TV: Netflix - Update on Voltron reboot & Guillermo Del Toro's The Defender of the Universe

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Voltron reboot and Guillermo Del Toro-helmed series coming to Netflix

Netflix will be the new home for The Defender of the Universe and a new, original series from one of Hollywood’s most imaginative filmmakers.

This week, DreamWorks Animation announced plans to extend and expand their deal to provide original content for the popular streaming video service, and identified a reboot of the Voltronanimated series and a new project from acclaimed filmmaker Guillermo del Toro as just two of the shows that will come out of the companies’ collaboration.

The newly announced series are both expected to premiere in 2016, with the
Voltron reboot offering a “reimagining” of the popular 1980s outer-space adventure series featuring giant, robotic lions piloted by a group of young heroes who can combine their respective lions into a single, massive robot. The series went on to spawn several interconnected animated series, comic books, video games, and toy lines, including the 2011 Voltron Force animated series that aired on Nicktoons.

The other project in development is Del Toro’s Trollhunters, an animated series that promises to “unleash a new, fantastical world wrapped around two best friends who make a startling discovery beneath their hometown.” Del Toro’s exact role in developing the project is unspecified.

These two series are just the first of several projects to come out of the expansion of DreamWorks’ partnership with Netflix, which has already produced several original animated series. Among the past shows to come out of the deal are the Netflix series The Adventures of Puss in Boots, Dinotrux, and Dragons: Race to the Edge — a spinoff series based on DreamWorks’ popular How to Train Your Dragon animated feature.

“DreamWorks Animation is synonymous with great storytelling that families around the world enjoy,” said Cindy Holland, vice president of original series for Netflix, in a statement accompanying the announcement. “It’s with great pleasure that we expand on an already successful relationship with DreamWorks Animation to bring more premium kids and family television to Netflix members globally.”
 
Netflix Voltron Series Titled Legendary Defender; Official Poster Revealed

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“From days of long ago. From uncharted regions of the universe. Comes a legend. The legend of Voltron.”

With those words, originally spoken by famed voice-actor Peter Cullen (best known asTransformers’ original Optimus Prime), a generation of American children were introduced to the the Anime subgenre of “combination mecha” and the world of Voltron: Defender of The Universe. A unique fusion of medieval-fantasy, futuristic spaceopera, and an animated take on the Super Sentaigenre, Voltron captured the imaginations of viewers and became a longstanding cult-classic with both Anime fans and 80s kids in general — despite a limited number of available episodes and ultra low-budget localization, which led to multiple (U.S. produced) reboots and talks of a movie spanning decades of fandom.

Now, Netflix and Dreamworks Animation are teaming up to give send the Voltron Force back into space, announcing a new series and providing fans a glimpse of what’s to come with a new teaser poster.

Although the poster comes via Nerdist, no details have yet been provided about what form the new series will take. Previous reboots such as 1998’s Voltron: The Third Dimension framed itself as a sequel to the continuity of the original series with the original characters, while 2011’s Voltron Force followed new characters recruited as proteges to the original team. Neither series lasted very long. The Dreamworks series, rumored for awhile now, has been presumed to be a new retelling of the original story, but no official confirmation exists. The version of the titular giant robot partially visible in the teaser poster appears to resemble the classic Lion Force or “Far Universe” incarnation from the original series.




The original Voltron was said to have been an accident of history: Small-time U.S. based distributor World Events Productions was attempting to import a Japanese anime series called Mirai Robo Daltanious, which featured a giant robot with the emblem of a golden lion’s face on its chest as the hero, but a mistake of translation when requesting more episodes instead led their Japanese partner-companyToei to send them copies of Beast King GoLion, which featured five human-piloted, color-coded robot lions who combined into a single larger humanoid robot. World Events decided they much preferredGoLion, and proceeded to re-edit and dub the episodes into English to create the first season of Voltron: Defender of The Universe. The series proved so enormously popular with U.S. audiences that Toei produced a second season’s worth of episodes, even though GoLion had originally only run for one.

Further episodes were created by substantially re-dubbing a second unrelated series, Dairugger XV, to claim that its 15-vehicle combiner-robot was a Near-Earth (“Vehicle Force”) counterpart to Voltron, with an original animated feature produced for the U.S. only bringing the two officially together. A third season was planned to feature a “Gladiator Voltron” created from episodes of Kōsoku Denjin Arubegasu(a.k.a. Lightspeed Electroid Albegas), but those plans were scrapped before they were officially completed. The unique design aesthetic and sprawling episode-to-episode continuity, common for anime but unfamiliar to U.S. audiences of the early ’80s, enraptured young viewers.

A live-action film has been talked about for years, but has continuously stalled despite renewed interest each time a new Transformers movie is set to be released. At one point, many Internet fans became convinced that the secrecy-shrouded film Cloverfield was actually a Voltron movie in disguise because of a mis-heard dialogue snippet from the trailers. Whereas the original series involved a group of space-explorers from Earth sent to a medieval-esque planet to find and activate the legendary Lions to restore Voltron as a weapon against an intergalactic tyrant, most early word about a proposed feature film purported to have seen the setting move to contemporary or near-future Earth. All rights to produce a live-action Voltron feature currently rest with Relativity Media, a troubled studio that recently emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy in a new arrangement with actor Kevin Spacey as its chairman — no word yet on whether or not the new Spacey regime still plans to let Voltron form his Blazing Sword on the big screen anytime soon.

Screen Rant will bring you more details on Voltron: Legendary Defender as they are made available.
 
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The mechanized lions of Voltron are roaring back to life.

The popular 1980s cartoon fantasy franchise with one really cool giant robot is being introduced to a new generation with the Netflix's animated seriesVoltron: Legendary Defender. Produced byDreamWorks Animation, the first 13 22-minute episodes will drop later this year, though fans will get a taste of footage Friday at WonderCon inAnaheim, Calif.

The original 1984-85 series, adapted from Japanese anime, focused on five men and the princess of the planet Arus who piloted lions and, to take down monster villains, would form Voltron and use his signature blazing sword. While the new show will have some modern tweaks, including more serialized storytelling, much will be the same to older fans.

Legendary Defender centers on five Earth teenagers — Keith, Lance, Hunk, Pidge and Shiro — who are thrown into the middle of an intergalactic battle and become the last line of defense for Arus and other planets against an evil alien force led by King Zarkon.

Whereas most of the original characters were nondescript space explorers, the main players in the new series will have backstories, and “ a real purpose for being on this mission and getting involved with Voltron in the first place,” says Dos Santos.

Voltron is nowhere near the scale of a Star Wars in terms of mythology, but it has managed to stick around in pop culture and became this representation of teamwork.”

Princess Allura, a main hero, will be more realistic, Montgomery promises: “She doesn’t have to be the (greatest) fighter right off the bat. She’s still a princess from a peaceful kingdom. But she’s certainly not fainting at every little thing that overwhelms her.”

DreamWorks gave the creative team carte blanche to make changes in the Voltronfranchise, andDos Santos admits that while they considered a version that was “really military and really serious, everything had chainsaws on it and was really bro’d out, and we just didn’t want that."

Instead, they opted to play to a wide age group by giving Voltron an epic Game of Thrones feel with some humor, and upping the danger level. So when the good guys encounter a vicious Robeast, “you actually feel like, ‘Oh man, is Voltron going to get out of this one?’ ” Dos Santos says. “There are some of those encounters they just manage to survive.”

Adds Montgomery: “Not everything is solved by Voltron alone. Sometimes they need to beat something just as the lions. Sometimes they just do it as themselves fighting as men.”
 
http://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/volt...dary-defender-producers-talk-creative-process

Voltron Legendary Defender Producers Talk Creative Process
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Joaquim Dos Santos and Lauren Montgomery discuss how they brought the new Voltron series to life.
From days of long ago, from uncharted regions of the universe, comes a legend. The legend of DreamWorks' Voltron Legendary Defender. Premering June 10th on Netflix, we had the chance to talk with Executive Producers Joaquim Dos Santos and Lauren Montgomery (Legend of Korra) about the creation of this new series and what fans, both old and new, can expect.

How were you first approached about this new Voltron series?

Montgomery: At the time we were working on Legend of Korra and it was starting to wind down and we started hearing rumors about DreamWorks partnering up with Netflix and they were making all these new shows and they had bought the Classic Media library which contained Voltron. That kinda piqued our interests.

We were kind of like, “What if we could do Voltron? What would we do with it? Oh my god." There’s so much potential for improvement. It just so happened things worked out in our favor. Mark Taylor, who works at Nickelodeon, he was now heading up production at DreamWorks on the television side of things. Him and Joaquim had a meeting.

Dos Santos: It was sort of a general meeting just to talk about possibilities because he knew that we were winding down on Korra and they were staffing up. It was just a general meeting and at the end of the meeting he brought up Voltron. My ears pirqued up and I pitched Lauren and I as showrunners on it and the ball just got rolling from there.

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In a previous interview, the president of World Events Productions, Bob Koplar, had spoken about how DreamWorks had came to him with a bunch of specific questions like why five lions? Why does Voltron have a cross on his chest? Stuff like that. Were you a part of those discussions?

Dos Santos: That may have been a little before we came on. We were part of the development process and those might have been super preliminary, just getting those questions out of the way before work proper began on the show. Those were questions we had honestly. The five lions thing is a given. You need the limbs and a torso and the head, etc.

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Montgomery: We honestly wondered why does Voltron have a cross on his chest. I don’t know the answer.

Is there an answer? Did you find out the answer?

Montgomery: I don’t know! Now I’m gonna look into it.

Dos Santos: Part of it is there’s this certain random aspect to the original series,GoLion where I don’t think those questions necessarily need answering. It was more just an aesthetic. It was trying to get across an idea without necessarily pinpointing anything. They looked at that as a very Arthurian lore symbol. Very sort of western symbol and that’s all they really needed to get across. Then the show was localized for American audiences and they weren’t going to put a big block out mark on the cross or anything.

Once you knew, okay, we’re doing Voltron, what was the first thing that you did? Did you watch all of the episodes? Did you brainstorm? How did the process start?

Montgomery: I know the first thing I did but I can’t say it because it’ll be a spoiler. Beyond that we remembered what we loved, we definitely felt like we had to go back and rewatch the source material because we remember what we love about the show but very few of us remember the legit story points.

What we found was that there was a lot of story missing in the original and it wasn’t quite the show that we thought we remembered it being. So what we ended up doing was we went back and watched the very original, GoLion which is the Japanese version and that one has a much more figured out story because they obviously weren’t trying to cobble something together from footage from another series, they were just making a story.

Problem is? That story was a lot darker than anything we could really do here in America.

Dos Santos: Especially in the '80s when animation was a whole lot more safe and there were a bunch more regulations than now. Honestly I don’t know if audiences were as sophisticated then as they are now. Those themes from GoLion are something we were able to infuse in terms of their more sophisticated nature into our show. They definitely wouldn’t have gotten across in the '80s.

Was it just the Lion Force episodes you watched? Did you watch Vehicle? Third Dimension? Voltron Force?

Dos Santos: No, we just watched the original Voltron series. That was the prime show we were trying to reboot here, and GoLion. Vehicle Voltron? I gotta admit that I’m gonna take some flack for not being the hugest fan of that when I was a kid. Honestly it just weirded me out when I was a kid I was so used to Lion Voltron that when I saw Vehicle Voltron I was like, “Eh, he’s kinda weird looking.”


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You mentioned there were things you remembered about Voltron from when you were kids. What are things you specifically remember, or what you thought Voltron was when you were kids?

Dos Santos: It’s literally the thing where so many people remember Voltron, right? They remember the robot, they remember the lions, and they loosely remember these characters. They don’t remember the plot of the show. We largely fell into that category. We knew he fought Robeasts, we knew there was King Zarkon, we know that there was a princess, we knew there was a castle.

As far as individual episodes, the big driving forces for me as a kid was playing and role playing as the characters on the playground. It wasn’t necessarily about following this big continuing story arc.

What characters did you play as when you were kids?

Montgomery: I was always Allura. She was really the only one. I remember Allura, I kinda remember there was the short one and there was the leader guy. At some point I just had zero recollection. I watched it again when I was a teenager and I went, “Wait, there was another guy before Allura?” I had completely forgotten about him.

Dos Santos: I remember when the Sven storyline took place when I was a kid and he kicked the bucket really early on and me all my friends, I remember talking about it on the school yard. The cool thing about Voltron was a lot of the kids wanted to be Keith but we would all alternate playing all the different characters. I thought that was the cool aspect and everyone had their favorite but they were willing to go, “Hey, now you’re Lance, I’ll be Keith, you be Hunk, you be Pidge.” That was a really cool aspect of the show and occasionally when we’d play with the girls, they got to be the princess.

It was a funny thing back then, toy properties and animation properties were way more segregated in terms of, these were girl shows, these were boy shows. Now things are different and times have changed and we’re in a much better place to be all inclusive of all sexes.

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A lot of people have commented that when they heard the show was going to be rebooted they thought some of the cast’s genders might change. So far, at least in what we’ve seen, it’s just five guys. Is that just sticking true to the original source material? Do you have something up your sleeve?

Montgomery: It’s definitely sticking true to our nostalgia, we loved the original and wanted to stick close to that. But again, this is just the starting point for the series. What happens down the line remains to be seen. You’ll see five males in the lions in the first few episodes, but let’s see where this takes us.

We’re not closing the doors, we’re not trying to be exclusive or anything. And the Allura character is not in any way a background character. She’s a huge part of the series, regardless of whether she’s piloting a lion or not. She probably has the largest understanding of what’s at stake in this world and the gigantic war they’re about to enter and she’s just a way more complex character than what she was in the original show. I honestly just have so many recollections of her constantly fainting. Not what we really wanted to do this time around.

Dos Santos: From a story and character perspective we can hang our hats on that she’s central to this generation of Voltron. She has the most ties to the backstory and origin of Voltron. She’s really the entry point for all of our pilots to really understand what they’re really getting themselves into.

We spoke Kimberly Brooks, who plays Allura, and she mentioned a process with the Lions called Quintessence. Can you tell us about that?

Dos Santos: Yeah, that’s basically what our universe is powered on. It’s a story point that will become more robust as the series continues. That’s the element that a lot of the things in our universe is powered on.

Montgomery: I guess you could say it’s something like the force, it’s out there, it’s in everything, and everything has some amount of Quintessence. We kind of stuck with this very true to the original Voltron series, combination of sci-fi and magic quality. Quintessence is hinging more on the kind of magic side. It’s kind of what we use to explain those unexplainable force that happen in our show.

The five pilots from the trailer seem very technology based, space cadets and all that, whereas Allura seems more like rooted in the magic thing. So will we see some conflict with those perspectives?

Dos Santhos: Yeah, I think we’re just going with the idea that the culture she’s from really married those two elements. There’s a real gray area where science picks up and magic takes off and that’s what sort of powers their technology.

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In all the material we’ve seen so far, the Lions are sentient. Can you talk about how that whole process came about?

Montgomery: It’s a very minor amount of sentience because if this lion can do whatever why do you need a pilot? When we were watching the original show, there were times when people would just put a key into a lion and it wouldn’t feel any more special than a car.

We wanted it to feel so much more than that. So we kind of introduced this concept that our pilots don’t just get a key. People don’t just hop in a lion. They have to be chosen or accepted by that lion. These lions kind of have opinions and they have a mild amount of sentience but it makes the idea of being a pilot much more of a special thing.

Dos Santos: That to is something that will evolve throughout the course of the series. It’s a sentience that changes and evolves and moves into a different place as the show goes on.

So these five pilots will form a relationship with the lions?

Dos Santos: Yeah, it really helps establish that each one of the pilots and their corresponding lion has a unique relationship from the other. So it helps on a character level across the board.

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Talk to us about creating this universe. You’ve spoken about taking the ‘defender of the universe’ thing to heart and really wanting to have these guys travel around to different planets with different aliens. Can you talk to us about creating that universe?

Montgomery: It was not easy.

Dos Santos: On a TV schedule, believe me it is not easy.

Montgomery: But that’s half of the fun of having a show in space. These characters started on Earth and went into space and found this crazy planet that has an alien princess on it. And then you’re just gonna sit on that planet for the whole series? Nah, we gotta get out and really see what other things are out there and half the fun is just playing with those designs and wow what kind of crazy alien people can we come up with now?

How do they interact with the world? What are their roles? They did some interplanetary traveling on the original Voltron but it usually turned into, here’s a planet with very human looking people but they were togas! And here’s a planet but they wear Jetsons outfits.

We just kind of wanted to push it a little further and make this universe feel very vast because when we’re dealing with a villain that’s taking over the entire universe you want to see the ramifications of that. You want to see the characters that are affected by it.

Dos Santos: From a story telling perspective and a staging perspective it makes it a lot more entertaining and fun if you’re able to see these crazy aliens and sort of wacky things that allows this latitude in both dramatic and comedic storytelling.

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For all the Legend of Korra fans out there, and there are many, what are the things they loved in that series that they can expect from Voltron?

Dos Santos: Characters that evolve over time. Characters that are complex that come into this world from their own perspectives. I think a high level of stakes and relationships that evolve over time. Legend of Korra was a really unique situation in that sense. We’re not creating a soap opera or a romantic show by any means but this type of serialized story telling allows for so many possibilities in terms of how characters relationships evolve over the series.

I was a big fan of those Legend of Korra art books. Are we going to be seeing aVoltron art book for this series?

Dos Santos: We’re trying, man.

Montgomery: I’d love to. I don’t think we have anything locked in yet but by golly if we have any power, it’ll happen.

Dos Santos: We’ve definitely brought it up in every internal executive meeting we’ve been to.

Can you talk about the music of the series? You’ve mentioned you’re staying away from the original theme song. What kind of music are you going for with this show?

Dos Santos: We’ve steered clear of the original theme and are trying to differentiate ourselves from the show in that regard but overall we’re going for something that pays homage to that era. Those cartoons that we grew up watching came from. There’s a lot of heavy synth, a heavy retro synth vibe that lends itself to a sci-fi feeling. Also this very sort of cosmic sense of exploration.

The composer that we have, Brad Breeck, he’s awesome. He’s worked on a bunch of other shows and when he came on board, he nailed it right off the bat. While you might not be getting the original theme which felt kind of trumpet like, it’ll harken back to memories you had of that era in general.

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If you could pick one of your favorite elements from the show, what would it be?

Montgomery: I don’t want to give any spoilers but Allura has some really incredible moments in the thirteen episodes and those are the things that have spoken to me the most that have kind of resonated with me a lot. She’s just got some really great moments and episodes that kinda really flesh out her character and really make her seem like this true incredible princess who’s really willing to put herself out there.

Dos Santos: It’s that same idea but on an entire character wide level. I’m really excited about the fact that we’ve been able to start these characters in one place and evolve them into a very different place over the course of the season and the series. Seeing how those play out and seeing the fans react to where these characters are going. That’s really exciting to me.

What is it like knowing that when this show comes out that you’ll be introducing people to the original series as well?

Dos Santos: That’s super awesome, man. If you can do the job of aunts and uncles of a certain age en masse then you’re good to go.

Can you tell us a little about the toy line coming out for the series?

Montgomery: We got a little glimpse at it and it looks amazing. We are very excited, I don’t know how much in depth we can go into it, but I tell ya, they’re pretty cool. I’ll be buying them.

Dos Santos: We’re big toy collectors as well. If you could see our offices you’d know we’re legit toy collectors.

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You mentioned earlier with Voltron it’s a lot of people remembering the more surface elements and less the plots themselves. So what do you think are some of the most important elements with the show? Especially the themes.

Montgomery: Beyond the obvious surface things of the pilots and our lions. I think we’ve already talked about this but the combination of the magic and sci-fi. This Arthurian castle with a princess inside of it and there’s this amazing lore and mythology to Voltron that not everyone quite understands. It’s got an air of mystery to it.

That combined with the sci-fi, because we didn’t want to go completely realistic sci fi where everything works out. We wanted this kind of unexplainable element that treads into territory we wouldn’t be able to if we had gone for making everything explainable and airtight.

Dos Santos: As far as themes go, the overall theme of teamwork is a huge thing for us to get across. Not just teamwork like, ‘we gotta work together to make this happen’ but really building characters that are complex enough to overcome their own shortcomings, evolve, and become the fully realized heroes we know they can be. Nobody at the beginning or end of the show will be perfect by any means but they will change and rise to the occasion.

Favorite lion and why?

Montgomery: It’s strange cause I love green, but I also love yellow because I just love how his design turned out.

Dos Santos: For me, from when I was a kid, Blue Lion has always been my favorite. I just thought proportionally the leg lends itself to the coolest shape when in lion form. So since I was a kid, blue lion has been my favorite. Sven used to be my favorite.

We would like to thank DreamWorks for making this interview happen. Stay tuned to Den of Geek for more interviews with the cast, coming soon! Make sure to check outDreamWorks Voltron Legendary Defender when it drops June 10th on Netflix.
 
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