Panzer World Galient

Panzer World Galient (機甲界ガリアン, Kikōkai Garian) is a 1984 Japanese fantasy and science fiction anime television series produced by Sunrise. It was broadcast on Nippon Television from October 5, 1984 to March 29, 1985.[1]

Panzer World Galient
Cover of the Premium Blu-ray Box release, depicting the two titular mecha of the series. Top: Assault Galient. Bottom: Tetsukyojin.
機甲界ガリアン
(Kikōkai Garian)
GenreHigh fantasy, Mecha, Military sci-fi
Anime television series
Directed byRyōsuke Takahashi
Written bySōji Yoshikawa
Music byTooru Fuyuki
StudioNippon Sunrise
Original networkNippon Television
Original run October 5, 1984 March 29, 1985
Episodes25
Anime film series
Chapter of the Land and the Sky
(compilation films)
Directed byRyōsuke Takahashi
Written bySōji Yoshikawa
Music byTooru Fuyuki
StudioNippon Sunrise
Released January 21, 1986 March 25, 1986
Runtime57 minutes (each)
Films2
Original video animation
Crest of Iron
Directed byMasashi Ikeda
Written byJinzo Toriumi
Music bySeiji Yokoyama
StudioNippon Sunrise
ReleasedAugust 5, 1986
Runtime54 minutes

Production

The series premiered on TV in October 1984 and lasted 25 episodes. It was directed by Ryōsuke Takahashi, with mechanical design by Kunio Okawara and Yutaka Izubuchi.

Plot

Set in a far flung medieval-looking world of Arst, Prince Jordy Volder takes up the fight against the ambitions of the conqueror Marder. Jordy uses the legendary giant robot "panzer" Galient, which is one of many panzers that have been preserved underground for thousands of years. Using an army of advanced robot panzers, Marder is conquering all of Arst in preparation of his plan for dominance of the Crescent Galaxy.

Theme music

  • Opening Theme - "The Galient World"-Run for your life by EUROX
  • Ending Theme - "Hoshi No Ichibyou" ("A second of a star") by EUROX

The show's opening and ending musical themes were composed and performed by EUROX, a Japanese progressive rock band formed in 1984 in Tokyo, Japan. They also did English versions of both songs which have quite different lyrics from the Japanese ones. They also did a 2009 remake of both songs in both languages.

The ending theme of the show was normally accompanied by nighttime shots of a sword stuck in the sand and images of the characters reflected on its blade as the credits flash on screen with the ending showing the same sword now being showered with rain (as reference to a line in the song about crying).

The final episode was different, with a tighter daylight shot on the sword that pans up to the handle. Prince Jordy's hand then pulls the sword from the sand and lifts it up in the air and we see him embracing Chururu. The credits flash onscreen as the Prince and Chururu look at each other as the images of the prince's mother and friends appear onscreen with rose petals blowing in the wind completing the ending.

References

  1. 機甲界ガリアン (1984~1985). allcinema (in Japanese). Stingray. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
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