When Does Ash Meet the Bully Persian Again

First season of the Pokémon animated tv set series

Flavour of television series

Pokémon: Indigo League
Season one
Pokemonseason1DVDBoxSet.jpg

English front end comprehend of the Pokémon: Indigo League DVD collection box, containing the first 26 episodes of this season

State of origin Japan
No. of episodes
  • 82 (Japanese version)
  • 80 (English version)
  • 79 (international version)
Release
Original network TV Tokyo
Original release April i, 1997 (1997-04-01) –
January 21, 1999 (1999-01-21)
Season chronology

Next →
Adventures in the Orange Islands

Pokémon: Indigo League (originally aired simply as Pokémon ) is the starting time season of the Pokémon animated television series and the first flavor of Pokémon the Series: The Kickoff , known in Nippon as Pocket Monsters ( ポケットモンスター , Poketto Monsutā ). Information technology originally aired in Japan on TV Tokyo from Apr 1, 1997, to January 21, 1999. It later aired in the United States in first-run syndication from September 8 to November 20, 1998, and on Kids' WB/The WB from February thirteen to November 27, 1999, concluding with the ambulation of the previously unreleased episode xviii on June 24, 2000. The commencement flavor premiered in Due south Korea on Seoul Dissemination Organization from July 14, 1999 to June xiv, 2000. It premiered in India on Drawing Network on May 12, 2003.[1]

The season follows the adventures of Ash Ketchum (voiced in Japanese by Rika Matsumoto, and in English language by Veronica Taylor), a 10-year-old aspiring Pokémon trainer from Pallet Town who is given a Pikachu (voiced past Ikue Ōtani) past Pokémon researcher Professor Oak to begin his Pokémon journeying. Ash is driven past his desire to win the Indigo Plateau'south Pokémon League, a challenging tournament for outstanding Pokémon trainers who compete against each other in Pokémon battles. To qualify for the tournament, Ash must collect the required number of gym badges, which are tokens earned after defeating each of the Kanto region'south elite Pokémon gym leaders. Early in the season, Ash befriends the h2o-type Pokémon trainer Misty, who befriends Ash in hopes of him replacing her destroyed bicycle, and Brock, a Pokémon breeder who is the leader of the Pewter City gym.

The episodes were directed by Masamitsu Hidaka and produced past Oriental Low-cal and Magic and TV Tokyo.

Episode list [edit]

Music [edit]

The Japanese opening song is "Aim to Be a Pokémon Master" (めざせポケモンマスター, Mezase Pokémon Masutā) by Rika Matsumoto for all 82 episodes. The ending songs are "One Hundred Fifty-One" (ひゃくごじゅういち, Hyakugojūichi) past Unshō Ishizuka and Pokémon Kids for 27 episodes, "Meowth's Song" (ニャースのうた, Nyāsu no Uta by Inuko Inuyama for 16 episodes, "Fantasy in My Pocket" (ポケットにファンタジー, Poketto ni Fantajī) by Sachiko Kobayashi and Juri Ihata with musical performance past the Pokémon Combo Orchestra for 16 episodes and the Christmas variant for 2 episodes, "Pokémon March" (ポケモン音頭, Pokémon Ondo) by Sachiko Kobayashi, Unshō Ishizuka and Kōichi Sakaguchi with an interlude by Shimai Niitsu, "Blazon: Wild" (タイプ:ワイルド, Taipu: Wairudo) by Rika Matsumoto for 12 episodes, and the English language opening song is "Pokémon Theme" by Jason Paige, the anime size version serves every bit the ending theme for 52 episodes, and its shortened version serves as the catastrophe theme for 26 episodes. The ending songs at the end of the episode are "Kanto Pokérap by James "D Railroad train" Willams and Babi Floyd for 52 episodes, 32 Pokémon on Mon thru Midweek, 30 Pokémon on Thursday, and 24 Pokémon on Friday, "My Best Friends" by Michael Whalen during episode 18 and for six episodes, "Double Trouble" by Rachael Lillis, Eric Stuart and Maddie Blaustien for 5 episodes, "What Kind of Pokémon Are You?" by Joshua Tyler for four episodes, "Together Forever" by J.P. Hartmann for half dozen episodes, "2.B.A. Master" by Russell Velázquez for 7 episodes, and "Viridian City" by Jason Paige for 4 episodes.

Habitation media releases [edit]

The episodes of this season were originally released as a collection of 26 individual DVDs and VHS released past Viz Video and Pioneer Entertainment betwixt December 13, 1998, and Jan 23, 2001.[3] [4]

Between 2006 and 2008, Viz Media re-released episodes of the flavor in three DVD compilations. The first xx-six episodes of this season were released on DVD on Nov 21, 2006, with "Beauty and the Embankment", being skipped. The second US season came out on Nov thirteen, 2007, with "Princess vs. Princess" and "The Purr-fect Hero" beingness moved onto the third part, to match the airing social club. The third and final office was released on February 12, 2008.

On November 5, 2013, Viz Media and Warner Domicile Video re-issued the first 26 episodes on DVD with new packaging.[5]

Viz Media and Warner Habitation Video released Pokémon: Indigo League - The Complete Collection on DVD in the United States on October 28, 2014. This release contains all three volumes of the series, consisting of 78 episodes in all, although this prepare lacks the episode "Holiday Hullo-Jynx", which was banned past The Pokémon Company International in 2014 due to the controversy surrounding it.

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ These episodes were aired together as part of an hour-long special to commemorate the return to circulate after the "Dennō Senshi Porygon" incident.
  2. ^ This episode was originally scheduled to air on the day of its respective Japanese vacation. However, due to the "Dennō Senshi Porygon" incident the episode's broadcast was pushed back too far. Information technology was instead circulate equally an hour-long special with the other holiday-themed episode.
  3. ^ These episodes aired in Japan as an hour-long special.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Pokémon in South Asia - Bulbapedia, the customs-driven Pokémon encyclopedia". bulbapedia.bulbagarden.net . Retrieved Feb 15, 2022.
  2. ^ Papapetros, Spyros (2001). On the Animation of the Inorganic: Life in Movement in the Art and Architecture of Modernism, 1892–1944. Berkeley, California: University of California. OCLC 51930122.
  3. ^ "Pokémon DVD: Tv set". akacool.com. Archived from the original on Jan 31, 2009. Retrieved Jan 23, 2009.
  4. ^ "Pokémon Indigo League DVD Guide". bulbagarden.net. Retrieved Jan 23, 2009.
  5. ^ Pokemon Season 1: Indigo League Pt.ane, Amazon.com, ASIN B00G47C54W

External links [edit]

  • Pokémon US official website
  • Pokémon anime website at Idiot box Tokyo (in Japanese)
  • Pokémon TV Anime at Pokémon JP official website (in Japanese)

yamamotonothem.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pok%C3%A9mon:_Indigo_League

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