A politician gives a speech in a shopping district full of shoppers. Suddenly, a man wielding a knife bursts out from among the shoppers and tries to kill those around him. To stop the man, Masako Murata (Pinko Izumi) tries to approach him, but her friends stop her. Meanwhile, a woman, who looks like a homeless person, appears in front of him and tells him "if you want to kill, then kill me." The man is about to stab her, but the woman opens her eyes. At the moment, blood bursts from the man's arm. The woman is about to kill him, but Masako Murata stops her and the woman leaves. Later, Masako Murata finds the woman collapsed on the street. Masako decides to take the woman to her house. There, Masako sees that the woman is injured in her back and also notices heavy despair in her eyes. The woman's name is Sana (Yuriko Ono). Sana is a ninja that has arrived in present day Japan. She now follows Masako Murata as her new boss and attempts to eradicate evil that is rampant in modern society.
Tetsujin Tiger Seven, translated as Iron Man Tiger 7, was a Japanese tokusatsu television series that aired in 1973, produced by P Productions. Unlike P. Productions previous series about cat based heroes Iron Man Tiger 7 is set in modern Japan.
Takigawa Go gets the power to transform into Tetsujin Tiger Seven from an artificial heart and a magic pendent. To transform he utters the henshin phrase "Tiger Spark". Takigawa Go is played by Tatsuya Nanjô who also starred in Toei's Henshin Ninja Arashi. Go rides a Suzuki motorcycle with rocket boosters. When he transforms into Tiger Seven the motorcycle transforms as well to become "Spike Go". Spike Go can drive itself, coming to its master's aid when Tiger 7 roars.
Tetsujin Tiger 7 was apparently P. Production's attempt at a Kamen Rider style series. They even hired Shunsuke Kikuchi composer of the 1970s Kamen Rider music to write the music for Tetsujin Tiger 7.
Kai, Finn, and Mia, sixth-grade friends, are called by Enigma, a mysterious walking top hat, to save Kaboom City, a fantastical world where everyday objects like skates, keys, or guitars have come to life thanks to Kazoom, the universe's most powerful energy, and have been transformed into "super-things," superheroes and super-villains with extraordinary abilities, each facing their own rival.
In 2012, high schooler An Zhenzhen's phone mysteriously connects to a future version of her classmate Jiang Ling from 2024. Guided by his messages, she attempts to alter the course of fate, but her actions trigger a series of misunderstandings and tragedies that intertwine their lives across time.
Not with a Bang was a short-lived British television sitcom produced by London Weekend Television in 1990. It ran for seven episodes, each 30 minutes long. The show was a dark science fiction comedy, focusing on the end of the human race on Earth. The title comes from the last line of T. S. Eliot's poem The Hollow Men "not with a bang, but a whimper".
A two-episode TTFC-exclusive web series set within the continuity of Kamen Rider Revice, and takes place after Revice Forward: Kamen Rider Live & Evil & Demons. In the special, George Karizaki is tasked with hunting down Orteca after the latter has escaped from Blue Bird custody.
Way Out was a 1961 fantasy and science fiction television anthology series hosted by writer Roald Dahl. The macabre 25-minute shows were introduced by Dahl's dry delivery of a brief introductory monologue, sometimes explaining a method of murdering a spouse without getting caught.
The taped series began because CBS suddenly needed a replacement for a Jackie Gleason talk show that network executives were about to cancel, and producer David Susskind contacted Dahl to help mount a show quickly. The series was paired by the network with the similar The Twilight Zone for Friday evening broadcasts, running from March through July 1961 at 9:30 p.m. Eastern time, under the primary sponsorship of Liggett & Myers. Writers included Philip H. Reisman, Jr. and Sumner Locke Elliott.
The premiere episode, "William and Mary", adapted from a Roald Dahl short story, told of a wife getting revenge on her husband.
In "Dissolve to Black", an actress cast as a murder victim at a television studio goes through a rehearsal, but the dra
Marc, a ufologist, searches for his missing brother, Gabriel, believing he was abducted by aliens. An encounter with a mysterious woman challenges his presumptions, raising questions about an imminent alien invasion.
The story takes place in Lingshan, where a group of "hopeless" people gather in the world. Abandoned by society, occupying land as king in Lingshan, the fourth generation of Kuiba Milin was born here. After trying hard to find the Kuiba, the Heavens decide to blast Lingshan to the ground.
This action-packed animated sci-fi anthology presents ten futuristic visions from Africa inspired by the continent's diverse histories and cultures. Executive produced by Oscar-winning director Peter Ramsey, these ten short films made by a new generation of animation creators draw on uniquely African perspectives to imagine brave new worlds of advanced technology, aliens, spirits, and monsters. This is Africa as you've never seen it before.
The Emperor of the Han Dynasty, Liu Che, shares a fateful bond with Modu Zhun, who was once a hostage of the Xiongnu, a powerful tribal confederation that once ruled the Mongolian steppes. In his past life, Modu Zhun loved Liu Che, yet he played a role in the downfall of the Xiongnu. Now reborn with a new chance, he swears vengeance, but his inescapable connection with Liu Che remains unbroken. As past karma intertwines with the present, they are draw into a web of power struggles and conspiracies. Though they use each other for their own ends, an undeniable attraction grows between them. Caught between love and hatres, the two defy their destinies, only to reaffirm the fated bond that ties them together.