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Power Rangers Dino Thunder - Wikipedia

  • ️Sat Feb 14 2004

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Power Rangers Dino Thunder
Genre
Based onBakuryū Sentai Abaranger
by Toei Company
Developed byThe Walt Disney Company
Toei Company
ShowrunnersAnn Austen
Douglas Sloan
Written byDouglas Sloan
Ann Austen
Jackie Marchand
John Tellegen
Steve Slavkin
Mark Hoffmeier
Bruce Kalish
Directed byCharlie Haskell
Andrew Merrifield
Paul Grinder
Douglas Sloan
Britta Johnstone
StarringSee below
Theme music composerBruce Lynch
ComposerBruce Lynch
Country of originUnited States
Japan
No. of episodes38
Production
Executive producersAnn Austen
Douglas Sloan
ProducersJanine Dickins
Koichi Sakamoto
Production locationsNew Zealand (Wellington, Auckland)
Japan (Greater Tokyo Area (Tokyo, Saitama, Yokohama)) and Kyoto)
CinematographySimon Riera
Running time20–21 minutes
Production companiesBVS Entertainment
Renaissance Atlantic Entertainment
Toei Company, Ltd.
Village Roadshow KP Productions Limited
Original release
NetworkABC Family
ABC (ABC Kids)
ReleaseFebruary 14 –
November 20, 2004
Related

Power Rangers Dino Thunder is the twelfth season of the television series, Power Rangers. This incarnation of Power Rangers was based on Bakuryū Sentai Abaranger, the 27th entry of Toei Company's long-running Super Sentai franchise.[1] Dino Thunder was also the subtitle of the Korean dub of Abaranger in South Korea and had a similar/identical logo to the American version as well. The series is notable as it features the return of Jason David Frank as Tommy Oliver[2][3] as a main character and a dinosaur theme for the powers, abilities and assets from most of the series' protagonists and antagonists. It was the first series to be aired on ABC Family part of ABC as well as part of Jetix on Toon Disney.[4][5]

A soccer player, a computer expert, a singer and eventually a teacher with a long history of such situations become Power Rangers to help save Earth from the ruthless scheming of the dinosauric Mesogog who wishes to eradicate all human life and return Earth to the age of dinosaurs. Mesogog is assisted in his ways by Elsa, Zeltrax, and an army each of both Tyrannodrones and Triptoids as well as monsters that they call their Mutations.

In this season, Tommy Oliver, from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers to Power Rangers Turbo fame, returns as a paleontology professor in Reefside, California and so he is known as Dr. Tommy Oliver (sometimes called by some in short as Dr. O). When he is assigned three detention students by Principal Randall (the human disguise of Elsa): athlete Conner McKnight, computer expert Ethan James and singer Kira Ford. They end up finding three Dino Gems - one for each teen, paving the way for their destiny as the Dino Thunder Power Rangers. Conner gains the powers of both the Tyrannozord and super running speed, Ethan gains the powers of both the Tricerazord and energy-formed skin-shield defense and Kira gains the powers of both the Pterazord and sonic screams.

Five episodes into the series, Tommy once again becomes a Ranger by bonding with the Black Dino Gem and receives its power of invisibility as the Black Dino Ranger. They are also later joined by Anton Mercer's adopted son Trent (some media reveals his family name, after 'Mercer', to be 'Fernandez' - 'Fernandez-Mercer') as the White Dino Ranger, whose White Dino Gem grants him the power of camouflage - before he joins, he must deal with the inner struggle of good and evil (as Tommy himself once had to do as the evil Green Ranger) because 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, who, in a faulty lab experiment, began to mutate into Mesogog. Trent later sides with good and saves his father from the mutation.

The Rangers morph by drawing power from their respective Dino Gems, which Tommy grants Conner's, Ethan's and Kira's the ability to morph into Dino Morphers whenever needed (Morph call: "Dino Thunder, Power Up!"). They use their abilities to battle Mesogog. By calling out "Super Dino Mode", the Power Rangers tap into the power of the dinosaurs, with spikes extending into view on their suits and, in the case of Kira, wings with Trent's own Super Dino Mode possessing an exclusive extra factor: bladed thin spikes extending from his hands. Each Dino Gems has a special power; red is speed; blue is armor; yellow is hyper screeching; black and white are similar, being invisibility and camouflage, which means Tommy and Trent both use stealth-themed powers with their Gems. In Power Rangers Dino Fury, the Dino Gems are revealed to be created by the Morphin Masters.[6][7]

During the course of the series, the team adds the following to its arsenal of Zords: Cephalozord (based on the Pachycephalosaurus), Dimetrozord (based on the Dimetrodon), Stegozord (based on the Stegosaurus), Parasaurzord (based on the Parasaurolophus), and Ankylozord (based on the Ankylosaurus). The Stegozord later combines with Trent's Dragozord (based on the Tupuxuara) to form the Dino Stegozord, effectively stealing the Stegozord. Tommy is paired with the Brachiozord (based on the Brachiosaurus), a carrier Zord for most, but not all, of the other Zords. Conner is also later given the powers of the Shield of Triumph to morph into the Triassic Ranger for extra power and pilots the Mezodon Rover/Megazord (based on the Styracosaurus), the Zord that corresponds with the Triassic Ranger powers, which can combine with the Cephalo, Dimetro, Parasaur and Ankylozords to form the Triceramax Megazord.

At the end of the series, the Rangers destroy Mesogog with their raw Dino Gem powers combined into a single last-resort attack which burns out the gems in the process. Just before this final battle, they are forced to sacrifice the Zords in their last battle with Zeltrax. Finally they return to their normal lives.

Cast and characters

[edit]

Dino Thunder Rangers

  • James Napier as Conner McKnight, the Red Dino Ranger and Triassic Ranger.
  • Kevin Duhaney as Ethan James, the Blue Dino Ranger.
  • Emma Lahana as Kira Ford, the Yellow Dino Ranger.
  • Jason David Frank as Dr. Tommy Oliver, the Black Dino Ranger, and previously the Green Ranger, the White Ranger, the White Ninja Ranger, Red Zeo Ranger and the first Red Turbo Ranger.
  • Jeffrey Parazzo as Trent Fernandez-Mercer, the White Dino Ranger.

Supporting characters

Villains

Guest stars

  • Pua Magasiva as Shane Clarke, the Red Wind Ranger.
  • Sally Martin as Tori Hanson, the Blue Wind Ranger.
  • Glenn McMillan as Waldo "Dustin" Brooks, the Yellow Wind Ranger.
  • Adam Tuominen as Hunter Bradley, the Crimson Thunder Ranger.
  • Jorgito Vargas, Jr. as Blake Bradley, the Navy Thunder Ranger.
  • Jason Chan as Cameron "Cam" Watanabe, the Green Samurai Ranger.
  • Grant McFarland as Sensei Kanoi Watanabe and Lothor.
  • Peter Rowley as the voice of Zurgane.
  • Katrina Browne as Kapri.
  • Katrina Devine as Marah.

Conversations of the season's name started as early as a year before the show's premiere. On March 4, 2003, an annual kick-off presentation was given to Disney and Bandai representatives to discuss the next year of business with topics such as forecasts of toy sales and development timelines. While "Dino Thunder" was not being presented at this time, the following titles were given as recommendations:[8]

  • Dino Strike
  • Dino Might
  • Dino Damage
  • Dino Defenders
  • Dragon Hunt

This series sees legacy cast member Jason David Frank (Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, Power Rangers Zeo, Power Rangers Turbo) return as a series regular, now in the role as mentor and later additional Ranger. At a Ikkicon Q&A in 2010, Frank discussed how his return started with a call he received from co-executive producers Ann Austen and Douglas Sloan, the former being Frank's first acting coach, in an effort to boost the show's ratings.[9]

With his family and life in the United States, it's rumored that Frank negotiated time off during the season's shooting in New Zealand to be able to return home. Relying on stunt performers and additional ADR, writers created a plot that has Tommy collectively encased in amber, unable to de-morph, and unable to control his invisible powers for episodes 13 - 26.

The season's fourth episode, "Legacy of Power," features a retelling of the show's in-universe history for the show's 500th episode celebration. "Fighting Spirit," the season's 27th episode, sees Tommy encounter his previous Ranger forms in a dream and aired on the eleventh anniversary of Power Rangers.

Dino Thunder was the first Power Rangers season 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, Bakuryū Sentai Abaranger, dubbed in a manner similar to the comedic parody dub of Kagaku Sentai Dynaman in the late 1980s.

Video game publisher THQ released two video games for Dino Thunder, one version for both Sony's PlayStation 2 and Nintendo's GameCube while the other was exclusively released on Nintendo's Game Boy Advance. Developed by Natsume, the GBA version was a side-scrolling fighting game with 13 missions and allowed players to control both the rangers and Megazord at different parts of the levels. The home console version, developed by Pacific Coast Power & Light, let players pilot the team's Zords as they work to free their auxiliary machines and destroy enemy facilities. This version included unlockable Zords from the two previous seasons, Wild Force and Ninja Storm, and was the first Power Rangers game to be produced on a sixth generation console.

In the United States, the series was released by Buena Vista Home Entertainment on five volumes, consisting of the first twenty-four episodes, except for Episode 10:

  • Day of the Dino (June 1, 2004, episodes 1-3, also includes Episodes 37-38 of Ninja Storm)
  • Legacy of Power (September 7, 2004, episodes 4-8)
  • White Thunder (September 7, 2004, episodes 9, 11-14)
  • Collision Course (December 7, 2004, episodes 15-19)
  • Triassic Triumph (December 7, 2004, episodes 20-24)

These volume sets were also released in regions where BVHE held distribution rights, however, Volume 1 does not include the bonus Ninja Storm episodes. In countries where licensing was held by Jetix Europe, releases depended on the region or distributor.

BVHE released the complete series in the United Kingdom on July 14, 2008, on a seven-disc boxset.[10] In the United States, Shout! Factory released the complete series on a five-disc set on October 18, 2016.[11]

  1. ^ Sisario, Ben (2004-02-29). "FOR YOUNG VIEWERS; Those Mighty Power Rangers Just Keep On Morphing". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
  2. ^ a b "Power Rangers Dino Thunder - Legacy of Power". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
  3. ^ "Power Rangers Dino Thunder - Day of the Dino". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
  4. ^ "THE BEST 'POWER RANGERS' REBOOT HAPPENED IN 2004". Inverse. 22 December 2016.
  5. ^ "Power Rangers Origins and Evolutions". ComingSoon.net. 2017-03-20. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  6. ^ Kelley, Shamus (February 21, 2021). "Power Rangers: Who Are The Morphin Masters?". Den of Geek. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  7. ^ Kelley, Shamus (April 17, 2021). "How Power Rangers Dino Fury Finally Embraced The Franchise's Continuity". Den of Geek. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  8. ^ Museum, Morphin (December 12, 2024). ""Ever wonder how season names came about in the Disney Era?..." Post". X. Retrieved February 1, 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ No Pink Spandex (2010-04-02). Ikkicon 2010 - Jason David Frank Q&A Part 3. Retrieved 2025-02-01 – via YouTube.
  10. ^ "Power Rangers: Dino Thunder". Amazon UK. 14 July 2008.
  11. ^ "Power Rangers Dino Thunder: The Complete Series". Shout! Factory. Retrieved 2025-02-01.