Monkey Quest Show
Nov 06, 2019 It's OK if you are doing this alone, but more than one monkey is OK too. At least two monkeys can do some things a lone monkey can't do. Like three monkeys can carry food cans. It's difficult being a lone monkey, and that's what makes this fun.
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/MonkeyQuest
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Monkey Quest was a browser-basedMMORPG from Nickelodeon Virtual Worlds. It was launched on March 17th, 2011, and lasted 3.5 years before getting shut down as of September 26th 2014.Advertisement:
In the game, you play a monkey in the world of Ook, which is inhabited by other talkingmonkeys. The premise is that the Big Bad Ka has come back after being defeated by the Monkey King, eons ago. Like any other role playing game, you level up by doing quests and defeating monsters.
This game provided examples of:
- Allegedly Free Game: You can't unlock higher level areas without paying for them, or having a 24-hour guest pass from people who have payed for memberships. Some users have gotten their monkeys up to high levels by doing the daily quests repeatedly, however.
- Anti-Grinding: Shadow monsters give less and less experience as you become more powerful, until defeating one only gives one experience point.
- Big Bad: Ka, although he hasn't made a direct appearance.
- Boss Battle: Averted. There's only Arenas or beefed-up versions of regular enemies that you must defeat for quests. Either aren't very difficult at all.
- No longer averted. With the introduction of the Ice Raiders tribe, a new quest at the end of that tribe's questline will have you fight Foulbreath the Troll.
- Civilized Animal: The monkeys of Ook, and the talking Octopi/Crocodiles/Snakes/Spiders that inhabit the various lands.
- Elemental Powers: Each of the five tribes of Ook are able to harness a specific natural element.
- Sea Dragons: Fire
- Ootu Mystics: combination of Earth and Wood (most of the Ootu Mystics' weapons are able to Poison enemies.)
- Chim Foo: Air
- Ice Raiders: Ice
- Mek Tek (unreleased): possibly Metal
- Everything's Better with Monkeys: Um, duh?
- Far East: The Chim Foo Path, a land of fire-breathing dragons, sakura trees, rooftop ninja tricks, wise kung-fu masters, and pandas you can bounce on.
- Fetch Quest: A lot of them, in every trail.
- Frothy Mugs of Water: The 'Courage Juice' drank by the Sea Dragons.
- Giant Spider: The Rachnoid Queen is a friendly example of this.
- Grappling-Hook Pistol: Actually, it's a chameleon.
- Hollywood Voodoo: The Ootu mystics, with a pinch of Magical Native American thrown in with the incorporation of dreamcatchers.
- Money for Nothing: You can find bananas floating in the air on all trails. It's just a simple matter of catching it.
- Non-Human Sidekick: The pets you can buy from Mogri's pet shop.
- Oxygen Meter: Especially prevalent in the Sea Dragons areas.
- Panda-ing to the Audience: The Pandas that are used as trampolines in the Chim Foo areas and Aura the literally giant panda.
- Practical Currency: Bananas.
- Rewarding Vandalism: By breaking barrels and jars, you can find crafting ingredients.
- Springs, Springs Everywhere: Drums, pandas, octopi, and frogs are all utilized as trampolines in Ook. The yet-as-unreleased viking area has animal-skin trampolines outside its entrance.
- Temple of Doom: Several of the Crossroads trails, especially the Lost Temple, are this.
- Temporary Platform: Any platforms you need to use your scrying orb on, although it's easy to recharge them by using the scrying orb repeatedly.
- Timed Mission: The Arenas.
- Vendor Trash: It's all too common to get the same crafting recipe over and over again from arena treasure chests. This especially applies for non-members who only have access to free areas and accumulate the same low-level items.
- Wallet of Holding: You can have as much bananas as you can collect and they never go bad or weigh you down.
- We Buy Anything: You can sell crafting items, potions, and unwanted clothing wherever there's a vendor.
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Index
西遊記 Saiyūki | |
---|---|
Top: The Japanese title card for Monkey, reading Journey to the West Bottom: The title card used in the English-language dub | |
Also known as | Monkey (UK) |
Genre | Fantasy Shenmo Action Adventure Comedy |
Created by | Wu Cheng'en |
Written by | Motomu Furuta Hiroichi Fuse Hirokazu Fuse James Miki Moto Nagai Yooichi Onaka Mamoru Sasaki Eizaburo Shiba Yu Tagami Kei Tasaka Mutsuo Yamashita |
Directed by | Toshi Aoki Jun Fukuda Kazuo Ikehiro Yusuke Watanabe Daisuke Yamazaki |
Starring | Masaaki Sakai Masako Natsume Shiro Kishibe Toshiyuki Nishida Tonpei Hidari Shunji Fujimura |
Voices of | UK dub: Burt Kwouk David Collings Maria Warburg Peter Woodthorpe Gareth Armstrong Miriam Margolyes Andrew Sachs |
Theme music composer | Mickie Yoshino |
Opening theme | 'Monkey Magic' by Godiego |
Ending theme | 'Gandhara' by Godiego (s1) 'Holy and Bright' by Godiego (s2) |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language(s) | Japanese |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 52 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Teisho Arikawa Tsuneo Hayakawa Yoji Katori Ken Kumagaya Kazuo Morikawa Tadahiro Nagatomi Muneo Yamada |
Release | |
Original network | Nippon TV |
Picture format | 4:3 |
Original release | 2 October 1978 – 4 May 1980 |
Saiyūki (西遊記, lit. 'Account of the Journey to the West'), also known by its English title Monkey, also commonly referred to as Monkey Magic (the show's title song), is a Japanese television drama based on the 16th century Chinese novel, Journey to the West, by Wu Cheng'en. Filmed in Northwest China and Inner Mongolia, the show was produced by Nippon TV and International Television Films in association with NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation), and broadcast from 1978 to 1980 on Nippon TV.
Release[edit]
Two 26-episode seasons ran in Japan: the first season ran from October 1978 to April 1979, and the second one from November 1979 to May 1980, with screenwriters including Mamoru Sasaki, Isao Okishima, Tetsurō Abe, Kei Tasaka, James Miki, Motomu Furuta, Hiroichi Fuse, Yū Tagami, and Fumio Ishimori.
Saiyūki was dubbed into English from 1979, with dialogue written by David Weir. The dubbed version was broadcast under the name Monkey and broadcast in the United Kingdom by the British Broadcasting Corporation, in New Zealand by Television New Zealand and in Australia by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Only 39 of the original 52 episodes were originally dubbed and broadcast by the BBC: all 26 of series 1 and 13 of series 2. In 2004, the remaining 13 episodes were dubbed by Fabulous Films Ltd using the original voice acting cast, following a successful release of the English-dubbed series on VHS and DVD; later, these newly dubbed episodes were broadcast by Channel 4 in the UK.
A Spanish-dubbed version of Monkey aired in Mexico, Costa Rica, Peru, Argentina, Uruguay and the Dominican Republic in the early 1980s. While the BBC-dubbed Monkey never received a broadcast in the United States, the original Japanese-language version, Saiyūki, was shown on local Japanese-language television stations in California and Hawaii in the early 1980s.
Monkey Quest Show Tv
Plot summary[edit]
Monkey (孫悟空, Son Gokū), the title character, is described in the theme song as being 'born from an egg on a mountain top'; a stone egg and thus he is a stone monkey, a skilled fighter who becomes a brash king of a monkey tribe, who, the song goes on to claim, was 'the punkiest monkey that ever popped'.[1] He achieved a little enlightenment, and proclaimed himself 'Great Sage, Equal of Heaven'.[2] After demanding the 'gift' of a magical staff from a powerful Dragon king, and to quiet the din of his rough antics on Earth, Monkey is approached by Heaven to join their host, first in the lowly position of Master of the Stable (manure disposal), and then—after his riotous complaints—as 'Keeper of the Peach Garden of Immortality'. Monkey eats many of the peaches, which have taken millennia to ripen, becomes immortal and runs amok. Having earned the ire of Heaven and being beaten in a challenge by an omniscient, mighty, but benevolent, cloud-dwelling Buddha (釈迦如来, Shakanyorai), Monkey is imprisoned for 500 years under a mountain in order to learn patience.
Eventually, Monkey is released by the monk Tripitaka (三蔵法師, Sanzōhōshi), who has been tasked by the (観世音菩薩, Kanzeon Bosatsu) to undertake a pilgrimage from China to India to fetch holy scriptures. The pair soon recruit two former members of the Heavenly Host who were cast out and turned from angels to 'monsters' as a result of Monkey's transgressions: Sandy (沙悟浄, Sa Gojō), the water monster and ex-cannibal, expelled from Heaven after his interference caused Heaven's Jade Emperor's (天帝, Tentei, Shangdi) precious jade cup to be broken, and Pigsy (猪八戒, Cho Hakkai), a pig monster consumed with lust and gluttony, who was expelled from Heaven after harassing the Star Princess Vega—the Jade Emperor's mistress—for a kiss. A dragon, Yu Lung (玉龍, Gyokuryū), who was set free by Guanyin after being sentenced to death, eats Tripitaka's horse. On discovering that the horse was tasked with carrying Tripitaka, it assumes the horse's shape to carry the monk on his journey. Later in the story he occasionally assumes human form to assist his new master, although he is still always referred to as 'Horse'. Monkey can also change form, for instance into a hornet. In Episode 3, The Great Journey Begins, Monkey transforms into a girl to trick Pigsy. Monkey's other magic powers include: summoning a cloud upon which he can fly; his use of the magic wishing staff which he can shrink and grow at will and from time to time, when shrunk, store in his ear, and which he uses as a weapon; and the ability to conjure monkey warriors by blowing on hairs plucked from his chest.
The pilgrims face many perils and antagonists both human, such as Emperor Taizong of Tang (太宗皇帝, Taisōkōtei) and supernatural. Monkey, Sandy, and Pigsy are often called upon to battle demons, monsters, and bandits, despite Tripitaka's constant call for peace. Many episodes also feature some moral lesson, usually based upon Buddhist and/or Taoist philosophies, which are elucidated by the narrator at the end of various scenes.
Soundtrack[edit]
The songs in the series were performed by the five-piece Japanese band Godiego. In Japan, the first series' ending theme 'Gandhara' (ガンダーラ, Gandāra), which was named after the ancient kingdom of Gandhara, was released by Columbia Music Entertainment on 1 October 1978, backed with 'Celebration'. This was followed by the release of the opening theme 'Monkey Magic' on 25 December 1978, with 'A Fool' on the B-side. Godiego also released the soundtrack album Magic Monkey on 25 October 1978, comprising all of the songs that the band had composed for the first series. The album became one of the group's highest charting releases, staying at #1 on the Oricon chart for a total of eight weeks from January through March 1979 (it was unseated for most of January by the Japanese release of Grease: The Original Soundtrack from the Motion Picture), and it was ultimately the #1 LP for 1979. For the second series, the ending theme of 'Gandhara' was replaced with 'Holy and Bright', which was released on 1 October 1979 (the two sides of the single featured a Japanese-language version on one side and an English-language version on the other).
In the UK, BBC Records released 'Gandhara' as a single in 1979 (RESL 66), with 'The Birth of the Odyssey' and 'Monkey Magic' on the B-side.[3] The single reached #56 on the UK Singles Chart, eventually spending a total of seven weeks on the chart.[4] A second BBC single was released in 1980 (RESL 81), this time featuring an edited version of 'Monkey Magic', along with 'Gandhara' and 'Thank You Baby', but this single failed to chart.[5] The BBC releases of 'Gandhara' have one verse sung in Japanese and the other in English. BBC Records also released the Magic Monkey album under the simplified title of Monkey (REB 384) in 1980 but it failed to chart.
Masaaki Sakai, who plays Monkey in the series, also performed several of the songs for the series: 'SONGOKU', 'Ima de wa Oso Sugiru' (今では遅すぎる, 'It's Too Late'), 'Kono Michi no Hatemademo' (この道の果てまでも, 'To the End of the Road'), a Japanese version of Godiego's 'Thank You Baby', and '20 Oku Nen no Kurayami' (20億年の暗闇, 'Two Billion Years of Darkness').
Cult appeal[edit]
Monkey is considered a cult classic in countries where it has been shown, reaching as far as South America. Among the features that have contributed to its cult appeal are the theme song, the dubbed dialogue spoken in a variety of over-the-top 'oriental' accents, the reasonably good synchronization of dubbing to the actors' original dialogue, the memorable battles which were for many Western youngsters their first exposure to Asian-style fantasy action sequences, and the fact that the young priest Tripitaka was played by a woman, despite being male.
Monkey Quest Reborn
In 1981, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation debuted the BBC-dubbed Monkey at 6pm on week-nights. Since then, the show has been frequently repeated on the ABC, notably during the contemporary youth TV show Recovery which aired episodes of Monkey weekly from 1996-2000. When Recovery was put on hiatus, it was replaced with three hours of Monkey. The radio station Triple J often made references to Monkey and interviewed the original BBC voice actors on several occasions.
The British folk pop band Monkey Swallows the Universe took their name from an episode of Monkey.
In an episode of the cult Channel 4 sitcom Spaced, main character Tim Bisley mentions that as a child he wanted to be Monkey when he grew up.
Characters[edit]
Shunji Fujimura | Andrew Sachs | Bai Long Ma | Gyokuryū |
Episode list[edit]
Series 1: 1978-79[edit]
- 01. Monkey Goes Wild About Heaven
- 02. Monkey Turns Nursemaid
- 03. The Great Journey Begins
- 04. Monkey Swallows The Universe
- 05. The Power of Youth
- 06. Even Monsters Can Be People
- 07. The Beginning of Wisdom
- 08. Pigsy Woos A Widow
- 09. What Monkey Calls The Dog-Woman
- 10. Pigsy's in The Well
- 11. The Difference Between Night And Day
- 12. Pearls Before Swine
- 13. The Minx And The Slug
- 14. Catfish, Saint And The Shape-Changer
- 15. Monkey Meets The Demon Digger
- 16. The Most Monstrous Monster
- 17. Truth And The Grey Gloves Devil
- 18. Land For The Locusts
- 19. Vampire Master
- 20. Outrageous Coincidences
- 21. Pigsy, King and God
- 22. Village Of The Undead
- 23. Two Little Blessings
- 24. The Fires of Jealousy
- 25. The Country of Nightmares
- 26. The End of The Way
Series 2: 1979-80[edit]
- 01. Pigsy's Ten Thousand Ladies
- 02. The Dogs of Death
- 10. The Foolish Philosopher
- 11. Who Am I?
- 12. What is Wisdom?
- 13. The Fountain of Youth
- 15. A Shadow So Huge
- 16. Keep on Dancing
- 17. Give and Take
- 18. Such A Nice Monster
- 20. Pretty As a Picture
- 21. Mothers
- 26. At the Top of The Mountain
The other half of series 2 was not originally dubbed into English. These were done in 2004 with as much of the original cast as possible [6]
- 03. You Win Some, You Lose Some
- 04. Pigsy Learns a Lesson
- 05. The Land With Two Suns
- 06. The House of the Evil Spirit
- 07. Am I Dreaming?
- 08. The Tormented Emperor
- 09. Between Heaven And Hell
- 14. Better The Demon You Know
- 19. The Fake Pilgrims
- 22. The Tenacious Tomboy
- 23. Stoned
- 24. Hungry Like The Wolf
- 25. Monkey's Yearning
See also[edit]
- The New Legends of Monkey (2018 TV series reboot)
References[edit]
- ^'Monkey Music - Lyrics of 'Magic Monkey' CD by Godiego'. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
- ^Episode 1, 'Monkey Gets Wild About Heaven.'
- ^'Godiego - Gandhara single'. Discogs. Retrieved 26 June 2010.
- ^Brown, Tony. (2000). The Complete Book of the British Charts. Omnibus Press. p. 357. ISBN0-7119-7670-8.
- ^'Godiego - Monkey Magic single'. Discogs. Retrieved 26 June 2010.
- ^https://www.hive.co.uk/Product/Monkey-13-Redubbed-Episodes/8626957
External links[edit]
Monkey Quest Rewritten
- Monkey - Great Sage equal of Heaven - fansite Includes synopses of 52 episodes, and descriptions of the characters, demons, and gods.
- Monkey Heaven - fansite Includes short synopses and detailed summaries of 52 episodes, airdates, and more.
- Monkey at the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)