The Toy Warrior (lost animated series based on pilot film; 2005): Difference between revisions
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{{ | {{NeedingWork|lack of clarity on the TV series|Toy Warrior}} | ||
|title=The Toy Warrior | {{InfoboxLost | ||
|title=<center>The Toy Warrior</center> | |||
|image=TOY-One-Sheet-MIPCOM16-Email Page 1.jpeg | |image=TOY-One-Sheet-MIPCOM16-Email Page 1.jpeg | ||
|imagecaption=Press Sheet for the 2005 animated film. | |imagecaption=Press Sheet for the 2005 animated film. | ||
|status= | |status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | ||
}} | }} | ||
The Toy Warrior was a 2005 animated film produced by JM Entertainment Co. Ltd. and animated by Seoul Movie (South Korean animation studio owned by TMS Entertainment, went defunct in late | ''The Toy Warrior'' was a 2005 animated film produced by JM Entertainment Co. Ltd. and animated by Seoul Movie (South Korean animation studio owned by TMS Entertainment, went defunct in the late 2000s). It was directed by Kyung-Won Lim (who had previously storyboarded and directed several episodes of ''Batman Beyond'') and written by Brian Swenlin (who had previously worked on various shows such as ''Darkwing Duck'', ''Aladdin'', ''Archie's Weird Mysteries'', ''Kim Possible'', etc). <ref>[https://www.animationmagazine.net/features/jm-ent-begins-animating-the-toy-warrior/ Article about the film's announcement.] Retrieved 15 Jun '19</ref> | ||
The film focuses on Jinoo, a 12 year old boy who accidentally gets transported to the Land Of Toys and must become the Toy Warrior in order to defeat the Dark Warrior who threatens to destroy the Toy Kingdom. <ref>[http://www.foothillentertainment.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/26/TOY-One-Sheet-MIPCOM16-Email.pdf Press | The film focuses on Jinoo, a 12-year-old boy who accidentally gets transported to the Land Of Toys and must become the Toy Warrior in order to defeat the Dark Warrior who threatens to destroy the Toy Kingdom. <ref>[http://www.foothillentertainment.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/26/TOY-One-Sheet-MIPCOM16-Email.pdf Press sheet for the film.] Retrieved 15 Jun '19</ref> The voice cast featured various prominent dub VA such as Mona Marshall (best known as Izzy from Digimon) portraying the main character, Jinoo, and Richard Epcar (who was also the Voice Director) voicing the villain, Dark Warrior. | ||
The film was intended to be a pilot for a TV show, but as of 2019 no news about the show has surfaced. The current distributor of the movie, Foothill Entertainment, lists on the description of the film on their site <ref>[https://www.foothillentertainment.com/toy-warrior/ Site listing for the film.] Retrieved 15 | The film was intended to be a pilot for a TV show, but as of 2019, no news about the show has surfaced. The current distributor of the movie, Foothill Entertainment, lists on the description of the film on their site that '''a 26 half-hour series is in development''', but this has not been updated in a while.<ref>[https://www.foothillentertainment.com/toy-warrior/ Site listing for the film.] Retrieved 15 Jun '19</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
[[Category:Lost animation|Toy Warrior]] | |||
[[Category:Lost TV|Toy Warrior]] | |||
[[Category:Completely lost media|Toy Warrior]] |
Latest revision as of 14:57, 7 May 2020
The Toy Warrior was a 2005 animated film produced by JM Entertainment Co. Ltd. and animated by Seoul Movie (South Korean animation studio owned by TMS Entertainment, went defunct in the late 2000s). It was directed by Kyung-Won Lim (who had previously storyboarded and directed several episodes of Batman Beyond) and written by Brian Swenlin (who had previously worked on various shows such as Darkwing Duck, Aladdin, Archie's Weird Mysteries, Kim Possible, etc). [1]
The film focuses on Jinoo, a 12-year-old boy who accidentally gets transported to the Land Of Toys and must become the Toy Warrior in order to defeat the Dark Warrior who threatens to destroy the Toy Kingdom. [2] The voice cast featured various prominent dub VA such as Mona Marshall (best known as Izzy from Digimon) portraying the main character, Jinoo, and Richard Epcar (who was also the Voice Director) voicing the villain, Dark Warrior.
The film was intended to be a pilot for a TV show, but as of 2019, no news about the show has surfaced. The current distributor of the movie, Foothill Entertainment, lists on the description of the film on their site that a 26 half-hour series is in development, but this has not been updated in a while.[3]
References
- ↑ Article about the film's announcement. Retrieved 15 Jun '19
- ↑ Press sheet for the film. Retrieved 15 Jun '19
- ↑ Site listing for the film. Retrieved 15 Jun '19