- Release Date: September 14, 2004
- Genre: Action
- Style: Third-Person 3D Action
- Similar Games: Power Rangers: Ninja Storm (IBM PC Compatible)
| Games: Power Rangers: Dino Thunder |
| Wikipedia: Power Rangers: Dino Thunder |
| This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (February 2009) |
| Power Rangers: Dino Thunder | |
| Format | Action-Adventure |
|---|---|
| Starring | James Napier Kevin Duhaney Emma Lahana Jason David Frank Jeffrey Parazzo Katrina Devine Tom Hern Miriama Smith Latham Gaines James Gaylyn Ismay Johnston |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of episodes | 38 (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Douglas Sloan Ann Austen Koichi Sakamoto |
| Producer(s) | Janine Dickins |
| Running time | 30 minutes |
| Production company(s) | BVS Entertainment |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | ABC (ABC Kids) ABC Family (Jetix) Toon Disney (Jetix) |
| Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
| Original run | February 14, 2004 – November 20, 2004 |
| Chronology | |
| Preceded by | Power Rangers: Ninja Storm |
| Followed by | Power Rangers: S.P.D. |
Power Rangers: Dino Thunder (often abbreviated as PRDT and often simply called Dino Thunder) is an American children's television series, an incarnation of the Power Rangers franchise. As with all Power Rangers series, it was adapted from a series from the long running, Japanese Super Sentai franchise, in this case the twenty-seventh, Bakuryuu Sentai Abaranger. This was also the name of the Korean dub of Abaranger in South Korea and had a similar/identical logo to the American version as well. Currently, 23 of the 38 episodes are available in various volumes on DVD in Region 1, whereas a complete box set was released in Region 2 in July 2008.
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Due to the mention that Power Rangers solely existed as a comic book in Power Rangers: Ninja Storm, many fans believed that series existed in a different universe than that of the original Power Rangers series. (However, Power Rangers in Space had previously mentioned a Ranger-based comic book in its crossover with Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation.) Fans also believed this due to the lack of a Ninja Storm/Wild Force team-up episode, partly due to the actors refusing to come since much of the production crew had been laid off as well as the change in hands of the Power Rangers franchise from Saban to Disney and filming locations from California to New Zealand. Executive producer Douglas Sloan also received heavy criticism for not tying Ninja Storm in with the original universe.
To tie up all of the loose Ninja Storm ends, and to try to bring in a larger audience, Sloan brought back Jason David Frank and his original character, The once evil turned hero, green, white, red, and now black ranger from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers through Power Rangers: Turbo, Tommy Oliver, a legendary Power Ranger, as a mentor for the new team as well as a fellow Power Ranger. Through the episodes "Legacy of Power", a look back on all of the previous Power Rangers series; "Back in Black", giving Tommy new Power Ranger powers; and "Thunder Storm", a team-up arc between Dino Thunder and Ninja Storm, all previous series were included in the original Power Rangers universe.
Also in the season premiere "Day of the Dino" Mesogog knew of Lothor as he mentioned Reefside would believe he had returned to town, although Blue Bay Harbor was Lothor's target in Ninja Storm. However considering Conner's twin brother attended the Wind Ninja Academy it is possible the two towns are relatively nearby one another, explaining Mesogog's statement.
Dino Thunder also was the first Power Rangers series to overtly acknowledge its Super Sentai roots with an episode entitled "Lost and Found in Translation," which featured a Japanese show based on the Power Rangers dubbed in English. In actuality, the footage used in that episode was from episode 10 ("Abare League Bind") of Dino Thunder's source series, Bakuryu Sentai Abaranger, dubbed in a manner similar to the comedic parody dub of Kagaku Sentai Dynaman in the mid-to-late 1980s.
A soccer player, a computer expert, a singer, an artist, and a teacher with a long history of such situations join forces to become Power Rangers and help save the Earth from the scheming of Mesogog, a dinosauric villain who wishes to eradicate all human life and return Earth to the age of dinosaurs.
In this season, Tommy Oliver, of Mighty Morphin Power Rangers to Power Rangers: Turbo fame, returns as a paleontology professor in Reefside, California. When he is assigned three detention students, Conner, Ethan, and Kira, they end up finding the Dino Gems, paving the way for them to become the Dino Rangers. Conner gains the power of the Tyrannozord, as well as super-speed; Ethan gains the power of the Tricerazord, as well as the ability to make his skin invulnerable; and Kira gains the power of the Pterazord, as well as a sonic scream. Tommy (known often as Dr. O) himself joins the team as the Black Dino Ranger, and they are also later joined by Trent Fernandez as the White Dino Ranger, with the powers of invisibility and camouflage, respectively. Trent Mercer must deal with the inner struggle of good and evil, as Tommy himself once had to do as the evil Green Ranger, due to the fact that he gained his powers from a raw Dino Gem in Mesogog's lab, with the powers originally intended to be Mesogog's. Mesogog is in fact, Trent's adopted father Anton Mercer, who, in a faulty lab experiment, began to mutate into Mesogog. Trent later sides with good and saves his father from the mutation. During the course of the series, the team adds to its arsenal Zords based on the Pachycephalosaurus, Parasaurolophus, Ankylosaurus, Dimetrodon, and Stegosaurus, the last of which combines with Trent's Zord, a Tupuxuara, to form the Dino Stegozord. Tommy pilots the Brachiosaurus Zord, the carrier for all the other Zords.
At the end of the series, Conner, Kira, Ethan, Tommy, and Trent finish off Mesogog with their raw Dino Gem power, but the gems are burned out in the process. Just before this, they are also forced to sacrifice all the Zords in their last battle with Zeltrax, one of Mesogog's strongest minions.
Near the beginning of the series, Tommy is kidnapped by Mesogog. While searching his computer in an attempt to find him, Connor, Kira, and Ethan come across a chronological history of the Power Rangers, going through every season and incarnation except Alien Rangers. The episode, "Legacy of Power," was the five-hundreth episode of Power Rangers, and the history was meant as a celebration of the milestone.
The Zords in Power Rangers: Dino Thunder were bioengineered from dinosaurs by Tommy Oliver and Anton Mercer.
A monthly comic strip based on the series appeared in every issue of "Jetix Magazine" in the UK. Jetix Magazine is the official magazine of JETIX, the channel that shows Dino Thunder in the UK. It was eventually replaced by S.P.D.
There were two games produced for Dino Thunder. On the Game Boy Advance, there was a sidescrolling game, which was a platformer involving fighting several villains from the series. The other game was produced for the PlayStation 2 and the Nintendo GameCube. This was the first Power Rangers game produced on a sixth generation console. All the action takes place inside the zords. This game also had some inconsistencies with the television series to allow the action to take place in the zords while battling the regular enemies who were human size.
| # | Air date | Episode Title |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2004-02-14 | "Day of the Dino, Part I" |
| 2 | 2004-02-14 | "Day of the Dino, Part II" |
| 3 | 2004-02-21 | "Wave Goodbye" |
| 4 | 2004-02-28 | "Legacy of Power" |
| 5 | 2004-03-06 | "Back in Black" |
| 6 | 2004-03-13 | "Diva In Distress" |
| 7 | 2004-03-20 | "Game On" |
| 8 | 2004-03-27 | "Golden Boy" |
| 9 | 2004-04-03 | "Beneath The Surface" |
| 10 | 2004-04-10 | "Ocean Alert" |
| 11 | 2004-04-17 | "White Thunder, Part I" |
| 12 | 2004-04-24 | "White Thunder, Part II" |
| 13 | 2004-05-01 | "White Thunder, Part III" |
| 14 | 2004-05-08 | "Truth And Consequences" |
| 15 | 2004-05-15 | "Leader Of The Whack" |
| 16 | 2004-05-22 | "Burning At Both Ends" |
| 17 | 2004-05-22 | "The Missing Bone" |
| 18 | 2004-06-12 | "Bully For Ethan" |
| 19 | 2004-06-13 | "Lost and Found in Translation" |
| 20 | 2004-06-19 | "It's A Mad Mad Mackerel" |
| 21 | 2004-07-10 | "Copy That" |
| 22 | 2004-07-17 | "Triassic Triumph" |
| 23 | 2004-07-24 | "A Star Is Torn" |
| 24 | 2004-07-31 | "A Ranger Exclusive" |
| 25 | 2004-08-07 | "Tutenhawken's Curse" |
| 26 | 2004-08-21 | "Disappearing Act" |
| 27 | 2004-08-28 | "Fighting Spirit" |
| 28 | 2004-09-05 | "The Passion of Conner" |
| 29 | 2004-09-18 | "Isn't It Lava-ly" |
| 30 | 2004-09-25 | "Strange Relations" |
| 31 | 2004-10-02 | "Thunder Storm, Part I" |
| 32 | 2004-10-09 | "Thunder Storm, Part II" |
| 33 | 2004-10-16 | "In Your Dreams" |
| 34 | 2004-10-23 | "Drawn Into Danger" |
| 35 | 2004-10-30 | "House Of Cards" |
| 36 | 2004-11-06 | "A Test Of Trust" |
| 37 | 2004-11-13 | "Thunder Struck, Part I" |
| 38 | 2004-11-20 | "Thunder Struck, Part II" |
| Preceded by Ninja Storm |
Power Rangers 2004 |
Succeeded by S.P.D. |
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This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Janine Dickins | |
| Strange Relations | |
| Latham Gaines |
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