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Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension, sometimes shortened as Galidor, is a 2002 television series that ran on YTV in Canada and Fox Kids in the United States in 2002 with a total of 26 half-hour episodes. The series was created by Thomas W. Lynch, the creator of The Secret World of Alex Mack and The Journey of Allen Strange; and funded and owned by the Lego Group. It was the final series to launch on Fox Kids, as the brand folded in the United States only 7 months after its debut.

Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension
GenreScience fiction
Action/Adventure
Mystery
Drama
Created byThomas W. Lynch
StarringMatthew Ewald
Marie-Marguerite Sabongui
Voices ofMichael O'Reilly
Georges Morris
Walter Massey
Ian Finlay
Country of originCanada
United States
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes26
Production
Running time30 minutes
Production companiesCinéGroupe
Tom Lynch Company
Release
Original networkYTV (Canada)
Fox Kids (USA)
Picture formatNTSC
Original releaseFebruary 9 (2002-02-09) 
August 24, 2002 (2002-08-24)

Plot


The show is centered upon Nick Bluetooth, a 15-year-old boy led (with his best friend Allegra Zane) by an extraterrestrial map to a spacecraft nicknamed the Egg, which moves them into an "Outer Dimension" threatened by Gorm. They are now there to protect the story's eponymous dimension. To defeat Gorm, Nick must find all the pieces of a key that will unlock the sealed gates to the kingdom of Galidor, one of many realms comprising the dimension.


Characters



Heroes



Supporting characters



Villains



Episodes



Season 1


  1. Identity (written by Thomas W. Lynch, directed by George Mihalka)
  2. Euripides, Please (written by Thomas W. Lynch, directed by Giles Walker)
  3. All For One, One For Nepol (written by Jonas Agin and Vijal Patel, directed by Jim Donovan)
  4. Bouncing Off The Walls (written by Shari Goodhartz, directed by George Mihalka)
  5. Dust Til’ Dawn (written by Jonas E. Agin and Vijal M. Patel, directed by Giles Walker)
  6. Belonging (written by Chad Fiveash and James Stotereaux, directed by Adam Weissman)
  7. Crack In The Map (written by Doug Cooney, directed by George Mihalka)
  8. Seeing Is Just Seeing (written by Terry Saltsman, directed by Giles Walker)
  9. Truth, Lies, And Videotape (written by Alex Epstein, directed by Jim Donovan)
  10. Just Because You're Paranoid (written by Alex Epstein, directed by Adam Weissman)
  11. Frozen Feud (written by Vijal M. Patel, directed by George Mihalka)
  12. Relativity (written by Damian Kindler, directed by Jean-Claude Lord)
  13. It's Deja Vu All Over Again (written by Tom Chehak, directed by Adam Weissman)
  14. The Road To Kek (written by Tom Chehak, directed by George Mihalka)
  15. A Room With No View (written by Leila Bensen and Dave Preston, directed by Adam Weissman)
  16. Escape From Kek (written by Alex Epstein, directed by Adam Weissman)

Season 2


  1. Pieces Of Nick (written by Tom Chehak, directed by Patrick Williams)
  2. A Tale Of Two Nicks (written by Laura Kosterski, directed by Roger Cantin)
  3. Go For The Bronze (written by Jana Veverka, directed by Patrick Williams)
  4. State Of The Art (written by John Mandel, directed by John L’Ecuyer)
  5. The Great Glinch Switch (written by Thomas W. Lynch, Jonas E. Agin, and Vijal M. Patel; directed by Adam Weissman)
  6. Mr. Tager Goes To Earth (written by Therese Beaupre, directed by Sean Dwyer)
  7. Area 51 (written by Erik Saltzgaber, directed by Adam Weissman)
  8. Recalling The Past (written and directed by Tom Chehak)
  9. The Gates Of Galidor Part 1: The Gauntlet (written by Alex Epstein, directed by Giles Walker)
  10. The Gates Of Galidor Part 2 (written by Tom Chehak, directed by Adam Weissman)

Toy line


A Galidor-themed Lego toy line of the same name was produced by the Lego Group in 2002.[1] Unlike other Lego themes, these were simply action figures with swappable body parts, akin to a simplified version of Lego's Bionicle theme. The theme was considered a commercial failure, due to over specialized parts and limited compatibility with other Lego themes. The Lego designers who worked on the theme were also heavily disappointed with the quality of the TV series, expecting Galidor to be a larger success after their recent work on Bionicle and Lego Star Wars.[2] Other Lego designers blamed Galidor's failure to being a case of self-competition due to being launched while Bionicle was at its peak popularity. Only 15 Galidor sets were released overall, with 2 sets in limited quantities and 2 cancelled sets. The specialized molds of Galidor along with those for other less successful themes such as Scala, Znap and Primo contributed to an inflated Lego production catalog from 6,000 parts up to 12,000; which became a major sunk cost in tooling for the company.[3]

Despite these issues Galidor did offer several innovative accomplishments for Lego, including the electronic Kek Powerizer figure that interacted with the television show.[4] The Kek Powerizer included lines of dialogue delivered via Brian Hamilton (actor) and a small electronic screen with mini-games on it.[5] The socket joint introduced in Galidor would later be adapted for use in Bionicle, Lego Alpha Team and notably in Lego Exo Force with the gradual introduction of new pieces that allowed Galidor parts to easily connect with Lego Technic and System style sets.

Galidor along with other failures of the era lead to Lego's near bankruptcy in the early 2000s.[6] Lego designer Mark Stafford would later comment that he believed Galidor was the biggest contributor to the era's fiscal failures.[7] A Lego fan subculture for Galidor has emerged in the years since fueled by both nostalgia and ironic enjoyment, most notably with Lego designer Nick Vas; who helped contribute to the design of the 2017 The Lego Ninjago Movie set Ninjago City which contained a minifigure wearing a Galidor shirt, along with a Galidor sticker element featuring Nick and Allegra depicted as traditional Lego minifigures as a nod to the former series and its place in Lego history.,[8][9]

The theme was referenced in Lego Marvel Super Heroes - Guardians of the Galaxy: The Thanos Threat where Star-Lord and Gamora discussing directions should they take to reach the Avengers, Peter mentions that one of the planets is named Galidor.


Video game


Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension
Developer(s)
  • Tiertex Design Studios (GBA)
  • Asylum Entertainment (PC)
Publisher(s)
  • Electronic Arts
  • Lego Interactive
Platform(s)
  • Game Boy Advance
  • Microsoft Windows
ReleaseGame Boy Advance
  • NA: October 29, 2002
Microsoft Windows
  • EU: 2004[citation needed]
  • NA: 2008[citation needed]
Genre(s)Action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

An eponymous video game adaption of Galidor was developed for Game Boy Advance by Tiertex Design Studios, and for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2 and GameCube by Asylum Entertainment. In May 2002, publisher Electronic Arts first displayed the Game Boy Advance and PlayStation 2 versions at E3 2002.[10][11][12] The Game Boy Advance game was released by Lego Interactive and Electronic Arts on October 29, 2002, to the North American market.[13] The game received a mixed reception, with reviews usually citing repetitive gameplay and unresponsive controls.[14][15] Asylum Entertainment's take on the game was initially scheduled for a release in early 2003,[16][17][18] and in July 2003, Electronic Arts announced that would be released in September of that year;[11] however, on September 3, 2003, Asylum Entertainment announced that, due to financial instability, they had cancelled their Galidor game for all platforms, and laid off the game's team.[19] The unfinished PC version was eventually found in various budget re-releases of individual Lego video games, or Lego video game bundles, released by Focus Multimedia and ValuSoft in Europe and North America, respectively.[20]


References


  1. "LEGO Galidor 20th Anniversary Theme Announced". thebrickfan.com. April 1, 2022.
  2. Robertson, David. "Brick by Brick Chapter 3".
  3. Garin, Chris (September 19, 2020). "The Origins Of Lego A Story of resilience".
  4. Millington, Huw. "8316: Kek Powerizer".
  5. "GALIDOR: Kek Powerizer". January 3, 2019.
  6. Feloni, Richard (February 10, 2014). "How Lego Came Back From The Brink Of Bankruptcy". Business Insider.
  7. Feloni, Richard (February 10, 2014). "How These Are The Disastrous Lego Kits That Almost Ruined The Company". Business Insider.
  8. Millington, Huw. "Mother Doomsday Minifigure Entry".
  9. "The LEGO Ninjago Movie's largest set: 70620 Ninjago City Review". August 14, 2017.
  10. Boulding, Aaron (May 14, 2002). "EA Floods E3".
  11. Calvert, Justin (July 7, 2003). "EA releases new Galidor info".
  12. Fielder, Joe (May 22, 2002). "E3 2002: First Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension shots".
  13. "Lego Interactive and EA release two new GBA titles. - GameZone". May 4, 2012.
  14. "Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension - GBA - Review - GameZone". May 4, 2012.
  15. Nix (November 18, 2002). "Galidor".
  16. "Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension Preview - Preview". Nintendo World Report.
  17. Dunham, Jeremy (June 12, 2002). "First Look: Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension".
  18. "Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension Preview - Preview". Nintendo World Report.
  19. Jenkins, David (September 3, 2003). "Gamasutra - The Art & Business of Making Games". www.gamasutra.com.
  20. https://www.lego.com/cdn/cs/set/assets/bltd6c9fecf8bee9f9b/bits_n_bricks_s03e37_feature_and_transcript.pdf [bare URL PDF]





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