of adolescent wish fulfillment as Johnny and Giant Robot take on not only Guillotine's human henchmen, the Gargoyle Gang, but also an increasingly bizarre (even by tokusatsu standards) menagerie of creatures, from the colossal eyeball known as Opticon to acid-spouting starfish Scalion, a huge metal claw, an oversize jawbone with eyes, a competing giant robot called Cleopat, and the blue-faced space vampire Drakulon (not to be confused with another foe, the piscine Dracolon).

The action is frantic and plentiful, and the silent but stalwart Giant Robot makes for an ideal fantasy playmate/hero, which should increase the show's appeal to modern younger viewers (though parents should be aware that there is also an awful lot of gunplay between Unicorn and Gargoyle agents, with the latter frequently ending up dead). Older fans who remember the series from syndicated broadcasts in the '70s and '80s, as well as airings of the compilation film Voyage into Space (which is unfortunately not included in this set), will undoubtedly be pleased to have the entire series run in one DVD set after being unavailable for years outside of grey market or online sources. The individual episodes retain much of the show's vibrant color palette (though the title sequences show considerable wear) as well as an opening logo from Orion Pictures, which acquired the series through its purchase of the American International Pictures library. There may be some consternation over the fact that the four-disc set includes only the English-dubbed version of the series presented by American International Television and not the original Japanese-language edition, but having the show in any format should be reward enough for most viewers. The set also includes typically exhaustive liner notes by Japanese fantasy film and television expert August Ragone, who provides detailed information on the series' creation as well as an episode guide and a rare interview with the late Kaneko. --Paul Gaita

Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 1.33:1
  • MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ NR (Not Rated)
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.72 ounces
  • Item model number ‏ : ‎ 26346755
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Michio Konishi, Itaru Orita, Katsuhiko Taguchi
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ Multiple Formats, Color, NTSC
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 11 hours
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ September 1, 2020
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Mitsonobu Kaneko, Toshiyuki Tsuchiyama, Koichi Chiba, Akio Ito, Bobbie Byers
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ SHOUT! FACTORY
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00AJXO3ZQ
  • Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ USA
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 4
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 out of 5 stars 823 ratings

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
823 global ratings

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I ALWAYS LOVED THIS MOVIE BY THE JAPAN MOVIE MAKERS FROM THE 60'S ERA. THE GIANT ROBOT IS A ICON MASTER PIECE BY THE JAPAN CULTURE!. (AWESOME MOVIE!).
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2014
    Since there are currently no other reviews I added a little synopsis of each show.(Seems I was wrong there are 46 other reviews, well enjoy the synopsis) Now onto the good stuff.

    There are 26 episodes on 4 DVD's, there are no sound options but all the episodes are in English. Picture and sound quality are actually better than I remember in the 70's.

    As an added benefit there is a little booklet included with the DVD's

    Booklet includes~~

    1) A boy and his Giant Robot~~ The Making of Johnny Sokko and his Flying Robot

    2) Johnny Sokko Speaks~~ Mitsunobu Kaneko talks about his days with Giant Robo

    3) Episode Guide

    1) Dracolon, The Great Sea Monster
    Shipwrecked, Daisaku (Johnny Sokko) and Juro Minami (an agent for Unicorn) drift to an island and are captured by the
    BF gang. The island is in fact, a base of the B.F. gang. They happen to discover a huge robot while they are running away.

    2) Nucleon, The Magic Globe
    Emperor Guillotine, king of BF syndicate, plans to take back Giant Robot and to arrest Daisaku (Johhny Sokko), the only
    one that can give orders to the robot. He sends a huge magic metal globe called Glober to the earth.

    3) Gargoyle Vine, A Space Plant
    Under Emperor Guillotine's orders, Dr. Over, a leading member of BF Syndicate, comes to the earth with a fossil of a
    devilish space plant called Satan Rose.

    4) Monster Ligon-Tyrox, A Strange Monster
    Emperor Guillotine sends Dr. Over and Ligon, a new weapon in the shape of a pyramid, to the earth. By operating
    Ligon, Over destroys oil fields in Araia one after another.

    5) The Gigantic Claw
    Dr. Tadokora develops QQV, a super-excellent transparent metal. He tests it and QQV endures all the attacks of Giant
    Robot. BF gang watch the experiments using TV cameras and try to rob the specifications of QQV.

    6) Dragon, the Ninja Monster
    A monster called Dorogon swallows a jet plane of the Commonwealth of Sordia when it is flying and an atomic submarine
    of Furenkov Republic when it is under the sea.

    7) Scanlon, the Starfish Monster
    There is the decoding office of the Japanese Branch of Unicorn Organization in the basement of a lighthouse on the coast
    of the Pacific Ocean.

    8) Challenge of the Two-Headed Monster
    Daisaku and Minami happen to help a one-eyes man BF members are chasing. According to the man's story, they are
    trying to kill him as a traitor because he became frightened by the inhumanity of the syndicate and quit it.

    9) Tentaclonn, an Electric Monster
    Emperor Guillotine gives Dr. Over a spaceship equipped with all kinds of scientific weapons. After landing at the earth,
    Over sends an electric monster called Sparky to the ground of a soccer game and kidnaps all 30,000 spectators
    as hostages.

    10) The Transformed Humans (The Giant Lagorian)
    Dr. Over makes Ligon swallow a train near Lake Biwa to kidnap Suzuki, one of the passengers and head of the
    Kyoto Branch of Unicorn Organization.

    11) The Terrifying Sand Creature
    The underground office of the South Pole Unicorn Branch is buried in red sand which suddenly started to gush out in the
    ice field. As the communications are cut off, Azuma sends Daisaku and Ninami there to see what happened.

    12) Ameron, the Synthetic Monster
    Unicorn members locate the secret headquarters of the Japanese Branch of BF Syndicate. They attack the house and
    arrest Dr. Over by taking his blue star-shaped metal on his chest, the source of his magical power.

    13) Opticon Must Be Destroyed
    There is a small quiet Allah Republic at the foot of the Alps. The only product of this beautiful country is gold. Her peace
    is broken when a vein of new ores is found in a gold mine.

    14) The Monstrous Flying Jawbone
    The office of Unicorn Chinese Branch is attacked by tank corps led by Red Cobra. Chang, its head, asks the help of the
    Japanese Branch. Azuma, Daisaku and Minami fly there on Giant Robo's back.

    15) Igganog, the Iceberg Monster
    Daisaku and Minami suspect that a strange villa standing in the heart of the Japanese Alps is a secret base of BF Syndicate.
    They approach the house to get some proof, when men in the house notice them and look for them.

    16) Torozonn, an Enemy Robot
    Beginning with the Swiss Branchg, the Unicorn branch headquarters are mysteriously destroyed one after another. Rome,
    Cairo, Bombay, Singapore, Hong Kong, then Tapai. It is easy to guess that Tokyo will be next.

    17) Destroy The Dam
    The Gargoyle Vine is back, and this time it's sucked up all the water in a lake. Will it grow to an incredible size and defeat the
    combined military might of the Earth? For Dr. Botanus' sake, let's hope so.

    18) A Mysterious Enemy Agent
    The mysterious enemy agent X-7 is assassinating Unicorn operatives around the world with the help of a giant flying hand.
    As a precaution, Jerry is assigned to protect Johnny, since only U7 can control Giant Robot. That same day, new kid Kenny
    joins Johnny's class. Coincidence?

    19) Metron, the Mysterious Space Man
    The mysterious space man Metron lands in his flying saucer and befriends the Unicorn crew. And yet, it should come as no
    surprise that he's actually working for Gargoyle. Torozon makes an encore appearance, but Giant Robot literally tears
    him apart.

    20) Captured By The Radion Globe
    The Radion, close relative of the Nucleon, captures Giant Robot and Fangor is going to replace the robot's electronic brain.
    Johnny and Jerry find the robot. Johnny's tears of frustration reactivate the robot's brain so it can fight Radion.

    21) The Terrifying Space Mummy
    The Space Mummy has poisoned the water supply so anyone who drinks it is turned into a mummy. Space Mummy and
    Gargoyle are hiding out in a convent dressed at nuns. Agent U5 is captured and Jerry dresses as a nun to save her. Marie
    storms the convent with guns blazing to save them. Giant Robot must fight the Starker, a monster that can change size
    at will.

    22) The Robot Called Cleopat
    The country of Melcon wants their own giant robot, and Giant Robot's birthday is spoiled by the news. The Melconians build
    Cleopat, but Goldenaut steals it. Gargoyle scientists can't activate Cleopat, but the robot's reaction defense disables Giant
    Robot by using his own attacks against him. Even blinded, Giant Robot defeats Tentaclon and throws it at Cleopat,
    destroying them both.

    23) Dr. Engali, Master of Evil
    U7, member of Japan Branch of Unicorn, is the one who controls the gigantic GIANT ROBO with the wrist-watch controller
    microphone. One day, he receives from his father a parcel as a birthday gift. It is a kit for constructing a man-size robot.

    24) Hydrazona, a Terrifying Bacteria
    Tokyo's night sky is hit with flood of headlights flowing through the veins of elevated speedways.
    But below, the ground is dark and gloomy.

    25) Drakulan, Creature of Doom
    U13, member of the Japan Branch of Unicorn, is on night patrol. At the entrance of a town he picks
    up a girl who is half frantic with fright. The girl explains that all the people of the town are dead.
    So it is. The street is littered with corpses.

    26) The Last of Emperor Guillotine
    Johnny is shot by a very careless assassin, and Emperor Guillotine pulls out all the stops, throwing his three remaining
    monsters at Giant Robot. Guillotine then grows to an incredible size and declares himself ruler of the world. Giant Robot
    can't defeat him, because Guillotine is made of atomic energy and traditional attacks would 'splode the entire world
    (Chief Azuma's words). Will Giant Robot make the ultimate sacrifice to save the planet and Johnny?

    P.S. I read through a bunch of the other reviews. I am wondering if this is the same set. It is put out by shout but I have none of the blurry images they complain about. Copyright is still 2013. I know Amazon compresses reviews from different releases into 1 "List" Not sure if that was done here. But like I said I don't see the quality issues that have been reported.
    28 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2014
    BOTTOM LINE: Dated and childish, but in the best way. JOHNNY SOKKO is a great Japanese TV series from the 'good old days' that still manages to charm and delight the young and young at heart. This Shout!Factory DVD release of JOHNNY SOKKO AND HIS FLYING ROBOT is a mixed blessing though. This basic DVD set is likely to be the only shot at a legit R1 release for this show we'll get, so I guess we have to take what we can get. 5 STARS for the classic, action & monster-packed series itself, (but only 3 STARS for the so-so DVD presentation).

    THE STORY: In the not too distant the future, a young boy accidentally gains control of a 100ft tall robot which was originally designed & constructed as a weapon of terror for those sinister intergalactic meanies, The Gargoyle Gang, and their squid-headed leader, that ruthless space tyrant, Emperor Guillotine. Under the mastery of young Johnny, Giant Robo instead becomes a defender of mankind. Johnny & Robo sign on with the United Nations Investigative Criminal Organization Response Network, (that's UNICORN to you & me), and together with his crime-fighting, spy-in-disguise partner Jerry Mano (aka Agent U3 ), 10 year-old Johnny guides Giant Robot's formidable atomic-powered strength & impressive array of built-in weaponry into combat against an army of wildly bizarre monsters from Planet Gargoyle to defend our Earth! When you think about it, this show was a fairly clear prototype/pre-cursor for Guillermo Del Toro's 2013 big budget 'Bots-n-Beasties mash-up, PACIFIC RIM!

    THOUGHTS: I think JOHNNY SOKKO AND HIS FLYING ROBOT is a great if somewhat silly show. Just keep in mind when the series was made and who its intended audience was. While it most definitely shows its age when viewed through modern eyes, its big heart & sense of bold adventure shine throughout. Johnny is your average good-natured kid who finds himself plunged into an incredible world of mystery, danger, and bizarre alien beings intent on enslaving mankind and colonizing the Earth. Kids are amazingly adaptable types and young Johnny takes the weirdness all in stride, teaming with the good guys of UNICORN in order to Atomic Punch those space jerks all the way back to Planet Gargoyle, where they belong. The various colorful villains of The Gargoyle Gang are one of the show's biggest strengths: unique, inspired and totally over the top. There's Nazi-wannabe Spyder (and his seemingly indestructible sidekick Piranha), the orthodontically-challenged Fangar, acne-nightmare Dr. Snake, the double-crossing 3-eyed Metron from Andromeda, the ghoulish Space Mummy, lumpy-skinned Dr. Engali (from the 5th dimension of Evil!), cosplay reject Harlequin ...and the baddest of the bunch, the creepy, chrome-domed Doctor Botanus. By comparison the agents of UNICORN come off as a boring bunch of one-dimensional squares. But hey! they're the good guys, right? So we'll stick with 'em. As the series progresses Johnny becomes emotionally attached to Giant Robot, forming a deep psychological bond to the big metal lug; one which sees the mismatched pair through many a hair-raising predicament. Being an older Japanese-created series, JOHNNY SOKKO AND HIS FLYING ROBOT is filled with legitimate life & death situations for young Johnny and tons of gory violence that would send modern Action for Children's Television members into apoplectic fits. Surprisingly however, there are also moments of genuine misty-eyed emotion sprinkled throughout this 26 episode kids' show. And if, like me, you first watched this as a youngster then I doubt you'll be able to hold back the tears during the heart-breaking series finale. The memorable climax was copied almost verbatim some 30 years later in Brad Bird's outstanding animated film THE IRON GIANT.

    THE DVD SET: Well, the good news is that, FINALLY, the complete JOHNNY SOKKO series has arrived on DVD. The bad news is that the sourced "masters" Shout! Factory used are what MGM had sitting in their vaults. (The self-same masters that Fox Home Releasing deemed unsatisfactory for them to use for their proposed manufactured-on-demand home release.) After languishing for almost two years, the pop culture genre hounds at Shout!Factory stepped in and sub-licensed JS&HFR. If not for them this show would likely still be sitting in a vault somewhere collecting dust. It's too bad they didn't cough up the cash to obtain original source materials from Toei Studios, but the strangely complicated world of international licensing just didn't make it feasible. The video portion is a mixed bag: the English-language opening titles are pretty awful-looking while the actual episodes themselves are decent, though truthfully only marginally better than many bootleg sets which routinely pop up on eBay. Audio is strong & level though a little 'crackly' due to age. (Special mention to the jazzy, James Bond-ian tinged soundtrack, which was mercifully left intact by the American International Pictures dubbing team.) Speaking of which, the English language dub is your only audio language choice and there are no subtitles. Also please note that with the exception of some excellent liner notes by Japanese SPFX historian & guru August Ragone there are no extras. If you want this boxset then my advice is to pick it up used and save yourself some $$$.
    7 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • bgb 2
    5.0 out of 5 stars FANTASTIC RE-DO FROM MY YOUTH THE SHOW WAS AND STILL IS ! THE BEST EVER.
    Reviewed in Canada on March 14, 2020
    Saw This "Johnny Sokko And His Flying Robot" For The 1ST Time Time When I Was 7 Years Old On Local TV...THEN FANTASTIC AND STILL TODAY SUPERB.
    Quality Of This Release Is Wonderful A+.
  • Rohit Warang
    5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome!
    Reviewed in India on June 22, 2024
    Nostalgia overload! This show has so many memories from my childhood! All discs work perfectly fine. Five stars!
  • Amazon Customer
    1.0 out of 5 stars 観れない
    Reviewed in Japan on January 28, 2017
    日本語音声なし。
    私はパソコンで鑑賞しているのだが、再生不能だった(ソフトはVLCを使用)多分最近のAVと同じコピーガードを使用しているものと思われる。
    Report
  • Hikaru K.
    5.0 out of 5 stars un classico in una bella edizione
    Reviewed in Italy on April 7, 2014
    il cofanetto contiene l'edizione americana , del telefilm giapponese giant robot, prodotto dalla toei negli anni 60.
    il master , seppur molto vecchio è davvero buono.
    il cofanetto, è elegante, con slip cover, contiene anche un libretto con interessanti annotazioni sulla serie e sui tokusatsu degli anni 60. prestare attenzione al fatto che si tratta di un prodotto per il mercato americano, quindi presenta il solo doppiaggio inglese e i dvd sono zona1
  • タイガーセブン
    1.0 out of 5 stars 字幕、音声変更不可です
    Reviewed in Japan on September 17, 2013
    字幕・音声共に変更不可です。全て英語です。OPはBGMアレンジされたものですら入っていません。はっきり言って損でした。

    大抵海外のDVDは日本語バージョンが入っているのですがこちらの商品には一切ありません。完全にアメリカ仕様です。(現地で放送されたものをそのままDVDにしてるのでしょうか?)

    よって英語が解る方、映像だけ見たい方、雰囲気だけ味わいたい方しかおすすめできません。…厳しいようですが☆1です。