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Power Rangers actually got better as time went on, especially the 'In Space' season.
In Space was cool except for the crossover with TMNT. Best season of the series.
Power Rangers actually got better as time went on, especially the 'In Space' season.
I heard about the crossover, never saw it.In Space was cool except for the crossover with TMNT. Best season of the series.
I heard about the crossover, never saw it.
Yeah, it was a Saban show too.Soooooooooooooo bad, AZiZ. Those Next Mutation turtles are terrible.
It was great in the 90's for kids and I still think the martial arts and action still looks good and the theme songs and Ron Wasserman's music never get old to me.To some extent, Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers. I know Power Rangers is still on, but Power Rangers was a huge fad in the 90s and that's when I watched. I think the thing that cheapens it for me now is knowing they only filmed the out-of-costume/school scenes themselves and borrowed stock footage from a Japanese superhero series and re-contextualized it with dubbing and the American footage. I would appreciate Power Rangers a lot more if it was made from scratch and not aped from the Super Sentai shows.
Yeah I agree that the storytelling got better with PRIS and was still kid-friendly. However, when Disney bought it, it went downhill(Dino Thunder and RPM being the exception).Power Rangers actually got better as time went on, especially the 'In Space' season.
Cancelled plans
The plan intended to continue some of the ideas and storylines from the Forever Red team-up episode of Power Rangers Wild Force as well as wrap up all loose ends from the original Mighty Morphin Power Rangers up to Wild Force. Just as Power Rangers In Space essentially brought together and wrapped up the five preceding seasons of Power Rangers (MMPR-PRT), the intention was for the 11th season to bring together and wrap up all the preceding seasons.
As writing for Wild Force finished and production was wrapping up, Amit began researching and drawing up plans to adapt Hurricaneger for an 11th season expected to start filming in LA. Hexagon was a plan in the very rough stages and was birthed during a rocky time of transition when the direction and even continued existence of the show was in doubt. This was just one of many potential visions for a season of the show; one that ultimately went unused.
By late 2002, the new owner of the Power Rangers franchise, Disney, decided to replace (almost) the entire crew and move production for the show to New Zealand, ending the idea of the Hexagon. Instead, Hurricaneger would be adapted into Power Rangers Ninja Storm.
Hexagon
The unused Hexagon plan, as it has come to be called, revolved around the idea of an umbrella organization unifying most of the various Power Ranger teams that have been seen over the years. The name Hexagon came from the idea that the base of operations for the season's Power Rangers would be a giant building like the Pentagon, except with six sides to symbolize the number of Power Rangers on most teams. It was conceived as a much larger version of Zordon's Command Center except with its location and purpose known to the public. An impregnable fortress staffed by hundreds, if not thousands, and far too well-defended for any of the villains of the Power Rangers universe to try attacking.
The power dynamic typically seen between heroes and villains in the show would be flipped for this season. Instead of an invasion of a vast army of evil against a few heroes operating in secret, this time the good guys would have the apparent advantage in terms of numbers and infrastructure.
The Hexagon was to be led by Tommy Oliver, who would act as the mentor for the season's Power Rangers like their Zordon or Captain Mitchell. As Forever Red illustrated, Tommy had been keeping in touch with various Rangers in the years since the episode Passing The Torch, Part 2. This older Tommy Oliver would be "No longer the ponytailed, wifebeater-wearing teenager of MMPR days, Tommy would now look more like a federal agent in a suit. Think similar to Marvel's Nick Fury." In Forever Red, Tommy deliberately used several Zordon clichés from the “I was afraid this day would come.” to “May the power protect you.” All foreshadowing that he was on his way to inheriting Zordon's position in the universe.
Sowing the seeds
In the original script for Forever Red, the idea was that Tommy was in retirement from being a Ranger and Andros pulled him back for one more battle. But as the episode evolved and Jason David Frank brought "his usual vitality to the role as well as this time an unexpected aura of gravitas", the line about Tommy being in retirement, while filmed, was ultimately cut from the episode leaving his status in Forever Red, to the viewer, more mysterious and ambiguous. Central to the Hexagon plan was the idea of a veteran hero turned commander in charge of a super union of superheroes. The idea of the season had its genesis in Reinforcements from the Future, Part 1 when Wes tells Cole “There are other Rangers out there, all fighting for a common goal,” matured in Forever Red when linkages not seen in the show were hinted at (Carter knowing TJ, Andros knowing about Jason, etc.), and really began to become clearer watching Tommy again.
The Team
The team for the season would consist of the three basic Hurricangers (Red, Blue and Yellow), young recruits to the Hexagon and the organization's active duty superheroes. These powers, obviously ninja-based, would likely be derived from Ninjor from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers season three - one of many returning characters who would contribute to the season’s story. Tommy would send these three Rangers away on missions in response to attacks by the villains. Instead of just one central city where all the fighting would take place, each episode's battle could take place in various locations around the Power Rangers universe. The three Rangers would travel around in the Hexagon's special stealth chopper, piloted by Joel from Lightspeed Rescue – a planned recurring character.
It would be implied that other Ranger teams were operating under the command of the Hexagon and there would be occasional cameos by other Rangers as our heroes would travel to respond to threats across the Power Rangers universe. Silver Hills, Angel Grove, Mariner Bay, Turtle Cove, and even possibly Aquitar, Mirinoi and KO-35 would all be seen on a regular basis "(the fact that they all happened to look like LA would help a lot with filming)". Tommy with his network of Ranger connections made him essentially the new Zordon and most Ranger teams could be called upon by him.
The Rangercast podcast, who had contributors who'd read the original Hexagon notes, revealed a bit not said by Amit: the Red Ranger would turn out to have been the main villain's son who was raised by the good guys and is destined to become evil due to his origins, "an inverse of Astronema". The Mara character would have been "his betrothed". [2]
The Villains
The villains for the season would be various and not unified and would even include some returning villains. Prince Gasket, Archerina, Scorpina, and Lokar were among the unresolved villains from previous seasons that Amit hoped to provide some resolution to during the season. The Hurricaneger villains were to be used in the show as representing different villain factions and the monsters-of-the-day that the Power Rangers would fight each episode wouldn’t always be from the same group. For example, the robotic monsters-of-the-day might be Machine Empire minions of Prince Gasket, while a more organic monster might be a minion of Scorpina – who would have become a much more fleshed out character than before – or one of the new Hurricaneger villain factions.
The two Beetle Hurricanegers (Dark Red and Dark Blue) were to be used as a rogue group of Power Rangers that operated outside of the Hexagon network of superhero teams. These Beetle Rangers were to be less in the traditional goody two-shoes mold of Rangers and have more of a rebellious, anti-authoritarian attitude to them. They would reject the Hexagon mentality of all superheroes operating under the leadership of one man and instead advocate Rangers should be independent and operate on their own, with Jason appearing as "almost a mirror opposite of a Tommy-style mentor for them".
As all Power Rangers seasons tried to have at least two female Rangers per season, Amit would have lobbied to add a second girl. He said on his Tumblr that he would have pushed "for the creation of a US-exclusive third Beetle Ranger – probably a Dark Yellow color – female Ranger". The Rangercast podcast have reported that in Amit's original notes, it was Navy Thunder who would have been the girl.[3]
Conflict
The central conflict of the season was to be the rivalry between the Beetle Power Rangers and the basic three Hexagon Rangers. The mental image of six Rangers divided in half by a line, with an explicit "Which side are you on?" drove much of the idea of the season. As Amit noted, this was years before Marvel's Civil War. The two teams of Rangers might have occasionally fought each other, without being under any mind control or brainwashing. They would often join forces to fight monsters like in Hurricanger, but this was definitely not intended to be a single team of Rangers for the season.
Rangers from past seasons would eventually find themselves choosing one side of the conflict over the other, making themselves available to assist one group but unavailable to the other. For example, maybe Delphine and the Aquitian Rangers reject the Hexagon and either refuse to cooperate with the Hexagon Rangers or show up to help the anti-Hexagon Rangers. The main focus of the show would be on the new characters of the season, but many of the guest stars would be previous Rangers. One of the main recurring Ranger roles was to be Jason the Red Mighty Morphin Power Ranger who was to definitely be on the side of the anti-Hexagon Beetle Rangers and almost a mirror opposite of a Tommy-style mentor for them.
It was hinted in Forever Red that Jason had spent the years since we had last seen him on the outskirts of society. Riding his Harley, alone, and getting into his own adventures. As noted, when he returned in Zeo, he was walking across the desert, wearing a duster, shades and a bandana, "looking more like someone on the run from the law than an ambassador back from a teen peace conference!" In Wild Force, he remarked to Wes and Eric that he was more familiar with them than some of the other Rangers. Had he been making his own friendships and alliances that would come to help him in the Hexagon season, or was he saying this to mock the Silver Guardians law enforcement officers in reference to one of his many scrapes with the law? Jason was to have been more of a casual, been around the block, big brother type of figure for the Beetle Rangers rather than a commander like the Hexagon Rangers had.
Return of the Green Ranger and resolution
The green Shurikenger would be added later in the series and for plot purposes would be called the most powerful Ranger ever created because he would in the end be the final challenge the Rangers would have to unite against to fight.
Amit has said that "the costume design with its gold breastplate was too reminiscent of the Green Mighty Morphin Power Ranger to not let Tommy be this Ranger. Tommy made his bones as the Green Ranger back in MMPR and to this day, the Green Ranger mini-series still represents possibly the best five episode stretch of Power Rangers." As the Green Ranger this season, Tommy would occasionally help the Rangers in their battles. Paying homage to the Green Ranger mini-series, Tommy and Jason would even battle each other once again. (Rangercast claimed that in the original notes, the Green Ranger would have been a different character called Derek (continuing the Eric, Merrick sounds for sixth Rangers). He'd be working as a deep-cover agent, altering the costume - with/without vest and the different helmet - depending on which Ranger faction he was with. [4]
Tommy would even become the main antagonist by the end of the season as the base Rangers eventually rebel against the Hexagon after realizing it had grown out of control. In the end, the heroes would fight and eventually force Tommy to see the errors of the Hexagon’s concentration of power open to being abused by people, prompting him to ultimately disband the Hexagon, scattering the heroes once and for all to their own corners of the Power Rangers universe. This would in a sense be the end of an era of Power Rangers beginning in season one and ending in season eleven, eliminating any unresolved issues and excess baggage to pave the way for a fresh start for the show to go any direction it chose for season twelve.
Cleaning up
There was a plan to explain how certain Rangers in Forever Red regained their powers. There was a plan for revealing the Phantom Ranger's identity. There was a plan for explaining Terra Venture's interstellar technology from Lost Galaxy which contradicted the non-spacefaring, modern civilization all other seasons took place in (it was a refurbished Dark Fortress and part of a grander conspiracy). There was a plan for the Silver Guardians. There was a plan for a Power Rangers Wild Force team up with Merrick, Zen-Aku, Jindrax, and Toxica (the latter two now leading a traveling carnival) aligning with the anti-Hexagon Rangers, and Cole, Taylor, Alyssa, Max, and Danny assisting the Hexagon Rangers, before all joining together to fight the good fight.
In many ways, it was designed to clean up the Power Rangers universe and its vast mythology. The idea wasn't to reduce the potential of possibilities of the show but to clarify the elements intrinsic to every incarnation of the Power Rangers concept from Zeo to Lost Galaxy to Wild Force to beyond. Hopefully providing resolution to old fans, establish legacy and importance to younger fans, and refine the basic blueprint of what makes a Power Rangers season, to be expanded upon for future seasons to come.
Of course, these were tentative plans for the season and were contingent upon many factors from actor availability, finalization of the story between Amit and the producer, cooperation from the network and toy company, and most importantly the many impossible to predict, sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse, unforeseen variables that inevitably arise during the process of writing, filming, and editing together a 40-episode season.
Source: http://powerrangers.wikia.com/wiki/Hexagon
In other words: I did myself a favor skipping the that infamous crossover.Soooooooooooooo bad, AZiZ. Those Next Mutation turtles are terrible.
Even though I didn't like full house, I just briefly met DJ Tanner Candance Bure today at work. She was here doing a interview for the 700 club. She is still a looker!
To some extent, Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers. I know Power Rangers is still on, but Power Rangers was a huge fad in the 90s and that's when I watched. I think the thing that cheapens it for me now is knowing they only filmed the out-of-costume/school scenes themselves and borrowed stock footage from a Japanese superhero series and re-contextualized it with dubbing and the American footage. I would appreciate Power Rangers a lot more if it was made from scratch and not aped from the Super Sentai shows.
I might be in the minority on this, but The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. I have not watched it for years and it blew me away when I watched it the other day how bad it is.
I love all the characters and I think most people knew at the time Will Smith would be a huge star...but the plots, the editing, the acting...it's just not put together very well.
[YT]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EgUkQOlFQrA[/YT]
'Nuff said.