Flint
the Time Detective began as a manga created by Hideki Sonoda and Akira
Yamauchi. Known in Japan as Jikū Tantei Genshi-kun (or Space-Time Detective Genshi), the manga ran across three volumes published by Bros. Comics. In
1998, TV Tokyo
commissioned the adaptation of the manga into an anime series.
Dark Lord. |
At the heart of the
story were two separate and distinct lands: the Land of Dread (called
Underworld in Japan) where the sinister Dark Lord (Toshiyuki Morikawa & Tom
Wyner) was tasked with keeping souls within, and the Land of Time,
overseen by the Old Timer (or Time-G, voiced by Katsumi Suzuki & Kim
Strauss) who monitors the events of history and keeps the clock in the land
running so history could keep flowing. The Dark Lord became affected by the
land he guarded, growing cold and emotionless and resented his duties. He
attacked the Land of Time, seeking a chance to be able to grow old from his
perpetual child-like form. The attack resulted in the scattering of the Land of
Time’s guardians, the Time Shifters,
throughout time.
Time Shifter Doron's primary, Con and Master (never seen on the show) Forms. |
The Time Shifters (known as Jiku Monsuta, or Space-Time Monster
in Japan) were creatures that had magical abilities and could assume several
different evolutionary forms; some of which were never seen on the show itself
but only in concept art or in mangas. Their primary forms were of cute little
creatures. Their Master Forms were achieved when in control of good and allowed
the Time Shifters to assume humanoid warrior appearances. Their Con Forms were
the result of being controlled by evil and gave them a more demonic appearance.
Many of them resembled everyday animals or objects with abilities to match,
such as Lynx (or Sufin, Michael
Sorich, who also served as one of three voice
directors), who resembled a Sphinx and was good at riddles; Raldo
(or Rarudo, Asami Nakajima & Cansino), resembling a turtle who could
trap people in his shell; Musey (or Myuji, Wendee Lee), resembling a musical note with the ability to recognize beautiful
music and use it to overpower emotions; and Change (or Kozeni,
Steven Blum), who resembled a purse
and hypnotized people with the promise of wealth. Dark Lord sought to retrieve
the Time Shifters and use their Con Forms to finish what he started.
Petra Fina with Dino and Mite. |
Unable to leave the
Land of Dread himself, Dark Lord relied on the services of others. Aiding Dark
Lord was Petra Fina Dagmar (Hitomi Aino or T.P. Lady in Japan, voiced by Yumi
Touma & Barbara Goodson) and her two minions Dino Fishman (Yuji Ueda &
Lex Lang) and Mite (Chafurin & David Lodge). Petra’s allegiance to Dark
Lord came from her infatuation with him, which he used to his advantage by
dangling her along. Dino was an experimental eel and Mite a frog who were freed
and made humanoid by Petra. When not on missions, they posed as teachers Ms.
Iknow and Mr. Dino and Principal Mite, respectively, at the young protagonists’
school.
Jillian Gray. |
By the time the 25th
Century had rolled around, time travel had become a common occurrence. To
protect the integrity of time, the Old Timer created the Bureau of Time & Space Investigations, also known as the Time Police. Run by Jillian Gray (Rei Jinguji in
Japan, voiced by Mami Nakajima & Mari Devon), time detectives were sent out
into history in order to repair any anomalies. The Time Police were tasked with
retrieving the Time Shifters before Dark Lord could, and they ended up being
joined by an unlikely new recruit.
Flint, Rocky and Pterry. |
During one of their
trips through time, Petra and her minions encountered young caveboy Flint
(Genshi in Japan, voiced by Yukiji & Martin Klein) and his father, Rocky
(Dad-tan in Japan, voiced by Fumihiko Tachiki & Bob Papenbrook). Flint and
Rocky were petrified by Petra and ended up being reawaken in the 25th
century by Dr. Bernard Goodman (Professor Yamato in Japan, voiced by Masamichi
Sato & Richard Cansino). However,
only Flint was restored to flesh and blood; Rocky remained stone, though
sentient, and was fashioned into a hammer for Flint to use. Eager for payback
against Petra, Flint joined the Time Police to aid them in their mission. Flint
wasn’t much of a detective, but proved useful in a fight.
Dr. Goodman, Tony, Sara and Pterry. |
Joining Flint were
Goodman’s niece and nephew, Sara (Sora in Japan, voiced by Nana Mizuki &
Tifanie Christun) and Tony (Tokio in Japan, voiced by Chiaki Morita & Brian
Donovan), as well as Time Shifter Getalong (or Raburabu, Mayuko Ominura
& Mona Marshall), a penguin-like being who could make people get along,
that had been with Flint during the Stone Age when he and his father were
attacked. They also had Pterry (Chinami Nishimura & Greg Berg), a robotic
Pteranodon that accompanied Flint on his missions and was responsible for
erasing the memories of anyone that encountered the time detectives or their
foes in history (such as historical figures who came to possess Time Shifters, like
Beethoven, Christopher
Columbus and Leonardo da Vinci).
From their home base of Tama City, Dr.
Goodman would send Time Shifters the team retrieved into the time stream to aid
Flint and his crew as needed.
Merlock Holmes and Bindi. |
Eventually,
they were joined by time detective Merlock Holmes (a play on
Sherlock Holmes, called
Kyoichiro Narugami in Japan, voiced by Kappei Yamaguchi & Dave Mallow).
Holmes was descended from vampires, which explained his pale complexion and
purple hair. He was initially assigned to followed Flint and his friends to
evaluate their progress. He was the show’s comedy relief; with his generally
being very clumsy. While he possessed some of the typical vampiric abilities,
Holmes also relied on a bit of magic to get by; particularly via the objects he
carried, such as a rose that could become a heat-firing cane, or wore, such as
his cape that could become a shield. Holmes soon got his own Time Shifter
partner in the form of Bindi (or Anmon, Rika Wakusawa &
Melissa Fahn), who resembled an Ammonite that could give or take life force.
Uglinator surprises Petra and her cronies. |
There were four Time
Shifters who were evil from the outset; created by Dark Lord from flowers. Super Ninja (or Nioja,
Wataru Takagi & Tom
Fahn) was an Oriental-themed warrior who fought
with a staff; Uglinator (or Desudasu,
Takuma Suzuki & Joe
Ochman) was a sinister-looking skull with horns that
could possess people; Nascal (or Nasukaru,
Sachiko Sugawara &
Ochman) was a rooster-like creature that could teleport; and Ominito (or Gera,
Mitsuo Iwata &
Sorich) was a mushroom-like creature who used video game-based attacks. Like
the other Time Shifters, these too could transform into bigger and more
powerful versions of themselves. Despite the previously established form names,
the next forms of these Time Shifters were called “Super”, later adapted into
“kon” by the English translation to bring it closer to “Con”. Super Ninja was
the only one of these Time Shifters who kept the “Super” in his name regardless
of his form.
The anime, known as Space-Time
Detective Genshi-kun, debuted on Japan’s TV Tokyo on
October 1st, 1998 and ran for 39 episodes into 1999. Shimo wrote the
series along with Hideki Sonoda, and it
was directed entirely by Hiroshi Fukutomi. Sachiko Oohashi handled
the character designs and the series’ music was composed by Tadashi Namba and Toshio Masuda. Group TAC handled the
primary animation with Studio
Tulip working on the backgrounds, and Asahi
Production and D/Max Studio
working on the computer animated components.
Time Shifters chaaaaaaaarge! |
Sometime after its initial
broadcast, Saban Entertainment licensed the
broadcast rights for the series in the United States through The Right Stuff International. Along
with translating the series, which was handled by Grace Anderson, Saban had
additional changes made. Parts of episodes were removed and replaced with
filler scenes and the entire musical score was redone by Alexander van Bubenheim, Glenn Scott Lacey, Jeremy Sweet, Michael Whittaker, Shuki Levy and Haim Saban (as Kussa Mahchi). Many
characters had their genders swapped, such as Pterry. Holmes also lost his
ability to sing and his personal fortune, which were present or mentioned in
the original anime. The series was also heavily Americanized, having the characters
originate from the United States instead of Japan and changing character names
and places. The Americanized version of the series ran on FOX’s Saturday morning FOX Kids programming block
from March 5th to December 17th, 2000. It also aired on
weekdays and FOX’s sister channel Fox
Family. The English scripts were written by Bridget Hoffman, Jeff Winkless, Mark Ryan, Michael McConnohie, Rebecca Olkowski, Stephen Apostolina, Tom Wyner and Tony Oliver. Additionally,
the series had been translated into French, Spanish, Italian, German, Dutch and
Portuguese over the following years.
The manga's Time Police chief. |
To promote the series, Bom Bom Comics
produced a short 6-chapter manga that influenced several episodes. The manga
introduced four new Time Shifters not presented in the anime: Wolfen, a
wolf-like creature that could walk on air; dragon-like HaniWani that could
eat through rock; Hanasaka,
resembling a tree stump that could grow flowers; and Funga (actually
introduced in the Bros. Comics run as Time Shifter No. 5), a large and
intimidating creature who was actually a huge coward. The Time Shifters that
did appear in the anime had differing designs than how they were presented in
the manga and were represented as devices with mechanical components, as was
the original intent. Instead of Jillian, an old man named Z·Z ran the Time
Police. The manga had an overall darker and more mature tone than the anime,
and Holmes was less of a klutz. There was also a lack of memory erasing,
allowing changes in the timeline to stand as long as they were minor. Section 23 released several episode
compilations on both VHS
and DVD
between 2000 and 2001.
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