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Phantom 2040 | |
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Genre | Action/Adventure Science fiction Superhero fiction Drama Crime fiction |
Created by | Lee Falk with David J. Corbett Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens |
Developed by | Hearst Corporation Minos S.A. France 3 [1] |
Written by | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Brynne Chandler Richard Merwin Shari Goodhartz |
Directed by | Vincent Bassols Bertrand Tager Kagan Michael Kaweski Michel Lyman Stu Rosen |
Starring | Scott Valentine J.D. Hall Leah Remini Ron Perlman Margot Kidder Jeff Bennett Mark Hamill |
Theme music composer | Larry Brown Steve Sexton |
Composers | Larry Brown Gerald O'Brien |
Country of origin | France United States |
No. of episodes | 35 [2] |
Production | |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Syndication |
Release | September 18, 1994 – March 3, 1996 |
Phantom 2040 is an animated series that is loosely based on the comic strip superhero The Phantom , created by Lee Falk. [3] The central character of the series is said to be the 24th Phantom. It was aired from September 18, 1994 to March 3, 1996 in syndication. [4]
"The year is 2040. The place is Metropia. Here, a new hero prepares for action. The man who cannot die. The ghost who walks. The Phantom. The Phantom's pledge: To fight evil and injustice wherever they may be found. In this future world, in this dying city with the fate of the earth and all humanity in the balance. The Phantom is there!"
It is the year 2040, all environmental disasters and the economic Resource Wars from the early 21st century have decimated the fragile ecosystem balance of an Earth once teeming with life. Everywhere, the privileged and wealthy continue to thrive in expensive real estate developments that tower above the suffering masses. The victims of Earth's misfortune have been forced to subsist on scavenged refuse from the past on the mangled streets of forlorn city-states.
In Metropia (once known as New York City), the largest and most powerful of the city-states, the powerful robotics manufacturing corporation Maximum Inc. has slowly shaped a cold, steely urban center, consisting of huge, residential towers intertwined with TubeTrain tunnels. Maximum's robotic "biots" (Biological Optical Transputer System) have replaced enormous amounts of human labor, and the corporation is illegally producing prohibited combat biots to form Maximum's private underground army. Under this guise of efficient progress, Maximum has its own plans for the future, which it refers to as the Maximum Era. Through the construction of the fortress of Cyberville, an immense survival shelter where only the wealthiest and most elite humans will retreat, and the take over of Metropia by means of its biot armies, its plans ultimately involve the dark path of decline and extinction as the culminating result of man's prior errors and efforts, once Earth finally succumbs to its slowly deteriorating state.
The only hope for the survival of humanity is the Ghost Jungle — thousands of square miles of mutated vegetation that may be the planet's salvation. This secret source of life is submerged beneath Metropia, unseen by most. College student Kit Walker Jr. is chosen by fate to save the world, donning the black mask and purple suit of his people's savior, the 24th Phantom.
The role of the Phantom has been passed on from father to son since the 16th century, leading the world to believe that the Phantom is a single immortal individual. Kit, the 24th in the line, is young, unsure, and inexperienced, but he finds within him the courage and might to battle the evil that threatens to destroy the Earth.
Phantom 2040's voice cast included Scott Valentine, Margot Kidder, Ron Perlman, Leah Remini, J.D. Hall, Alan Oppenheimer, Richard Lynch and Jeff Bennett - while Mark Hamill, Debbie Harry, Rob Paulsen and Paul Williams had recurring roles.
The show was developed for television by executive producer David J. Corbett and executive story editors Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens. In addition to story-editing both seasons, the Reeves-Stevens devised the show's writers' bible, [6] and scripted numerous episodes, including the two-part pilot (Generation Unto Generation). Other key writers on the show included Brynne Chandler and Michael Reaves.
The unusual character designs were the distinctive work of Peter Chung, creator of Æon Flux .
The art director/conceptual designer on the show was Thom Schillinger, who created all of the background designs and technical concept designs to complement Peter Chung's distinctively elongated character design. [7]
The show debuted in 1994 to rave reviews, though it survived only 35 episodes before it was relegated to weekend repeats in 1996. Along with action sequences, stories focused on intelligent plotting and character development, winning the series praise for its subtle teaching of such values as individuality, freedom and the volatility of humanity.
Along with Andrea Romano's equally pioneering work on Batman: The Animated Series , Stu Rosen's voice direction on Phantom 2040 had a lasting impact on animated adventure television. Romano and Rosen cast accomplished dramatic actors and introduced a new level of maturity and complexity to their show's vocal performances that set the standard for all TV animation that followed.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
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1 | 1 | "Generation Unto Generation (Part One) [8] " | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | September 18, 1994 | 4308-052 |
Kit Walker Jr., a student at Metropia University, meets his father's old friend, Guran, who informs him of his heritage and tries to convince him to become the next Phantom. | |||||
2 | 2 | "Generation Unto Generation (Part Two)" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | September 25, 1994 | 4308-053 |
Kit's first heroic act as the Phantom is to stop Maximum Inc. from using a virtual reality game to brainwash young citizens into rioting. | |||||
3 | 3 | "The Sum of the Parts" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | October 2, 1994 | 4308-018 |
Maxwell Madison Jr. creates the first stable "fractal biot", a shapeshifting automaton who is ordered by Maximum to impersonate the Phantom and frame him for a series of armed robberies. Meanwhile, Jack Archer, one of Kit's professors, discovers Kit's true identity. | |||||
4 | 4 | "Fire and I.C.E." | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | October 9, 1994 | 4308-008 |
The Phantom and Guran hack into a virtual reality projection of Cyberville, Rebecca Madison's planned fortress. Unbeknownst to them, Graft has found a way to pinpoint the location of the Skull Lair by tracking their virtual signal. However, an orphaned teenage cyber-surfer nicknamed Sparks also finds a way to penetrate Maximum's system, and Graft mistakes him for the Phantom. | |||||
5 | 5 | "Reflections of Glory" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | October 16, 1994 | 4308-040 |
Maximum's trained starlet singer, Vaingloria, uses her hypnotic mirrors to brainwash the children of City Councillors in a bid by Rebecca Madison to rig the vote on Cyberville. Kit and Enforcer Sagan Cruz are forced to cut their date short as the Phantom takes action against Maximum's plot. | |||||
6 | 6 | "Shadows from the Past" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | October 23, 1994 | 4308-016 |
Queen Nia, deposed heir to the throne of Egypt, tracks down the Phantom to seek revenge for his unification of Africa long ago, but Guran is hit by her poisonous darts in the Phantom's place. Delusional and lost in the Ghost Jungle, Guran's babblings reveal more about the Sector Zero train wreck, but the Phantom must find him before Nia does. And then there's the Shadow Panther . . . | |||||
7 | 7 | "The Good Mark" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | October 30, 1994 | 4308-004 |
Guran presents Kit with the Phantom's other ring, called the Good Mark, while Graft lures the Phantom into a trap using fake data files regarding the Sector Zero incident. But when Graft discovers that Rebecca is hiding the real Sector Zero files, he steals them in an attempt to loosen Rebecca's iron grip over him. Enforcer Cruz works with the Phantom for the first time, and the Phantom gives her a medallion marked with the Good Mark in return. | |||||
8 | 8 | "The Ghost in the Machine" | Brynne Stephens | November 6, 1994 | 4308-017 |
Rebecca succeeds in partially reviving Maxwell Madison Sr. in a biot's body, but unable to remember his death, Maxwell kidnaps his son and sets out to regain his memories. The Phantom follows him to Sector Zero and discovers more about the Sector Zero wreck. | |||||
9 | 9 | "Dark Orbit (Part One)" | Len Wein | November 13, 1994 | 4308-036 |
Sean One, with the aid of Australian crime boss Gorda, raids Maximum cargo ships to obtain chemicals needed for his Damocles Platform, a deadly orbital laser cannon he plans to use to force the Earth into recognizing the independence of the Orbital Colonies. | |||||
10 | 10 | "Dark Orbit (Part Two)" | Brynne Stephens | November 20, 1994 | 4308-001 |
The Phantom teams up with Graft and Maxwell Jr. to stop Gorda and Sean One from firing the laser cannon on Damocles Platform at Metropia. | |||||
11 | 11 | "The Biot in Red" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | November 27, 1994 | 4308-033 |
Fleeing from the Phantom, Maxwell Jr. hides a vital data file stolen from Sean One, but the free fractal biot Heisenberg stumbles across it and seeks out the Phantom, discovering more about his self-awareness and complex emotions as he does so. | |||||
12 | 12 | "The Gauntlet" | Marc Scott Zicree | December 4, 1994 | 4308-024 |
Sparks discovers the truth about what happened to his parents, while Guran and the Phantom investigate a dangerous new security system in Cyberville: a shape-shifting, sentient structure called Project Gauntlet. | |||||
13 | 13 | "Three Into One" | Michael Reaves | December 13, 1994 | 4308-050 |
For seemingly no reason, three civilians become one linked, super-powered consciousness, and the Enforcers have no choice but to ask the Phantom to stop the trio from destroying Metropia. To do so, the Phantom must find out the truth about the experimental Triad project. | |||||
14 | 14 | "Life Lessons" | Brynne Stephens | February 4, 1995 | 4308-014 |
Kit is shocked to discover that humans are masquerading as biots in an attempt to get work, but is shocked even more by the discovery of a hidden nuclear reactor in Cyberville, which is leaking radiation and hurting the disguised humans. The Phantom must team up with Heisenberg to stop the defective reactor before it melts down. | |||||
15 | 15 | "The Magician" | Mel Gilden | February 11, 1995 | 4308-015 |
Sagan stumbles across records of a mysterious white-haired man who was friends with the Phantom in the time of Kit's father, and Graft will go to any lengths to find the strange "magician" before the Phantom can. | |||||
16 | 16 | "Swifter, Higher, Faster" | J. Larry Carroll & David Barrett Carren | February 18, 1995 | 4308-012 |
While attempting to reconnect with his friends at the university, Kit runs across a plot by Maximum to test dangerous performance-enhancing nanobots on student athletes, and learns that one of his friends has become one of Maximum's test subjects. | |||||
17 | 17 | "Lasers in the Jungle" | Shari Goodhartz | February 25, 1995 | 4308-029 |
Graft leads an armed raid on the Ghost Jungle to find the Phantom's hidden lair, and is forced to bring Vaingloria along with him. When Kit's plan to divert Graft from the skull lair goes awry, the Phantom must improvise to save his friends from the wrath of Maximum's biot army. | |||||
18 | 18 | "Down the Line" | Craig Miller | April 29, 1995 | 4308-013 |
The Skull Lair receives a strange message from the future: the Phantom of 2157 pleads with the Phantom to break his pledge and kill Rebecca Madison, for the good of the world. Tension rises as Kit and his friends argue about whether to take the message's advice. | |||||
19 | 19 | "Control Group" | Shari Goodhartz | September 2, 1995 | 4308-044 |
Rebecca Madison decides to test a new brainwave transfer method on Graft, causing the Phantom to stumble upon some of Graft's old memories, of his time as a soldier in the Resource Wars and his defiance of Maximum. Now, the Phantom must help Graft remember that he was once a hero to stop Rebecca from turning Metropia's new war memorial into a lethal plasma cannon. | |||||
20 | 20 | "A Boy and his Cat" | Lydia C. Marano & Arthur Byron Cover | September 9, 1995 | 4308-047 |
Maxwell Jr. ends up trapped in virtual reality after his leisurely stroll through Maximum's defences leaves Rebecca fuming, and the Phantom must get him out before he unknowingly destroys Metropia with his indestructible, virtually-controlled army of combat biots. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
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21 | 1 | "Rite of Passage" | Richard Merwin | September 16, 1995 | 4308-007 |
A recap of events in Season One, centered around the stories of the protagonists: Kit, Heloise, Sparks, Guran and Sagan with voiceover from Kit. | |||||
22 | 2 | "The World is My Jungle" | Richard Merwin | September 23, 1995 | 4308-034 |
Part two of the recap of events in Season One, this time centered around the antagonists: Rebecca Madison, Graft, Maxwell Madison, Max Jr., again with voiceover from Kit. | |||||
23 | 3 | "Sanctuary" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Len Wein | September 30, 1995 | 4308-025 |
Queen Nia returns to the Ghost Jungle and brings with her a dangerous marksman, Gunnar, and together they capture Guran. But when Gunnar finds evidence of the presence of the fabled Shadow Panther in the jungle, he forces Nia to accompany him on his hunting quest, and the Phantom must intervene. Meanwhile, Rebecca Madison abandons Maxwell's beloved cat in the streets of Metropia in a bid to draw him out of virtual reality. | |||||
24 | 4 | "The Ties That Bind" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Brynne Stephens & Michael Reaves | October 7, 1995 | 4308-010 |
After Rebecca Madison succeeds in destroying Sean One's main orbital platform, the Phantom calls a hidden meeting with his scattered friends to plan their next move against Maximum, but the group is ambushed by Graft's biot army and Dr. Jak. | |||||
25 | 5 | "The Woman in the Moon" | Sam Graham & Chris Hubbell | October 14, 1995 | 4308-037 |
As the Orbital Council prepares to vote on whether or not to declare independence from Earth, the Phantom travels to the orbital platforms to investigate a shipment of cloned human hands being sent to Sean One. Meanwhile, both Sean One and Maximum put opposing plans into motion to fix the independence vote in their favor. | |||||
26 | 6 | "Matter Over Mind" | Marc Scott Zicree | October 21, 1995 | 4308-028 |
Sparks stumbles upon a formula for the toxic chemicals involved in the Sector Zero wreck, which triggers lost memories within Mr. Cairo. With the Phantom's help, he discovers more about his past, and his connection to Dr. Jak and the Sector Zero crash. | |||||
27 | 7 | "The Sins of the Fathers (Part One)" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | October 28, 1995 | 4308-032 |
Major revelations about Maxwell Sr.'s past and the Sector Zero crash are revealed, as Kit comes to question his father's actions. Rebecca finally succeeds in reviving Maxwell Sr., but not in the way she had intended. | |||||
28 | 8 | "The Sins of the Fathers (Part Two)" | Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens | November 4, 1995 | 4308-030 |
The group returns to the Skull Cave in Bengala, Africa, and Kit decides he no longer wishes to be the Phantom. Unbeknownst to them, Rebecca Madison has unleashed her biot army in Metropia as Cyberville nears completion. The Phantom returns to Metropia for a final showdown with Maximum Inc. | |||||
29 | 9 | "The Sacrifice (Part One)" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Brynne Stephens | November 11, 1995 | 4308-009 |
Trapped in Cyberville, the Madison family offers Gorda a partnership in Maximum, Inc. if she helps them escape. Meanwhile, Kit learns that his father is still alive, having just awakened from sixteen years in cryogenic stasis, but does not have long to live due to his exposure to the toxic chemicals from the Sector Zero crash. | |||||
30 | 10 | "The Sacrifice (Part Two)" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Michael Reaves | November 18, 1995 | 4308-038 |
The Madisons escape Cyberville with Gorda's help, and immediately begin plotting to rebuild Maximum, Inc. and conquer Metropia. Elsewhere, Mr. Cairo offers to help the Phantom find the data he needs to make an antidote to save his father's life in Maximum's data banks, but must put his own existence at risk to do so. | |||||
31 | 11 | "Rogue" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Shari Goodhartz | November 25, 1995 | 4308-057 |
Heisenberg is branded a rogue biot after Dr. Jak records a secret gathering of his fellow self-aware biots and claims that they are planning a revolt. The Enforcers ask Maxwell Jr. to assist them in hunting Heisenberg down, unaware that he intends to retake control of the biot for himself. | |||||
32 | 12 | "The Second Time Around" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Mel Gilden | February 11, 1996 | 4308-022 |
The Phantom is forced by Guran to let a criminal escape after the thief shows them a gold coin marked with the Good Mark, and enters a virtually-reconstructed story of one of the 20th Phantom's adventures to discover how the coin came to be in his possession. | |||||
33 | 13 | "The Furies" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Brynne Stephens | February 18, 1996 | 4308-035 |
When Gorda's theft of a cache of iridium belonging to Maximum, Inc. causes a rift in her partnership with Rebecca, Maxwell Sr. attempts to manipulate both the Enforcers and the Phantom against both sides to his own advantage. | |||||
34 | 14 | "Moments of Truth" | Story by : Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens Teleplay by : Shari Goodhartz | February 25, 1996 | 4308-022 |
After finding out Sparks knows nothing about geography, Kit enrolls him in special classes at the university. Meanwhile, the partnership between Maximum, Inc. and Gorda continues to erode as Rebecca has rare Brazilian roses smuggled into Metropia behind Gorda's back. As the Phantom tries to find out what makes the roses so valuable to Rebecca, Maxwell Jr. and Graft plan to use Sparks to find the location of the Skull Lair. | |||||
35 | 15 | "The Whole Truth" | Richard Merwin | March 3, 1996 | 4308-035 |
As Rebecca deploys her biot army on the streets of Metropia in an attempt to take over the city, Maxwell Sr. reveals the whole truth behind the fateful Sector Zero crash, leading the Phantom to make one final effort to bring down Maximum, Inc. |
A Phantom 2040 video game was produced for Sega Genesis, Game Gear and Super NES, and like the animated series, it received very positive reviews despite its obscurity. It is possible to play as both the Phantom and, in the Game Gear version, his alter-ego, Kit Walker. The game has over 20 different endings, depending on the choices the player makes while progressing through the story, and revolves around Rebecca Madison's attempts to create a biot army, revive her dead husband and seize control of both Metropia and the world.
Phantom 2040 was adapted into a comic book series by Marvel Comics in 1995 (cover dated May–August 1995). Only four issues were published, released as a mini-series. The stories were only loosely based on the TV series, and was notably different in tone from the dark, complex animated show. The comic book was written by Peter Quinones, pencilled by Spider-Man co-creator Steve Ditko and inked by Bill Reinhold. Each issue featured a free poster drawn by such artists as John Romita Sr.
Family Home Entertainment VHS Releases 1994/1995 (USA)
A straight-to-video compilation titled Phantom 2040: The Ghost Who Walks was released in the USA on VHS by Family Home Entertainment in 1994 (and re-released on May 21, 1996). It is made up of the first five episodes of season 1 edited into a single movie.
Family Home Entertainment subsequently released eight first-season episodes across four commercially available VHS tapes (in the USA) on August 22, 1995:
1) Generation Unto Generation Parts 1 and 2
2) Fire and I.C.E. / The Sum of the Parts
3) Dark Orbit Parts 1 and 2
4) The Ghost in the Machine / The Biot in Red
Lions Gate DVD Release 2004 (USA)
Phantom 2040: The Ghost Who Walks was re-released on DVD by Lions Gate on September 21, 2004 and remains available for purchase in most counties as a US import.
Via Vision Entertainment DVD Release 2013 (Australia) In Australia (where the popularity of Lee Falk's original Phantom comic strip has never waned), Season One was released as a four-disc DVD collection (containing the first twenty episodes of the show) by Via Vision Entertainment on 6 November 2013. [9]
The Complete Phantom 2040 on YouTube All 35 episodes of Phantom 2040 (33 original episodes plus the first and second season "bridging" compilation episodes Rite of Passage and The World is My Jungle) are officially available for viewing on YouTube via the Comics Kingdom channel. Comics Kingdom is the official YouTube channel of King Features Syndicate, who hold all rights to The Phantom. The Comics Kingdom channel also features all episodes of the Phantom 2040 production team's later Flash Gordon show and all episodes of Defenders of the Earth (starring Flash Gordon, The Phantom and Mandrake the Magician).
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