Thundercats Wiki
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==='''Other Villains'''===
 
==='''Other Villains'''===
*'''Bounty Hunter''' - A muscular monster with a face resembling a Bulldog, with high, pointed ears. He has a sparkling laser on his head and a red star on his belt. He was imprisoned by Stargazer for 200 years but escaped twice from the Penal Planet 10 (broken out once by Mon*Star in episode 22, and the second time on his own, in episode 45). He can absorb energy directed at him, and use it to sustain his physical form as well as grow larger and more powerful. He can only be defeated by the solar energy bazooka that Commander Stargazer has. He is extremely dangerous and powerful, as he has easily defeated all the original Silverhawks twice. He was stopped by Commander Satargazer and by the new golden Silverhawk, Hotwing.
+
[[Bounty Hunter]] is a muscular monster with a face resembling a Bulldog, with high, pointed ears. He has a sparkling laser on his head and a red star on his belt. He was imprisoned by Stargazer for 200 years but escaped twice from the [[Penal Planet 10]]. He can absorb energy directed at him, and use it to sustain his physical form as well as grow larger and more powerful. He can only be defeated by the solar energy bazooka that [[Commander Stargazer]] has. He is extremely dangerous and powerful, as he has easily defeated all the original [[SilverHawks]] twice. He was stopped by Commander Satargazer and by the new golden SilverHawk, Hotwing.
   
 
==='''Three Outlaws from Fence'''===
 
==='''Three Outlaws from Fence'''===

Revision as of 23:31, 2 August 2014

Silverhawks Logo

SilverHawks is an American animated television series developed by Rankin/Bass Productions and distributed by Lorimar-Telepictures in 1986. The animation was provided by Japanese studio Pacific Animation Corporation. In total, 65 episodes were made. It was created as a space-bound equivalent of their previous series, ThunderCats.

As was the case with ThunderCats, there was also a SilverHawks comic book series published by then-Marvel Comics imprint Star Comics. At present, Warner Brothers owns the rights to the series.

Overview

Production and development

Rankin/Bass followed up their successful ThunderCats series with this series about a team of human heroes in the 29th century who were given metal bodies and hawk wings to stop organized crime in the Galaxy of Limbo. SilverHawks featured many of the same voice actors who had worked on ThunderCats, including Larry Kenney, Peter Newman, Earl Hammond, Doug Preis and Bob McFadden.


Story

Bionic policeman Commander Stargazer recruited the SilverHawks, heroes who are "partly metal, partly real," to fight the evil Mon*Star, an escaped alien mob boss who transforms into an enormous armor-plated creature with the aid of Limbo’s Moonstar. Joining Mon*Star in his villainy is an intergalactic mob: the snakelike Yes-man, the blade-armed Buzz-Saw, the "bull"-headed Mumbo-Jumbo, weather controller Windhammer, shapeshifter Mo-Lec-U-Lar, robotic card shark Poker-Face, weapons-heavy Hardware, and "the musical madness of" Melodia (uses a "keytar" that fires musical notes).

Quicksilver (formerly Jonathan Quick) leads the SilverHawks, with his metal bird companion TallyHawk at his side. Twins Emily and Will Hart became Steelheart and Steelwill, the SilverHawks’ technician and strongman respectively. Country-singing Col. Bluegrass played a sonic guitar and piloted the team’s ship, the Miraj (pronounced "mirage" on the series, but given that spelling on the Kenner toy). Rounding out the group is a youngster “from the planet of the mimes,” named Copper Kidd (usually called "Kidd" for short), a mathematical genius who spoke in whistles and computerized tones. Their bionic bodies are covered by a full-body close-fitting metal armor that only exposes the face and an arm, the armor is equipped with a retractile protective mask, retractile wings under-arm (except Bluegrass) thruster on elbows, and laser-weapons over the body. At the end of every episode, Copper Kidd was quizzed (along with the home audience) on various space facts by Col. Bluegrass.

Launching from their satellite base, Hawk Haven, the SilverHawks flew into battle five days a week for one season. The series was closely associated with ThunderCats, sharing the same production company, the same style of story lines, and virtually the same voice cast. Mon*Star, the main villain, has a voice similar to that of Mumm-Ra, the main villain of ThunderCats, who is also voiced by Earl Hammond.

Characters

Heroes

The SilverHawks in the show's title sequence. Left to right: Copper Kidd, Bluegrass, Quicksilver (with Tallyhawk perched on arm), Steelheart, Steelwill.

Other Supporting Characters

Villians

Mon*Star is a quintillionaire alien mob boss who escaped from his cell, located on Penal Planet 10. He appears as a feline muscular humanoid with dark hair streaked with red over all the body, a voluminous red mane and beard and an eyepatch (with the symbol of a black star) covering his left eye. Utilizing beams from Limbo's Moonstar, Mon*Star's body becomes encased on spiked armor-plating as he recites "Moonstar of Limbo, give me the might, the muscle, the menace, of MON*STAR!". In this state, he temporarily regains his left eye with it able to fire the crimson Light Star beam which has various effects, destructive and stunning. Mon*Star rides a giant "space-squid" called Sky-Runner and has a weapon-bird named Sky Shadow. He has some bad blood with Stargazer due to their past conflicts and extends that animosity to the SilverHawks.

(voiced by Earl Hammond)


Yes-Man is a half-man, half-snake creature. He is Mon*Star's all-purpose lackey, thrall, and/or sycophant. As his name suggests, he is notorious for constantly saying "Oh yess, Boss...yess." Yes-Man once used the powers of the Moonstar alongside Mon*Star, but did not change form. The Moonstar primarily gave him increased mental abilities and ambition. This led to a feud between himself and his boss until the powers faded.

(voiced by Bob McFadden)


Hardware is extremely intelligent, short but bulky, light purple-skinned creature who carries an over-sized rucksack full of self-engineered weapons and equipment. Hardware has the uniquely honed talent for invention, and can devise devilishly effective machines. Mon*Star considers Hardware his most dangerous minion because of this talent. Hardware's weapon-bird is Prowler.

(voiced by Bob McFadden)

Melodia is a musical mistress who serves as a nemesis and counterpart to the SilverHawks]' Bluegrass. Melodia is usually seen cruising around in the Limbo limo, causing havoc and assorted acts of terror as diversions. Melodia almost always carries a musical synthesizer called a "Sound Smasher" as a weapon. Her usual dressing are an exaggerated costume of a rock-singer: two-shaded green hair; a short black dress; red belt with plug up battery pack for "Sound Smasher"; long red gloves; half dark purple, half light pink tights and; dark blue glasses with a red 'music note' frame (in contrast to Bluegrass' blue 'music note' frame). In "Switch", while both Melodia and Bluegrass were under effect of a gas that temporarily turns good people into bad people and vice-versa, Bluegrass was the one with a red music note frame and Melodia had a blue one. It's not specifically stated if that was another direct effect of the gas or if the weapons/instruments could be regulated into different colors.

(voiced by Maggie Wheeler)

Windhammer is an eco-terrorist with a huge "blasted" tuning fork that enables him to manipulate or generate destructive weather patterns either on a planet or in space. He is a muscular humanoid with azurine skin, long blonde hair and large elf-like ears.

(voiced by Doug Preis)

Mo-Lec-U-Lar is a molecule-themed shapeshifter whose primary form is a humanoid body composed of many spheres in various copper shades. He is Mon*Star's master of disguise and leading hitman. Besides shapeshifting, he one time became invisible in order to infiltrate the Silverhawks' base. His weapon-bird is Volt-ure.

(voiced by Doug Preis)

Mumbo Jumbo is a copper-skinned robotic minotaur who is basically the grunt for the mob, aided by his ability to "bulk up", growing larger and more muscular, increasing his strength by doing so. He speaks in metallic grunts which his associates seem to understand and appears to be on the low scale of the intellectual spectrum. His signature attack is a quadrupedal charge at an opponent. He is a sworn enemy of Steelheart because of Steelheart's strength and skill which takes him down easily. Mumbo's weapon-bird is Airshock.

(voiced by Peter Newman)

Poker-Face is a robotic member of Mon*Star's mob who has slot machines for his eyes and carries a cane decorated with playing card suits. He is the owner of the Starship Casino which was run outside of the "Lightyear Limit" and was the extent of the SilverHawks' jurisdiction. He always charges Mon*Star billions for new inventive ideas against the Silver Hawks.

(voiced by Larry Kenney)

Timestopper is a cocky juvenile delinquent nyctophobe with a chest device that has the ability to suspend all ambient motion and kinetic energy around him (freeze time, as it were) for a minute. He is often in the services of Mon*Star but has no qualms about getting in his way if he isn't paid for the job. His nyctophobia is most likely from the fact his chest device is light-powered.

(voiced by Larry Kenney)

Buzz-Saw is a cybernetic war machine of a light copper-shade with razor sharp circular saw cutting blades over its body that can be used as projectile weapons. It speaks with a high-pitched metallic voice. His weapon-bird is Shredator.

Zero the Memory Thief is a a long-nosed shady character who steals memories using a cattle prod-like weapon and records them on cassettes. He occasionally did business with Mon*Star's gang when the opportunity suited him. While he can steal memories, they don't teach him how to use the memorized data the way his victims know.

Smiley (Character) is a mummy mummified boxer robot that is brought back to life by Poker-Face. He was once stopped by Commander Stargazer. Smiley is the heavyweight champion of Limbo. Pokerface (and then Mon*Star) use a remote control to tell Smiley what he has to do. In the Starship Casino, Smiley defeats easily both Mumbo Jumbo and Buzz-Saw, but later on could not beat the SilverHawks.

Other Villains

Bounty Hunter is a muscular monster with a face resembling a Bulldog, with high, pointed ears. He has a sparkling laser on his head and a red star on his belt. He was imprisoned by Stargazer for 200 years but escaped twice from the Penal Planet 10. He can absorb energy directed at him, and use it to sustain his physical form as well as grow larger and more powerful. He can only be defeated by the solar energy bazooka that Commander Stargazer has. He is extremely dangerous and powerful, as he has easily defeated all the original SilverHawks twice. He was stopped by Commander Satargazer and by the new golden SilverHawk, Hotwing.

Three Outlaws from Fence

They appear in many episodes and are friendly to Melodia and Poker-Face, though the three are usually betrayed by the Mon*Star's monions.

Space Bandit spends most of the time on the planet Fence, playing cards with his two friends - Rhino and Cyclops.

Rhino is a rhinoceros-like mutant who spends most of this time on the planet Fence, playing cards with the Space Bandit and Cyclops.

Cyclops is a balloon body creature who spends most his time on the planet Fence playing cards with the Space Bandit and Rhino.

DVD releases

On October 14, 2008 Warner Home Video released Silverhawks: Volume 1 on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time. The 4-disc set contains the first 32 episodes of the series.

On October 4, 2011, Warner Brothers released Silverhawks: Volume 2 on DVD in region 1 via their Warner Archive Collection. This is a Manufacture-on-Demand (MOD) release, available exclusively through Warner's online store and Amazon.com. The 4-disc set contains the remaining 33 episodes of the series.

List of episodes

Broadcasted episodes

Number Title Original Airdate
1.01 The Origin Story September 8, 1986
1.02 Journey To Limbo September 9, 1986
1.03 The Planet Eater September 10, 1986
1.04 Save The Sun September 11, 1986
1.05 Stop Timestopper September 12, 1986
1.06 Darkbird September 15, 1986
1.07 The Backroom September 16, 1986
1.08 The Threat of Dritt September 17, 1986
1.09 Sky-Shadow September 18, 1986
1.10 Magnetic Attraction September 19, 1986
1.11 Gold Shield September 22, 1986
1.12 Zero The Memory Thief September 23, 1986
1.13 The Milk Run September 24, 1986
1.14 The Hardware Trap - Part 1 September 25, 1986
1.15 The Hardware Trap - Part 2 September 26, 1986
1.16 Race Against Time September 29, 1986
1.17 Operation Big Freeze September 30, 1986
1.18 The Ghost Ship October 1, 1986
1.19 The Great Galaxy Race October 2, 1986
1.20 Fantascreen October 3, 1986
1.21 Hotwing Hits Limbo October 6, 1986
1.22 The Bounty Hunter October 7, 1986
1.23 Zeek's Fumble October 8, 1986
1.24 The Fighting Hawks October 9. 1986
1.25 The Rengade Hero October 10, 1986
1.26 One on One October 13, 1986
1.27 No More Mr. Nice Guy October 14, 1986
1.28 Music of the Spheres October 15, 1986
1.29 Limbo Gold Rush October 16, 1986
1.30 Countdown to Zero October 17, 1986
1.31 The Amber Amplifier October 20, 1986
1.32 The Saviour Stone October 21, 1986
1.33 Smiley October 22, 1986
1.34 Gotbucks October 23, 1986
1.35 Melodia's Siren Song October 24, 1986
1.36 Tally-Hawk Returns October 27, 1986
1.37 Undercover October 28, 1986
1.38 Eye of Infinity October 29, 1986
1.39 A Piece of the Action October 30, 1986
1.40 Flashback October 31, 1986
1.41 Super Birds November 3, 1986
1.42 The Blue Door November 4, 1986
1.43 The Star of Bedlama November 5, 1986
1.44 The Illusionist November 6, 1986
1.45 The Bounty Hunter Returns November 7, 1986
1.46 The Chase November 10, 1986
1.47 Switch November 11, 1986
1.48 Junkyard Dog November 12, 1986
1.49 Window in Time November 13, 1986
1.50 Gangwar - Part 1 November 14, 1986
1.51 Gangwar - Part 2 November 17, 1986
1.52 Sneak Attack - Part 1 November 18, 1986
1.53 Sneak Attack - Part 2 November 19, 1986
1.54 Moon*Star November 20, 1986
1.55 The Diamond Stick-Pin November 21, 1986
1.56 Burnout November 24, 1986
1.57 Battle Cruiser November 25, 1986
1.58 Small World November 26, 1986
1.59 Match-Up November 27, 1986
1.60 Stargazer's Refit November 28, 1986
1.61 The Invisible Destroyer December 1, 1986
1.62 The Harder They Fall December 2, 1986
1.63 Uncle Rattler December 3, 1986
1.64 Zeek's Power December 4, 1986
1.65 Airshow December 5, 1986

Spin-offs

Action figures

The SilverHawks action figure collection based on the animated series was produced by Kenner and first released in 1987. LJN, the makers of the ThunderCats figures, originally were to produce the SilverHawks figures but decided to pass on the project at the last minute. Each figure was packaged with a companion bird and, similar to the popular Super Powers Collection, had an action feature of some type. The second series of figures is harder to find than the first with Ultrasonic Quicksilver being the most difficult. The MonStar with Laser Lance, Copper Kid with Laser Discs, and the Copper Racer vehicle were not produced but were shown in the 1988 Kenner toy catalog. The series 1 Hawk Haven Fortress was never produced either, due to the high production costs it would incur. Figures for many characters, including Melodia and Poker-Face, were never made.

Comics

The Marvel Comics imprint Star Comics (which also published ThunderCats) released a seven-issue series. Writers included Steve Perry who also wrote for the animated series.

Merchandise

Several other pieces of SilverHawks merchandise were released in the 1980s including a board game, puzzles, and a plastic pencil pouch with the main characters on one side with a metal zipper. A set of pajamas were also produced which included wing flaps under the arms to more resemble the characters while wearing them.

ThunderCats (2011)

In the 2011 ThunderCats remake, Mon*Star briefly appears in a cameo in the episode "Legacy." He was seen on a monitor in the bridge of Mumm-Ra's ship.