Big Bad Beetleborgs | |
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Also known as | Saban's Big Bad Beetleborgs |
Genre | Action/adventure Comedy horror Science fiction Superhero Tokusatsu |
Created by | Haim Saban Shuki Levy Toei Company |
Based on | Juukou B-Fighter & B-Fighter Kabuto by Toei Company |
Starring | Wesley Barker Herbie Baez Shannon Chandler Brittany Konarzewski Billy Forester Vivian Smallwood Kim Delgado Elizabeth Z. Lund Channe Nolen Christopher Cho Claudine Barros Marshal Hilton Blake Torney David Fletcher Joe Hackett Frank Tahoe Lina Godouse |
Theme music composer | Jeremy Sweet Billy Forester |
Composers | Jeremy Sweet Barry Trop Inon Zur Shuki Levy Kussa Mahchi |
Country of origin | United States Japan |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 88 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Haim Saban Shuki Levy Lance H. Robbins |
Producer | Robert Hughes |
Production locations | California (Santa Paula & Los Angeles) Japan (Saitama, Kyoto, Yokohama and Tokyo) |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies | Saban Entertainment Renaissance-Atlantic Films Toei Company, Ltd. Bugboy Productions, Inc. |
Original release | |
Network | FOX (Fox Kids) |
Release | September 7, 1996 – March 2, 1998 |
Related | |
VR Troopers |
Big Bad Beetleborgs (later Beetleborgs Metallix for Season 2) is an American live-action superhero television series by Saban Entertainment and was co-produced with Renaissance-Atlantic Films, Toei Company and Bugboy Productions. [1] Two seasons aired on Fox Kids from September 7, 1996, to March 2, 1998.
The series adapted combat footage from the Metal Hero tokusatsu-series Juukou B-Fighter (first season) and B-Fighter Kabuto (second season). [2] Unlike its contemporaries, such as Power Rangers , the show had a greater emphasis on sitcom elements, rather than a villain of the week.
In the fictional town of Charterville, three kids — Andrew "Drew" McCormick (Wesley Barker), his younger sister Josephine "Jo" McCormick (Shannon Chandler, later Brittany Konarzewski), and their best friend Roland Williams (Herbie Baez) — enter the haunted Hillhurst Mansion after accepting a dare from two rich bullies, Van and Trip. They discover that the mansion is inhabited by actual monsters who intend to eat them. In the midst of a chase, the kids accidentally bump into a pipe organ, releasing a phasm named Flabber (Billy Forester), who had been trapped inside of it. Out of gratitude for freeing him, Flabber offers to grant the kids one wish. Their wish is to become their favorite comic book heroes, the Big Bad Beetleborgs. However, this also brings the Beetleborgs' archenemies, the Magnavores, into the real world. Throughout the season, the Magnavores' leader, Vexor, summons monsters from the comic books to battle the Beetleborgs.
Later, Vexor creates Shadowborg, who briefly takes away the Beetleborgs' powers, prompting them to ask the comics' creator, Art Fortunes, to create the White Blaster Beetleborg and Drew's new Mega Blue mode to help them. The team would later meet a new kid in town, Josh Baldwin (Warren Berkow), who becomes the new Beetleborg and helps the team until he lost his powers after Shadowborg was destroyed.
In the penultimate episode of the first season, the Magnavores steal a picture of a new villain named Nukus from Art Fortunes' office, and bring him to life in hope he will help them destroy the Beetleborgs, through his creation of Borgslayer, a hybrid of all the Magnavore monsters. However, unbeknownst to the Magnavores, Nukus was actually plotting to get rid of them, and tells Trip and Van how to defeat Borgslayer, and orders them to take the information to the Beetleborgs, who succeed in destroying Borgslayer, causing the Magnavores to be swept back into the comics.
After the Beetleborgs destroy Borgslayer and the Magnavores, Nukus has challenged them. Despite Art's warning that Nukus is too powerful, the Beetleborgs face him anyway, and Nukus quickly wipes them out, destroying their armor, weapons, and powers in one fell swoop.
Nukus soon discovers that his creator is actually Art's incarcerated brother, Les Fortunes. He subsequently busts Les out of prison and uses some of Les' drawings to summon his own group of villains called the Crustaceans. Les now serves Nukus by creating new monsters for him to use. In response, Art creates new powers, armor, vehicles, and weapons, which Flabber then brings to life again for the kids, who rechristen themselves as the Beetleborgs Metallix.
The battle between the Beetleborgs and the Crustaceans would later escalate after the Fortunes brothers dig up a time capsule containing the Lost Comic; a story both brothers worked on when they were children which featured the Astral Sword that could summon and control the all-mighty Roboborg if one manages to gather the eight Astral Coins. Nukus summons his own evil team of Borgs from the Lost Comic called the Mantrons, while the Beetleborgs are reinforced by the Astral Borgs. After many battles, the Beetleborgs finally get their hands on the Astral Sword and all eight coins, using it to summon Roboborg, who demonstrates his powers by sending the Mantrons back to the Lost Comic.
To fight Roboborg, the Crustaceans eventually created their own giant robot named Boron, while Nukus and Vilor gain upgraded Mega forms. Boron could be summoned and controlled with the Astral Axe. As a response to Nukus' and Vilor's new Mega forms, the Beetleborgs were given an upgrade by Roboborg who fused their Metallix powers with their original powers creating the Mega Spectra Beetleborgs. Vilor's "mega" form did not last long, and he quietly returns to his original look without explanation while Mega Nukus retained his upgraded look.
The series concluded with the Beetleborgs gaining the enemy Boron as an ally, stripping Nukus of his greatest weapon during the fight against Repgillian, while Les Fortunes willingly decides to return to Charterville Prison, disabling his ability to create new monsters out of illustrations.
An old mansion outside of Charterville had fallen into disrepair since the passing of Old Man Hillhurst and became home to some rather goofy monsters. With the exception of Flabber, all the monsters attempt to eat any humans who trespass in their home. As a running gag, they never learn their lesson about trying to go after the Beetleborgs who always manage to outwit or clobber them, usually with Flabber's help.
The Magnavores (2–53) are the first set of villains the Beetleborgs faced, who originated from the Beetleborgs comic series. They were released due to Flabber granting the kids' wish which unintentionally released them. While in Charterville, the Magnavores use the old Charterville cemetery as their lair. By the end of Season One, the Magnavores were sent back into the comics as a side effect of Borgslayer's destruction.
The Crustaceans (52–88) are villains created by Les Fortunes and the second set of villains the Beetleborgs faced. After the Magnavores were defeated, the "Crustaceans" used the old Charterville cemetery as their lair.
Like other adaptations produced by Saban Entertainment, some of the original source footage was altered for Beetleborgs. The Input Magnums, the original B-Fighters' guns, were changed to the Sonic Lasers and were colored bright red and purple, due to how the Input Magnums looked very realistic. However, the colors of the guns changed from time to time due to the blending in of the B-Fighter footage. In Metallix, the Data Laser's colors remained unchanged (silver and black), but the toy line changed the weapons to a white-and-blue color scheme. More violent scenes from B-Fighter were either covered up with large, Batman-esque sound effects or were cut out through comic-book-panel transitions.
Big Bad Beetleborgs and Beetleborgs Metallix ended after the Saban crew were left with no more Juukou B-Fighter and B-Fighter Kabuto footage to adapt. Their predecessor VR Troopers also ended for the same reason. [3]
The show's theme music was performed by Jeremy Sweet and series star Billy Forester. A newer version of the song was made for the Beetleborgs Metallix episodes. The background score was credited to Shuki Levy and Haim Saban (under the alias Kussa Mahchi). It had compositions written by Inon Zur (only credited as a music producer), who had just joined Saban Entertainment. Several of the show's compositions were also used on Saban's concurrent Power Rangers Turbo (1997). Currently, Beetleborgs has never had any official soundtrack releases.
The show was filmed in a number of locations. Much of the show was filmed in Santa Paula, California, a small rural town in Ventura County.
In 1997, Acclaim Comics published a one-shot entitled Power Rangers Turbo vs. Beetleborgs Metallix featuring the Beetleborgs battling the Turbo Rangers before teaming with them against Divatox and Nukus.
After ending a two-season run on the Fox network, the series was rerun on UPN Kids from 1998 to 1999. In Australia, Big Bad Beetleborgs began airing on Network Ten's Cheez TV morning block during February 1998. [4] In Europe, the series aired on the international version of Fox Kids, which was later rebranded as Jetix. On May 7, 2010, as part of the sale of the Power Rangers franchise, the copyright for Beetleborgs was transferred from BVS Entertainment to Saban Capital Group. In 2018, the rights were transferred to Hasbro, as part of the acquisition of the Power Rangers brand, which included related intellectual property & content libraries previously owned by Saban Properties. [5]
On June 15, 2011, all episodes of Big Bad Beetleborgs and Beetleborgs Metallix were made available on Netflix until February 1, 2021.
There have been 3 VHS releases in the US and Australia: The Curse of Shadow Borg, The Vampire Files, and Metallix – The Movie. They were all released by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment.
Shout! Factory began putting the series out on DVD with the October 16, 2012 release of Beetleborgs: Season 1, Part 1. Season 1, Part 2 was released on February 12, 2013. Season 2, Part 1 was released on June 11, 2013. Season 2, Part 2 was released on May 5, 2015.
The series was added to Plex in 2025
DVD Name | Ep # | Release Date |
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Beetleborgs: Season 1, Part 1 | 27 | October 16, 2012 |
Beetleborgs: Season 1, Part 2 | 26 | February 12, 2013 |
Beetleborgs: Season 2, Part 1 | 18 | June 11, 2013 |
Beetleborgs: Season 2, Part 2 | 17 | May 5, 2015 [6] |