Stone Protectors
Stone Protectors | |
---|---|
Written by | Marty Isenberg Robert Skir Peter Lawrence Matthew Malach J. Larry Carroll David Bennett-Carren Richard T. Murphy Chris Hubbell Sam Graham Grant Morgan |
Directed by | Dorie Rich Susan Blu (voice director) |
Starring | Don Brown Jim Byrnes Ted Cole Ian James Corlett Scott McNeil John Tench Cathy Weseluck Terry Klassen Rob Morton Louise Vallance Campbell Lane Phil Hayes Kathleen Barr |
Composer | Steve Zuckerman |
Country of origin | United States United Kingdom France |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Stephanie Graziano |
Producer | Michael Hack |
Running time | 30 Minutes |
Production companies | Graz Entertainment Sachs TV Entertainment Hanho Studios |
Original release | |
Network | Syndication |
Release | 1993 |
Stone Protectors is a 1993 multi-media entertainment property consisting primarily of an action figure line and animated series.[1] The series also had a tie-in video game released for the Super NES and the Sega Genesis. It served as a late attempt to market the troll doll craze of the early 1990s to young boys. While not particularly successful, nor inspired by a prior medium, Stone Protectors generally followed in the same vein as contemporaries including Toxic Crusaders, Swamp Thing, and the highly popular Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
Back-story
[edit]A kingdom built of crystals came under attack by the reptilian troll-like Saurians whose leader, Zok, desired the powerful crystals protected by the Empress. Zok broke into the castle and reached for the crystals only to see them explode into pieces and fly to Earth.
After being thrown out the back door of a New York City club, an awful rock band known as the Rock Detectors found the five magical stones which gave them troll-like appearances and special skills (not the least of which is playing good music), and they are now collectively known as The Protectors. This put them at odds with the music-hating Zok and his henchman Zink who call themselves the Predators.
- Cornelius, the group's leader, holds the green stone and became a samurai with an assortment of appropriate weaponry (katana, shuriken, and a pair of nunchaku made of microphones). He is the band's lead singer, but also plays the guitar.
- Chester holds the red stone, became an expert at wrestling and received great strength. He plays the bass guitar and saxophone.
- Clifford "Cliff" holds the blue stone and became an expert rock climber. He is the band's drummer.
- Angus holds the yellow stone and became a soldier excelling in military combat, as well as turning ordinary objects into weapons. He plays the keyboard. Angus ostensibly built up the Protectors' bizarre attack vehicles from things like barbecues and lawnmowers.
- Maxwell holds the orange stone and became an "accelerator" - an athletic speedster who sports in-line skates. He plays the guitar.
Animated series
[edit]A short-lived cartoon series based on the characters debuted in 1993.[2] In it, Empress Opal of Mythrandir splits the legendary Great Crystal into six pieces to keep it out of Zok's hands. Zok manages to capture one piece, but the other five bond with the future Stone Protectors, spiriting them away to Mythrandir to help Opal upset Zok's schemes and spread a sentiment of peace and freedom with their music. The series lasted one season; 8 out of 13 episodes were released on VHS in 1994 by Family Home Entertainment, the whole series was released on VHS in England. Piko Interactive acquired the intellectual property rights to Stone Protectors from former owner Kam Toys. On March 2, 2021, a Kickstarter campaign was launched to get the entire 13-episode series released to DVD.[3] The initial goal for the Kickstarter was $30,000 with further stretch goals such as a comic book, Blu-ray and a new episode for the series. The Kickstarter only met its main funding goal on March 29, 2021. The series was released on DVD on July 5, 2022.[4] A special edition boxset was also released.[5]
It is notable that while the advertisements for the action figures attempted to tie the Stone Protectors into the troll doll fad, the cartoon seemed eager to avoid the comparison. For instance, it replaced the line "trolls on a roll" from the theme song in the commercials with "Don't you know?"
The series has also been broadcast on the BBC in England, RTB in Brunei, TV2 in Malaysia, Bop TV in South Africa, ZBC in Zimbabwe, Channel 33 in the United Arab Emirates and TV2 in New Zealand.
Episodes
[edit]Nº | Title | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "Forged in Fire" | Martin Isenberg and Robert Skir | TBA |
2 | "Stranded in Mythrandir" | Peter Lawrence | TBA |
3 | "Levity" | Matthew Malach | TBA |
4 | "Return of Blackheart" | J. Larry Carroll and David Bennett Carren | TBA |
5 | "Weaponogs" | Richard T. Murphy | TBA |
6 | "Fan or Foe" | Chris Hubbell and Sam Graham | TBA |
7 | "Island Hopping" | Martin Isenberg and Robert Skir | TBA |
8 | "Digging In" | Peter Lawrence | TBA |
9 | "Between Zok and the Deep Blue Sea" | Grant Morgan | TBA |
10 | "The Test" | J. Larry Carroll and David Bennett Carren | TBA |
11 | "The Crystal Vampire" | Matthew Cartsonis and Peter Lawrence | Unaired |
12 | "The Wall of Sound" | Richard T. Murphy | Unaired |
13 | "Going Home" | Sam Graham and Chris Hubbell | Unaired |
Action figures
[edit]The Stone Protectors action figures were produced by the Ace Novelty Toy Company. All of the figures were roughly 5" tall and featured cut joints at the neck, shoulders, and elbows as well as ball joints at the hips. Their heads were a soft, rubbery material with tall, synthetic hair sticking straight out the top. In rotating the right arm of a Stone Protectors figure, a flint module would ignite inside its chest, creating a quick yet bright flash seen through the translucent chest emblem. A second series of sports-themed figures was also released. Princess Opal was never made as a figure, nor were there any generic Saurian Guards.
The toyline as well as the cartoon that followed it were seen as poor imitations of the popular Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles line of toys and cartoon series and overlooked by many.
Series 1 | Series 2: Sports Heroes/Villains | Vehicles |
---|---|---|
Angus the Soldier | Angus the Prince of Punch | Anti-Aircraft Barbeque |
Chester the Wrestler | Chester the Gridiron Giant | Hang Glider Bomber |
Clifford the Rock Climber | Clifford the Jumpin' Jammer | Mortar Launching Golf Cart |
Cornelius the Samurai | Cornelius the Grandslam Guru | Mow 'N' Surf Attack Scooter |
Maxwell the Accelerator | Maxwell the Slapshot | |
Zok the Evil Leader | Suckerpuncher | |
Zink the Horrible Hatchetman | Tackle Jackal |
Video game
[edit]Stone Protectors | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Eurocom |
Publisher(s) | Kemco Piko Interactive |
Programmer(s) | Ian Denny Tim Rogers Ashley Finley |
Artist(s) | Mat Sneap Colin Garratt Matt Dixon Nigel Quine-Bentley Andy Bee |
Composer(s) | Steve Duckworth |
Platform(s) | Super NES, Sega Genesis |
Release | SNES November 1994 Mega Drive/Genesis March 2022 |
Genre(s) | Side-scrolling beat 'em up |
Mode(s) | Single-player, two-player Co-op |
A Super NES game based on the property was released in November 1994 by Kemco.[6] A Genesis version was developed and completed,[7] but not released back then. This version, intended to be published by Vic Tokai, was finally leaked to the public in 2010 by Nesplayer.com.[8] It was finally given an official release by Piko Interactive[9] in March 2022,[10] together with a re-release of the SNES version.[11]
Stone Protectors features 10 levels in which the heroes – Clifford, Cornelius, Chester, Maxwell, and Angus – battle The Predators throughout their mission to retrieve Zok's crystal and bring them all back to the kingdom. Weapons can also be acquired but only used by certain characters. Depending on the difficulty setting, the game's ending scene also features different music in which the Stone Protectors are seen performing as a band.
GamePro gave the game a generally negative review, commenting that the graphics are good but the animation is poor, and the controls make it difficult to pull off special attacks or counteract enemy attacks. They concluded that the game, while not without merits, is overall "a frustrating journey."[12]
Other merchandise
[edit]Pressman Toy Corp. released a Stone Protectors board game.[13] In late 1993, Harvey Comics debuted Stone Protectors "Premiere Issue" (effectively an issue #0), followed by issues #1–3.
References
[edit]- ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 794–795. ISBN 978-1476665993.
- ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 599. ISBN 978-1538103739.
- ^ "Stone Protectors strike back in massive Kickstarter campaign |, Reviews, Interviews, Articles, Product Reviews, and More!". Archived from the original on 4 March 2021.
- ^ "Stone Protectors". Amazon. 5 July 2022.
- ^ "Amazon.com". Amazon.
- ^ Manx Stone Protectors GameFAQs.com (January 6, 2008). Retrieved on 12-03-08
- ^ "ProReview: Stone Protectors". GamePro. No. 68. IDG. March 1995. p. 50.
- ^ "Stone Protectors - SEGA Genesis Unreleased Prototype!!". Nintendo Player. Present Nintendo Player. 2010. Archived from the original on 5 August 2010. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
- ^ "Stone Protectors - (pre-order)". Retrieved 4 April 2022.
- ^ "Stone Protectors Release Information for Genesis - GameFAQs". Retrieved 4 April 2022.
- ^ "Stone Protectors Release Information for Super Nintendo - GameFAQs". Retrieved 4 April 2022.
- ^ "ProReview: Stone Protectors". GamePro. No. 65. IDG. December 1994. p. 164.
- ^ Stone Protectors (1993) BoardGameGeek.com. Retrieved 12-03-08.
External links
[edit]- Stone Protectors (action figures) at Virtual Toy Chest
- Stone Protectors (animated series) at Blast from the Past
- Stone Protectors (video game) Archived 27 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine at Eurocom
- Stone Protectors theme song at YouTube
- Stone Protectors at IMDb
- 1990s toys
- 1990s American animated television series
- 1993 American television series debuts
- 1993 American television series endings
- 1993 comics debuts
- Mass media franchises introduced in 1993
- 1994 video games
- Action figures
- American children's animated action television series
- American children's animated superhero television series
- BBC children's television shows
- Beat 'em ups
- Cooperative video games
- Dam dolls
- Fictional musical groups
- Television series about trolls
- First-run syndicated animated television series
- Harvey Comics superheroes
- Harvey Comics titles
- Piko Interactive games
- Sega Genesis games
- Super Nintendo Entertainment System games
- Superhero teams
- Superhero video games
- Television superheroes
- TVNZ 2 original programming
- Video games developed in the United Kingdom
- Mass media franchises
- Eurocom games
- Kemco games
- Side-scrolling video games