Shark Face Fan Art Red Vs Blue Shark Face Armor Fan Art

Street Sharks
Street Sharks Title Card.png

Title menu

Genre
  • Action
  • Hazard
  • Superhero
Created by
  • Phil Harnage
  • Martha Moran
Developed by
  • Phil Harnage (flavour i)
  • Douglas Booth (season 2)
  • Martha Moran (season 3)
Directed by
  • Ron Myrick (season i)
  • Ron Harris (seasons 2–3)
Starring
  • Lee Tockar
  • Matt Loma
  • Andrew Rannells
  • D. Kevin Williams
  • Tony Wike
  • Terry Berner
  • J. Michael Lee
  • Pam Carter
  • Jim Hoggatt
Theme music composer
  • Michael Benghiat
  • Lois Blaisch
Composer Reed Robbins
Land of origin United states of america
Original language English
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 40
Production
Executive producers
  • Allen Bohbot
  • Mark Freedman
  • Andy Heyward
  • Robby London
Producer
  • Michael Maliani
Running fourth dimension 22 minutes
Production company
  • DIC Productions, L.P.[a]
Benefactor United States
Bohbot Entertainment
Worldwide
ABC Distribution Visitor
Release
Original network Syndication (Amazin' Adventures)
Flick format NTSC
Original release September 7, 1994 (1994-09-07) –
May 18, 1997 (1997-05-18)
Chronology
Related shows Extreme Dinosaurs

Street Sharks is an American superhero animated serial about the adventures of crime-fighting half-man/one-half-sharks.[1] Information technology was produced by DIC Productions, Fifty.P. and Bohbot Entertainment, and aired from 1994 to 1997, originally as a part of Bohbot'south Amazin' Adventures programming cake.[2] The prove promoted a line of action figures by Mattel.[three] The creators were David Siegel and Joe Galliani of Mr. Joe'due south Really Big Productions.

In 1996, the Street Sharks were paired with the Dino Vengers and the show was retitled Dino Vengers Featuring Street Sharks.

Plot [edit]

A university professor named Dr. Robert Bolton and his partner Dr. Luther Paradigm create a machine known equally the "cistron-slammer" which is capable of changing aquatic animals into anthropomorphic hybrids by combining their Dna. In his try to preclude Paradigm from using this machine for personal power, Bolton is transformed into an unseen monstrosity, simply escapes. Later, Paradigm gives Bolton's four sons John, Bobby, Coop, and Clint the likeness of four dissimilar sharks. When Dr. Paradigm captures their friend Bends, the resulting "Street Sharks" rescue him and the resulting boxing causes Paradigm to be combined with piranha Deoxyribonucleic acid (for which he is frequently nicknamed "Dr. Piranoid" past other characters). In subsequent episodes, Dr. Epitome creates a variety of mutant animals to destroy the Street Sharks while attempting to persuade the inhabitants of their native metropolis of Fission City to imprison them. Of these mutant animals, a few sided with the Sharks themselves: namely Rox, Moby Lick, Mantaman, and El Swordo.

The final few episodes introduced the Dino Vengers: a group of extraterrestrial dinosaurs allied with the Street Sharks against their own rivals in the Raptor Gang. When Dr. Prototype wanted to become a sample of the Raptors' DNA to meliorate himself, they fob him by giving him iguana DNA which transforms him into "Dr. Iguanazoid" leading to him working with the Raptors where they volition reward him past correcting the Deoxyribonucleic acid error they gave him. In the end, Paradigm is captured and imprisoned while the Raptor Gang leaves Earth.

The Dino Vengers afterward had their own series called Extreme Dinosaurs where they and the Raptors had different backgrounds.

Characters [edit]

Bolton family [edit]

A screenshot from the first episode, "Sharkbait". Clockwise from upper left: Jab, Streex, Big Slammu, Ripster.

  • Ripster (voiced by Lee Tockar) – John Bolton is the smartest, the leader, and oldest of the four brothers who enjoys creating inventions. He has taken up most of his knowledge and skills from his father. He is also an avid pool player. In the kickoff episode of the evidence, John rides a motorbike. When transformed into Ripster, he becomes a bully white shark able to bite through steel, besides equally having extrasensory abilities.
  • Jab (voiced by Matt Hill) – Clint Bolton is the laziest of the Street Sharks, only enjoys battle and appears to have some talent with mechanics. When transformed into Jab, he becomes a hammerhead shark and uses his caput every bit a battering ram.
  • Streex (voiced past Andrew Rannells) – Robert "Bobby" Bolton Jr. is a level-headed, absurd and self-proclaimed ladies' man. He is e'er shown wearing his rollerblades and appears to savor parachuting and snowboarding and later plays drums professionally. When transformed into Streex, he becomes a tiger shark, named after the purple streaks on his body. In the toyline, he was originally called "Blades" for his skills equally a rollerblader.
  • Large Slammu (voiced by D. Kevin Williams) – Coop Bolton is the strongest and youngest of the four. He is also a football player in high schoolhouse. In the offset episode, he uses a skateboard. When transformed into Big Slammu, he becomes a whale shark and his most prominent maneuver is the "Seismic Slam" in which he may shake or crack the footing with his fists.
  • Dr. Robert Bolton (voiced by D. Kevin Williams) – A university professor and the begetter of the Bolton Brothers who invents the gene-manipulation device for peaceful uses. He is only seen on-screen in the start episode where he tries to cease Dr. Prototype'southward experiments merely to become inverse into an unseen inhuman fauna. Afterwards, he is only ever represented by a shadow cast on the wall (either as a humanoid or equally an animal like monstrosity). It is suggested through the series that Dr. Bolton secretly assists his sons. The episode "Shark Source" shows him defeating Dr. Piranoid to rescue a kidnapped mutant crocodile. Despite the fact that he helps them, Dr. Bolton is never reunited with his sons. However, he does contact his sons through a TV screen where the transmission keeps fifty-fifty the viewers from seeing his current appearance.
  • Sir Thomas Bolton - An ancestor of the protagonists who is encountered in the episode "Sir Shark-a-Lot". He is the target of Paradigm's time-travel circuit to destroy the Bolton family.

Allies [edit]

  • Lena Mack (voiced past Pam Carter) – A student of Dr. Prototype's who suspects him of criminal offence, and therefore assists the Street Sharks. She is subsequently reduced to a background role and has a younger brother named Malik.
  • Bends (voiced by Jim Hoggatt) – Fission Academy'due south technical genius and a source of comic relief who supplies the Street Sharks with their motorbikes and weapons and conceals them underneath the University's ice skating rink. In episode 16, it is revealed that he cannot be mutated past a gene-slamming airborne virus. This genetic trait was passed downward to his swell, great, great grandson who is a member of the resistance against Dr. Paradigm in an alternate future as seen in "Shark to the Future".
  • Moby Lick – Jets Taylor is a expert friend of the Bolton Brothers and Bends. Nether Dr. Prototype's mind-control, Jets is combined with a killer whale by Dr. Paradigm in society to brand him his latest Seaviate. Becoming Moby Lick, he afterward broke free of Image's heed control and became an ally of the Street Sharks. Moby Lick has a long prehensile natural language (the source of his name), great strength, and the power to inhale water and expel information technology through his blowhole; and after demonstrated the ability to communicate with other killer whales. In "Shark Hunt", it is revealed that Moby became an eco-conservationist in the Everglades National Park.
  • Rox (voiced by Lee Tockar) – Melvin Kresnik is an upward-and-coming musician mistakenly combined with a bull shark who exposes Dr. Paradigm's plan to change Kresnik's audience into mutants. Thereafter, Rox continues as a rock star by explaining his altered grade as a costume and remains a friend of the Sharks. He was dropped from the series later on Flavor Two. In the toyline, Rox is labelled every bit a mako shark instead of a balderdash shark.
  • President David Horne (voiced by Tony Wike) – The President of the United states. The Street Sharks salve him from Dr. Paradigm before he can be "cistron washed" similar he did with Vice-President Russell. Following this incident, President Horne secretly leaks information to the Street Sharks.
  • El Swordo (voiced past Garry Chalk) – A circus performer who worked with a large marlin named Spike. The two were somewhen "fused" together by Dr. Image resulting in a combination of memories under the homo's personality. El Swordo remains active in entertainment every bit a professional person swordsman.
  • Mantaman (voiced by D. Kevin Williams) – A flight dinosaur-like alien specimen was constitute encased in stone by Dr. Terrence "Terry" Morton and reactivated past Dr. Paradigm. Dr. Morton then deliberately cistron-slammed himself with a combination of the alien'southward Deoxyribonucleic acid and manta ray DNA to help the Street Sharks fight the original alien. He has a younger brother named Ryan who appears in "Shark Jacked" when he gets captured past Dr. Paradigm. By the cease of the episode, Mantaman'due south parents learn of what became of their son and accept his appearance. Around the "Ancient Sharkonauts" episode, Mantaman returns nether the control of the Raptors when it was revealed that they were backside the flying dinosaur-like alien whose Deoxyribonucleic acid is function of Mantaman. He is later liberated by the Street Sharks.
  • The Dino Vengers – A armed services unit of measurement from an exoplanet inhabited by anthropomorphic dinosaurs. Allied with the Street Sharks. Once ordinary members of their race, the four volunteered to receive genetic enhancements that made them far larger and stronger to meliorate combat Bad Rap and his gang of terrorists.
    • T-Os (voiced by Ian James Corlett) – A Tyrannosaurus and the leader of the Dino Vengers.
    • Stegz (voiced by D. Kevin Williams) – A Stegosaurus.
    • Bullzeye (voiced by Ian James Corlett) – A Pteranodon.
    • Spike (voiced by Garry Chalk) – A Triceratops.

Antagonists [edit]

  • Dr. Luther Paradigm (voiced by J. Michael Lee) – The master antagonist of the serial and curvation-enemy of the Street Sharks. A professor at Fission City Academy, he is easily identified by his metal eyepatch and subsequently by a giant yellowish robotic exoskeleton, with offensive capabilities including the ability to fire harpoons. In the 2d episode, Dr. Image is injected with piranha DNA meant for the Street Sharks who nicknamed him Dr. Piranoid. After, Paradigm's face assumes inhuman attributes at moments of strong emotion. When in public, Dr. Paradigm wears a robe to hide his exoskeleton. When Dr. Bolton defeated Dr. Piranoid to rescue a convict mutant crocodile and damaged his armor, it was shown that parts of his trunk were fish-like. During episodes featuring the Dino-Vengers, Dr. Image injected himself with iguana Deoxyribonucleic acid which was given to him by the Raptors instead of Velociraptor Deoxyribonucleic acid and was renamed Dr. Iguanazoid as a consequence. He has since helped out the Raptors with their plots hoping that they will actually give him Velociraptor Deoxyribonucleic acid. Past "Shark-apolypse At present!," Dr. Iguanazoid is apprehended past the Street Sharks.
    • SharkBot (voiced by Steve Gibbs) – Dr. Paradigm'southward experimentation with robotics. It was used to free the monster Repteel from prison and frame the Street Sharks for the offense. The Sharks ultimately reprogrammed SharkBot to destroy Paradigm'south laboratory. SharkBot was after rebuilt into SharkBot 2.0, which fought the Street Sharks until the end of the series' second flavor.
    • Tentakill – A biped creature of unknown origins and species, first seen in the episode "Sir Shark-a-Lot" as Prototype's newest weapon. It is incapable of spoken language, shows limited intelligence, and was not utilized often.
    • Seaviates – A group of mutant bounding main creatures that serve Dr. Paradigm.
      • Slobster (voiced by D. Kevin Williams) – An anthropomorphic monster created past injecting a lobster with the DNA of Genghis Khan and Thomas Blood. He and Slash only appear in season i (although they still announced in the opening credits).
      • Slash (voiced by Terry Berner) – A swordfish injected with the Dna of villains similar Genghis Khan and Thomas Blood like Slobster. Thus, he becomes an anthropomorphic fish with a drill chip on its olfactory organ who speaks in a hissing lisp. Slash is usually defeated past immobilization of his nasal drill. He and Slobster but appear in flavour one (although they all the same announced in the opening credits).
      • Killamari (voiced past D. Kevin Williams) – An anthropomorphic squid able to project natural "spears" or "harpoons" from his mouth and the many suckers covering his body. In the episode "Lone Shark," he about kills Jab with his venom. Lena and Bends concoct an anti-venom which has since reduced his threat.
      • Repteel (voiced past Tony Wike) – The only i of Dr. Image's Seaviates to take originally been human being. Mr. Cunneyworth is the aged owner and hotel manager of a run-down hotel accidentally demolished past the Street Sharks during a fight with Dr. Epitome'south Seaviates. Every bit he had nowhere else to become, Mr. Cunneyworth willingly immune Dr. Image to merge his genetic codes with those of a moray eel and an electric eel. As Repteel, he feeds on electricity and shoots miniature eels (also charged with electricity) from his hands and wears a special pack to store energy.
      • Shrimp Louie (voiced by Andrew Rannells) – A mutated shrimp and one of Paradigm'southward later Seaviates. Though it is unclear if he was human first or non. He is not very strong, is quite the coward, and his primary weapons are big blaster guns. He simply appears in seasons 2 and 3.
  • Maximillian Greco – An anile mafioso who blackmails Dr. Paradigm into gene-slamming him with the DNA of a rhinoceros (upon its nose-hair samples being obtained) and the Dna of a desert tortoise upon learning of his illegal and secret experiments. This granted Greco the strength of a rhinoceros and the longevity of a desert tortoise which rejuvenated Greco to half his existent age. He afterwards resurfaced as the owner of a casino.
    • Zeus and Apollo (song effects provided by D. Kevin Williams) – Maximillian Greco's pet Chihuahuas. Like their owner, they were also genetically enhanced by Dr. Image which made them larger than normal.
  • Malcolm Medusa III (voiced past J. Michael Lee) – A rich, business-owning large game hunter who oftentimes targets endangered animals. The Street Sharks and Moby Lick expose him. In "Shark Chase", Malcolm Medusa Three traps Moby Lick and the Street Sharks in a hunting enclosure. He is somewhen imprisoned in an isle prison equally he plans his revenge.
    • Clammando (voiced by D. Kevin Williams) – A mutant clam who is Malcolm Medusa III's correct-hand human being. He started out every bit a dock worker for Malcolm Medusa Three who barbarous into a toxic waste material part of the h2o where there were clams. Equally a result upon beingness fished out by Malcolm, he turned into a mutant clam. In "Shark to the Hereafter," Clammando's appearance was first used as a Seaviate that worked for Dr. Paradigm during the Street Sharks' visit to the time to come.
  • The Raptors – A trio of rogue Velociraptor-like criminals.
    • Bad Rap (voiced by Doug Parker) – The leader of the Raptors, who has a metal brace-like device on his rima oris and a rocket launcher on his correct paw.
    • Haxx (voiced past Doug Parker) – A Raptor with implants on the backs of each wrist that produce green blades, whose tail has been replaced with a blade capable of spinning like a drill.
    • Spittor (voiced by Doug Parker) – The scientist and brains of the Raptors. Spittor carries a tank with various liquids released from nozzles on his hands, tail, and rima oris.
  • Dr. Tecno-Piranoid (voiced by J. Michael Lee) – A hereafter counterpart of Prototype. He is more than evil and quite possibly more powerful than the regular. He could also be consider the worst villain of the show. He first appears in the episode, "Shark to the Future" and and so returns in "Shark Wars". Like how Image has SharkBots serving him, this version has Mechosharks equally his mechanical army.
    • Mechosharks – Dr. Tecno-Piranoid's army of mechanized shark monsters.

Recurring characters [edit]

  • Guy in the Sky (voiced past Tony Wike) – Fission Metropolis'south top air radio reporter and paparazzo. He was never fully seen, merely recognized by a xanthous helicopter. The Guy in the Sky was later dropped from the show afterward first season.
  • Detective Michael Brock – The police force detective who investigates the Sharks' activities. He was after dropped from the show after beginning season.
  • Mayor Neutrino - is the mayor of Fission City.
  • Danielle Lafon - is Fission Urban center'southward news reporter.

Series overview [edit]

Episodes [edit]

Season one (1994) [edit]

Season 2 (1995) [edit]

Flavour 3 (1996–97) [edit]

Featuring Dino Vengers.

Dwelling video releases [edit]

United States [edit]

In 1995, Buena Vista Home Video released a VHS titled The Factor Slamming Begins, which featured the first 3 episodes of Season one: "Sharkbait", "Sharkbite" and "Sharkstorm" combined into a characteristic-length format. Buena Vista followed this release with two tapes featuring Season one episodes: "Shark Quest", which had the episodes "Shark Quest" and "Lone Shark", and the other: "Shark 'n' Ringlet" which featured the episodes "Shark 'north' Curlicue" and "Fresh Water Shark". Unusually, these releases were branded as regular BVHV releases rather than being released under the DIC Toon-Time Video label, dissimilar other DIC DVDs released past the visitor at the time.

In belatedly September 2012, Mill Creek Amusement appear they would release the series to DVD during early on 2013.[4]

On February 19, 2013, Mill Creek Entertainment released Street Sharks – The Complete Serial on DVD in Region 1 for the very beginning fourth dimension.[5] [vi] This release has been discontinued and is out of print.

On January 16, 2018, Mill Creek Amusement re-released the complete series to DVD in Region 1.[seven] [eight]

On December thirteen, 2021, Discotek Media announced they would release the series for the commencement time on Blu-ray sometime in April 2022. This will be Discotek Media'southward kickoff release of a Western animated series that is not based on a video game.[9]

United Kingdom [edit]

In 1996, BMG Video released 3 VHS tapes in the Great britain, featuring the aforementioned episodes as the U.Due south. VHS'due south, although the first tape was retitled as Jawsome!.

In 2004, Anchor Bay U.1000. released a single-DVD/VHS volume featuring the start 4 episodes.

In 2005, Avenue Entertainment released ii DVD volumes containing two episodes each: Volume i featured "Sharkbite" and "Shark Fight" and Book ii featured "Sky Sharks" and "Shark of Steel".

Tie-in products [edit]

In 1996, Archie Comics released a short-lived comic book series based on Street Sharks. They published a three-upshot miniseries which was based on the showtime three episodes of the series,[10] and a regular comic serial, which lasted three issues.[11]

From 1994 to 1997, Mattel released a line of Street Sharks action figures.[12]

Run into also [edit]

  • List of anthropomorphic animal superheroes
  • Extreme Dinosaurs – a spin-off Tv series
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987 Television set series)

References [edit]

  1. ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 601. ISBN978-1538103739.
  2. ^ "Amazin' Adventures on". Telly.com. Retrieved 2011-03-13 .
  3. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 796–797. ISBN978-1476665993.
  4. ^ David Lambert (25 September 2012). "Street Sharks – DVD Plans Come to Light for the Popular Mid-'90s DiC Animated Series". TV Shows on DVD. Archived from the original on 26 January 2018. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  5. ^ "Street Sharks DVD news: Proclamation for Street Sharks – The Consummate Series". TVShowsOnDVD.com. 11 December 2012. Archived from the original on 25 October 2015. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  6. ^ "Street Sharks – The Complete Serial". TV Shows on DVD. 19 Feb 2013. Archived from the original on 26 January 2018. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
  7. ^ David Lambert (18 October 2017). "Street Sharks – Swimming Back to DVD: 'The Consummate Series' from Mill Creek". TV Shows on DVD. Archived from the original on nineteen Oct 2017. Retrieved 19 Oct 2017.
  8. ^ "Street Sharks – The Complete Series". TV Shows on DVD. 16 January 2018. Archived from the original on 26 Jan 2018. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  9. ^ "Discotek Licenses Skull-Face up Bookseller Honda-san, Tales of Phantasia, Every bit Miss Beelzebub Likes Information technology, Yowamushi Pedal New Generation, More than Anime". Anime News Network. December xiii, 2021.
  10. ^ "Street Sharks (mini series) (1996)". Comic Book Database. Retrieved 17 August 2009.
  11. ^ "Street Sharks (1996)". Comic Book Database. Retrieved 17 Baronial 2009.
  12. ^ "Lifestyles: Street Sharks are Chompin' Skilful!". Electronic Gaming Monthly #69 (April 1995), pg. 137.
  1. ^ Animation outsourced to Plus Ane Blitheness, Rainbow Animation Grouping, Hong Ying Blitheness and Han Yang Animation.

External links [edit]

  • Street Sharks at IMDb
  • Official website (via Internet Annal)
  • Street Sharks at the Big Cartoon Database

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_Sharks

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