Speed Racer Lives (found Flash animated web series; 2006): Difference between revisions

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'''''Speed Racer Lives''''' is an American flash animated web series produced by Speed Racer Enterprises, Creative Group Animagic and Heavensport in 2006. Launched to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of Tatsunoko Production's original ''Speed Racer''/''Mach GoGoGo'' anime series, it primarily acted as a way for then toy licensee Art Asylum to create new products based on the franchise without having to go through the expense of advertising on television.<ref>[https://icv2.com/print/article/8252 Art Asylum Seeks an Alternative to Costly TV Ads] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070320181920/http://www.artasylum.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=88&Itemid=33 THE TRUTH ABOUT SPEED RACER REVEALED – ALL NEW, ORIGINAL SPEED RACER ANIMATED PROMOS DEBUT ONLINE THIS SUMMER FOLLOWED BY A NEW TOY LINE CELEBRATING THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY!] Retrieved April 21, 2017</ref> The series consisted of three 7-minute webisodes that premiered at the San Diego Comic-Con between July 20-22, 2006 that were also released online between September 7-19, 2006.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20061019230848/http://artasylum.com/forum/index.php?topic=352.0 Speedracerlives.com is up and running!!] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20061019230728/http://artasylum.com/forum/index.php?topic=402.0 New Webisodes now showing on speedracerlives.com] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref><ref>[http://www.animationmagazine.net/features/new-speed-racer-debuts-at-comic-con/ New Speed Racer Debuts at Comic-Con] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref> Additional episodes were planned but ultimately went unproduced.
'''''Speed Racer Lives''''' is an American flash animated web series produced by Speed Racer Enterprises, Creative Group Animagic and Heavensport in 2006. Launched to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of Tatsunoko Production's original ''Speed Racer''/''Mach GoGoGo'' anime series, it primarily acted as a way for then toy licensee Art Asylum to create new products based on the franchise without having to go through the expense of advertising on television.<ref>[https://icv2.com/print/article/8252 Art Asylum Seeks an Alternative to Costly TV Ads] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070320181920/http://www.artasylum.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=88&Itemid=33 THE TRUTH ABOUT SPEED RACER REVEALED – ALL NEW, ORIGINAL SPEED RACER ANIMATED PROMOS DEBUT ONLINE THIS SUMMER FOLLOWED BY A NEW TOY LINE CELEBRATING THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY!] Retrieved April 21, 2017</ref> The series consisted of three 7-minute webisodes that premiered at the San Diego Comic-Con between July 20-22, 2006 that were also released online between September 7-19, 2006.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20061019230848/http://artasylum.com/forum/index.php?topic=352.0 Speedracerlives.com is up and running!!] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20061019230728/http://artasylum.com/forum/index.php?topic=402.0 New Webisodes now showing on speedracerlives.com] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref><ref>[http://www.animationmagazine.net/features/new-speed-racer-debuts-at-comic-con/ New Speed Racer Debuts at Comic-Con] Retrieved April 21, 2017.</ref> Additional episodes were planned but ultimately went unproduced.


The series is set decades after the conclusion of the original. Speed and Trixie have settled down with two children of their own: Velocity and Speed Jr. Just like their father, the duo compete in high-speed races and have to thwart the forces of evil
The series is set decades after the conclusion of the original. Speed and Trixie have settled down with two children of their own: Velocity and Speed Jr. Just like their father, the duo compete in high-speed races and have to thwart the forces of evil


The website the videos were hosted on has long since been shut down. It was announced the shorts would be released on DVDs bundled with larger scale toys, but none of Art Asylum's ''Speed Racer'' line is easy to find. As both Art Asylum and Speed Racer Enterprises are out of business, it's unlikely the series will ever be officially released again. Prior to its resurfacing, the only known footage on the internet was from a trailer uploaded by the toy company.  
The website the videos were hosted on has long since been shut down. It was announced the shorts would be released on DVDs bundled with larger scale toys, but none of Art Asylum's ''Speed Racer'' line is easy to find. As both Art Asylum and Speed Racer Enterprises are out of business, it's unlikely the series will ever be officially released again. Prior to its resurfacing, the only known footage on the internet was from a trailer uploaded by the toy company.  
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{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ASL6es15m8|320x240|center|The full series|frame}}</div>​
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ET9iqPCPr4|320x240|center|The full series|frame}}</div>​


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Revision as of 12:01, 11 November 2017

Speed Racer Lives01.jpg

Promotional one-sheet.

Status: Found

Date found: Novermber 10, 2017

Found by: Speed Racer Lives


Speed Racer Lives is an American flash animated web series produced by Speed Racer Enterprises, Creative Group Animagic and Heavensport in 2006. Launched to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of Tatsunoko Production's original Speed Racer/Mach GoGoGo anime series, it primarily acted as a way for then toy licensee Art Asylum to create new products based on the franchise without having to go through the expense of advertising on television.[1][2] The series consisted of three 7-minute webisodes that premiered at the San Diego Comic-Con between July 20-22, 2006 that were also released online between September 7-19, 2006.[3][4][5] Additional episodes were planned but ultimately went unproduced.

The series is set decades after the conclusion of the original. Speed and Trixie have settled down with two children of their own: Velocity and Speed Jr. Just like their father, the duo compete in high-speed races and have to thwart the forces of evil.

The website the videos were hosted on has long since been shut down. It was announced the shorts would be released on DVDs bundled with larger scale toys, but none of Art Asylum's Speed Racer line is easy to find. As both Art Asylum and Speed Racer Enterprises are out of business, it's unlikely the series will ever be officially released again. Prior to its resurfacing, the only known footage on the internet was from a trailer uploaded by the toy company.

On November 10th 2017, the entire series was uploaded to YouTube.

Gallery

The full series

Series trailer

References

External Links