CHARGEMAN KEN!
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
65
RELEASE
June 28, 1974
LENGTH
7 min
DESCRIPTION
It is the year 2074. In a world threatened by aliens... an unlikely hero emerges! Ken Izumi may look like an ordinary 10-year-old boy, but he secretly possesses weapons, armor, and accessories that transform him into the superheroic Chargeman Ken. Ken protects his mom, dad, little sister Caron, robot pal Barican, and the rest of mankind from the diabolical Juralians, shape-shifting alien invaders bent on terrorizing the earth with flesh-eating butterflies, booby-trapped scientists, an evil doll, a prison break, alien mummies, a kid that sets stuff on fire, a song that makes you die... basically, they have about 65 plans for world domination.
The only thing standing between the fragile human race and conquest by the Juralians is Chargeman Ken and his unquenchable thirst for fiery, atomic justice!
Chargeman Ken originally ran on Japanese broadcast television in 1974. This delightfully bizarre kids’ cartoon was rediscovered in 2007 by Japanese fans, who flocked to Chargeman Ken for its strange artwork, clumsy animation, and fantastically inept stories... some of which have been banned from Japanese TV altogether.
(Source: Discotek Media)
CAST
Ken Izumi
Kazuko Sawada
Barican
Kazumi Tanaka
Caron Izumi
Volga Hakase
Hikou
Maou
Nagisa
Saori Izumi
Yuki Aida
Helen Koizumi
X-6-gou
Hoshi
Hiroshi Izumi
Kiyoshi Kawanishi
Matsumoto
Jurals Seijin
12-ban
K-11-gou
Speed Baroness
Miyuki
Yuichi
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO CHARGEMAN KEN!
REVIEWS
C00kieMaster
20/100Literally an unforgettable experienceContinue on AniListThere comes a time where an anime or really any piece of fiction or art moves you so much that you will never forget the experience. How likely a person is to forget a piece of art is often linked to its quality. This is something that I have seen countless times as a negative criticism for many anime or manga. If you read enough reviews you will see sentences such as:
A forgettable experience...
Forgettable characters...
I cannot find myself looking back at this...
unmemorable...
I don't think I will remember this in a week
If we are using memorability as a contention for judging the quality of media then certainly the 1974 anime Charge Man Ken has a solid argument to be one of the greatest anime of all time.
Ok calm down Mods, this is not a troll review. I'mma start being 'serious' now.
I am going to do something that I was piously against in reviewing media that is to NEVER give spoilers. But given the unique nature of this anime and my utter lack of interest for ANYONE to watch this, I really don't give a shit anymore. In fact, giving spoilers will not do jack shit because the whole 'story' is literally just a convoluted unexplainable mess of contrived events.
I am just going to be frank. Charge Man Ken is bad. It is terrible in every shape and form. It is literal dog shit. I am the type of person that never liked shitting on a production because I know that at the end of the day this was made by a human being and I try to empathize with the strangers working on any art no matter how terrible it may be. But even the creators of this anime really did not give a shit because according to the wikipedia page of this horrendous anime:
The low budget caused Knack Productions's staff to become apathetic toward the show and largely skip work on it in favor of going to the beach
So the gloves are off and I am going to laser blast this like Chargeman Ken as it rightfully deserves.
I have never seen a more lazy animation in my life, most of the 'animation' presented are just prolonged still images that occasionally zooms in or pans. And yes the work of the animation work is already lazy enough but the production team one up that laziness by literally reusing the same animation multiple time again and again to the point it is literally impossible to ignore. I consider myself quite an unobservant person, I have watched anime with friends before and was constantly impressed when they are able to immediately recognize duplicate animations used in literally 10 episodes ago or longer. The amount of reused animations is so staggering high to the point I would often be confused to whether I have watched the same episode. And no I am not talking about the dumb transformation scene where Ken just basically just puts on a helmet.
Presenting:
Chargeman Ken Rolling
Chargeman Ken Shooting
Bad Guys Dying
Not only they keep reusing the same animation they keep reusing the same exact music tracks. And there like literally 4 tracks for the entire 65 episodes.
The generic cheerful background music
The generic suspense music
The generic sad music
The transformation theme song
Maybe there is one more?? but I honestly I don't think I care enough to notice or recall.
And I almost forget to talk about the art... its just so ugly. The background art is honestly whatever but the way the characters are drawn are literally so uncanny and ugly to the point that I cannot take the anime seriously LITERALLY at first glance.
Okay then what about the 'story'?
EVERY single episode follows THIS EXACT FORMULA
Evil Juralians have a stupid evil plan > They manage to trick Ken into their 'trap' (EVERY SINGLE TIME) > Ken transforms by putting up a helmet > Ken Kills all the Juralians > END
Where the Juralians come from? How Ken gets his powers? Does he actually have powers or is it just his powerful high tech arsenal? Why is Ken the only one fighting?
I wish someone can answer those questions about the story too because these are questions I don't think even God knows. Ken just heroically foils the plans of the Juralians for 64 episodes without effort and literally just blow up their base in the last episode that is 65.
There is one episode where the evil Juralians capture and tortures a random human scientist and try to get him to tell them Chargeman Ken's weakness. He screams: 'KEN HAVE NO WEAK POINTS!' Whether he did it out of bravery to not reveal his secrets or that is genuinely the case... we will never know...
There is so much more shit to talk about but I think I said enough, if you want a more detailed breakdown on how terrible this 'anime' is you can hear all about it from one of my favorite youtuber if you are interested in this video:
Despite all the criticism I did genuinely enjoyed watching it. Cringe so bad its good comedy is not usually something that I am into; there was a time I tried to watch The Room because its famously hailed as 'so bad its good'. I never understood the appeal. To me its just BAD. There is literally no entertainment value, I stopped watching after literally 10 minutes or less. Charge Man Ken is something different man, I don't know if its the fact its a goofy looking cartoon or for whatever reason. It is so baffling stupid and bad that there are literal times I laugh to tears and just retort in a high pitch voice against my computer screen like 'what da fak broooo???' Watching Charge Man Ken is like sniffing glue or watching a train wreck, you know its bad but for some reason you can't stop. My advice is probably do not binge it, there are certainly times where I watched multiple episodes and felt like I am getting too much brain damage. Based on my professional opinion I prescribe no more than 3 episodes a day to keep your mental health in check.
In all seriousness if I am rating based on enjoyment this is probably a 10/10. But I am so sorry, this is so blatantly bad in every way it does not deserve more than 1/10. But just because of how much I enjoyed it I have to at least give it a 2/10.
Should you watch Charge Man Ken? No is the obvious answer. I don't think this sort of humor is for everyone. If anything its pretty mean spirited to enjoy. Enjoying the disaster that is Charge Man Ken is somewhat akin to making fun of people with mental health issues. You decide if this the sort of entertainment you are into.
Definitely an unforgettable experience, but for all the wrong reasons.
hsch96
100/100When fascism comes to the future, it will be wrapped in a tokusatsu suit and carrying a raygunContinue on AniListSpoilers for Chargeman Ken! and the 1985 movie Brazil
Chargeman Ken is an anime unlike anything I have ever seen, in that it comes off as a Brechtian play. It is incredibly good at putting mediocre episodes in between the completely unhinged ones, like the pickled ginger that comes with sushi, to make you lower your guard again and increase the effect of the next piece; and I think that this exact mixture of involuntary contemplation and incredulous stupor is necessary to discover its subtextual message. Even the animation and the music do everything in their power to break the immersion in the A-plot and annoy you as much as possible, so you begin to look behind the curtain (There is even a liberally used track that canonically makes the listener go insane).
As we embark on our journey, we are greeted by Ken, the ostensible protagonist of the series. He lives a happy life in future Japan with his mom and his dad who is a doctor, his little sister, and his clumsy robot. Ken's paradise is only threatened by an alien race, called the Juralians, who attempt to supplant humanity by taking over the world. The dastardly Juralians threaten human society in some way, Ken transforms, desintegrates them using a beam weapon, and the day is saved (for now). This is the plot of almost every episode, and on a surface level, the show is a monster-of-the-week action flick where the main appeal is to see what wicked design the Juralians have come up with this episode.
But as the episodes go on, the whole thing becomes a bit silly (like with all the classrooms in Japan being packed into a single building), and the always-same OP, ED, and canned transformation sequence starts to hamper your enjoyment of the action and kick the analytic part of your brain into gear. Then, there is an episode where the picture that has been established suddenly cracks. A meteor rushes towards the Earth from outer space, and instead of cackling gleefully about humanity's impending doom, the leader of the Juralians offers his help to deorbit and whittle down the meteor, and actually goes through with it! Hold on, weren't they, you know, bad guys? How reliable is this narrative anymore? The next few episodes are mid slop, so you are given some alone time to ponder these questions.
Over time, social-political elements are introduced, especially as the show goes into other problems like food shortages, poverty, or corruption. But strangely enough, even though those issues are known to be systemic, they are discussed as though they were brought on by some group of Juralians that has to be eliminated. Even when a more popular boy than him appears at Ken's school, he is revealed to be a Juralian in disguise. Hold on, didn't we hear this somewhere before? Let's look at some of the things the superficially apparent story of this series does:
- It establishes a cult of tradition. Barring one, every episode follows the same blueprint, and nothing new of substance can be learned
- It rejects intellectualism not only in the museum episode, but also when it reveals one scientist to be a military security risk and another to be a literal bomb planted by the Juralians
- Ken acts for actions sake, he always transforms and attacks where often further analysis would be wise
- Everyone who disagrees with the view that the Juralians have to be eliminated is later shown to be a traitor
- Everything and everyone different is portrayed as suspicious and pertaining to Juralians
- The story appeals to a disenfranchised middle class, as it takes place among a nuclear family that is exposed to constant outside threats
- There is an obsession with a plot to replace humanity by the Juralians
- The Juralians are at the same time both too strong and too weak, they can easily beat the Armed Forces, yet are no match to Ken's stun gun
- Life is permanent warfare: Large-scale attacks by Juralians are portrayed to be commonplace and happen all the time, despite everyday life going on as if everything was normal
- There is contempt for the weak, as Ken's robot Barrican is the butt of constant derision due to his mental and physical disabilities. (In general, Ken is deeply unserious about mental health, he pretends to be an idiot to infiltrate a mental hospital and he praises a man he meets for his inability to cope with modern life after it drove him to attempting suicide)
- Heroism is expected: Ken is a kid who goes to primary school and yet the story hinges on him waging battle, piloting vehicles, and solving criminal cases
- Sexism is rampant, whenever a woman is the focus of the story she is manipulated or in distress
- Humanity is portrayed as a monolithic bloc rallying behind Ken, absent a few individuals who represent the criminal element or have shit taste
- The vocabulary of the story is impoverished as there is no place for critical reasoning or meaningful dialogue
Though this may appear innocuous at first glance, these are in reality the 14 defining characteristics of fascism outlined by Umberto Eco. By fighting against what he believes to be an existential threat, Ken is unwittingly, though by no means accidentally, transformed into the ideal fascist supersoldier battling an increasingly strange and inconherent external enemy to uphold internal stability. Over time, Ken shows his growing disrespect for human rights himself every time he fires at Juralian vessels he has to assume contain innocents and hostages. And once this is revealed, the future doesn't seem so utopian at all: In the penultimate episode it is shown that every facet of human life hinges on a central computer system that cannot be circumvented and has no backup, meaning that whatever instance controls these computers exerts dictatorial, even tyrannical power on everyone else's feeble existence.
But, in a twist that may have gone on to inspire Terry Gilliam's similarly eminent classic Brazil, the actual governing entities are anonymous; the only thing we get to see - albeit in excruciating detail - is the operation of the immediate executive force, be it Brazil's all-enveloping bureaucracy or Chargeman Ken's symbolic and militaristic displays as a führer figure. Fittingly, this leads to another question both of these works pose to us, Brazil more overtly in its biting satire befitting of Monty Python's animation director; Chargeman Ken more subtly in its distinctly circumspect Japanese manner: Who is really to blame for the attacks?
Suddenly it makes sense that every classroom in Japan would be in the same building, despite the horrifying security implications an actual Juralian attack on this building would entail, that despite possessing overwhelming scientific advantages and vastly superior firepower they would go for underhanded, convoluted machinations all involving extremely mundane episodes in the life of this one specific boy, and that after the complete extermination of the Juralian race during the series finale, no attempts are made to explain how this final solution actually solves any of the problems from which Ken or humanity itself were suffering.
In contrast to the bland A-plot from which to escape, the subtext is brilliant and refreshing: You, the viewer, are put into the shoes of a fascist believer who slowly, through a state of introspective zen masterfully interrupted by sporadic clues and moral wake-up calls, manages to free themself from successive layers of delusion about the regime and their own role in it, despite everything that was taught and promulgated to them as unquestionable truth on a meta level. Chargeman Ken! might just be the antidote to fascism.
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SCORE
- (2.1/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inJune 28, 1974
Main Studio Knack Productions
Favorited by 32 Users