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Marvel releases episodes of 1970s Japanese Spider-Man TV show

And you can watch it, for free, thanks to Marvel Comics

Photo of Dennis Scimeca

Dennis Scimeca

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Marvel.com has released two episodes of the live-action Spider-Man television series that ran in Japan in 1978 and 1979, and they’re a doozy. Spider-Man has a giant, transforming robot that helps him fight little monsters who grow into huge monsters, like in every episode of every Power Rangers show, ever. Yes, this was really on television.

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Marvel is tying the release of the episodes to Amazing Spider-Man #12, where the Spider-Man we know and love pulls his Japanese counterpart and his counterpart’s flying, transforming robot into his own reality. English-speaking audiences don’t have to worry about the language barrier, as Marvel has added subtitles to the episodes.

It’s a good thing they did, too. Western audiences would probably be utterly lost with some sort of English-language assistance. Japanese Spider-Man is largely unrecognizable to fans who know the character from Marvel comics. You can watch a large version of the first episode of Japanese Spider-Man here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MxGtH-2duM

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In the Japanese Spider-Man series, our hero has web-slingers, can climb on walls, and wears the classic red and blue suit. But the similarities between him and our Spider-Man end there.

There’s no Peter Parker snapping pictures for the Daily Bugle and living with Aunt May. Instead, we get a motocross racer named Takuya Yamashiro who lives with his “astro-archeologist” father, his little brother, and his two sisters.

Takuya doesn’t get his powers from a radioactive spider, but rather from an alien named Garia, from the planet Spider. Takuya is also given a spaceship called the Traveller, which can transform into a giant robot named Leopardon that he can pilot.

Spider-Man fights monsters created by the villainous Professor Monster, who makes human-sized monsters that then grow into giant-sized monsters. Spider-Man beats them up using Leopardon.

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Marvel has also released the seventh episode, which you can watch here. Once you’ve finished it, we recommend another corny, 1970s live-action Spider-Man show that is just as marvelously funny: the first episode of The Amazing Spider-Man, broadcast in America in 1977.

Screengrab via Marvel Entertainment/YouTube

 
The Daily Dot