Hindi Mighty Morphin Power Rangers Free Download

Hindi Mighty Morphin Power Rangers Free Download

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Hindi Mighty Morphin Power Rangers Free Download

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A team of teenagers with attitude are recruited to save Angel Grove from the evil witch, Rita Repulsa, and later, Lord Zedd, Emperor of all he sees, and their horde of monsters.
Four athletically able teenagers along with their brainy friend Billy are selected by Zordon to fight the evil of Rita Repulsa, her monsters and her minions after the witch is accidentally released from imprisonment in an intergalactic dumpster on the moon. Later in the series, the rangers are joined by Tommy, the once evil Green Ranger designed for Rita's evil, but later was deprogrammed and spent two portions of the series briefly as the Green Ranger. Over time, some rangers had to pass their powers to others as well. Action scenes and scenes with Rita were edited from footage based on Japanese action sagas. Replacement villain Lord Zedd was designed in the U.S.
Reviewing &quot;Mighty Morphin Power Rangers&quot; and keeping some sort of perspective is quite difficult. Put simply, this show might as well be called the &quot;soundtrack to my childhood&quot;, as I was obsessed with it in only that way one can be obsessed by something when they are 7-8 years old. This was the show that &quot;taught me how to watch serialized television&quot;, for better or worse (!).<br/><br/>The basic setup for the show is that five &quot;teenagers with attitude&quot; from Angel Grove (might as well be a Los Angeles suburb) are recruited by old sage (and he of the disembodied head) Zordon (David J. Fielding) to fight against the evil forces of Rita Repulsa, whose monsters are always intent on destroying the city and taking over the world. Jason (Austin St. John), Zack (Walter Jones), Kimberly (Amy Jo Johnson), Trini (Thuy Trang), and Billy (David Yost) step into the roles of Red, Black, Pink, Yellow, &amp; Blue Power Rangers, respectively, sworn to protect Angel Grove and the world from whatever invaders Rita may send down upon them.<br/><br/>On the fringes of the action (at least to start out with) are the comical Bulk (Paul Schrier) &amp; Skull (Jason Narvy) duo, as well as the mysterious Green Ranger Tommy Oliver (Jason David Frank), who may or may not be on the Rangers&#39; side.<br/><br/>The actual &quot;Ranger&quot; action sequences are taken wholesale from the Japanese series &quot;Super Sentai&quot; and dubbed over, giving the entire experience a rather bizarre (yet distinctive feel).<br/><br/>As a child, this show completely mesmerized me...almost to the point of obsession sometimes. It was the perfect show for young kids (probably young boys especially, although enough female characters are on the show to not push it too far away from a &quot;girl market&quot;) during its era. Looking back from an adult perspective, however, the show comes off as incredibly cheesy/hokey...things that never even registered on &quot;young me&#39;s&quot; radar! The teen rangers are total goody-goodies, Bulk &amp; Skull get annoying quickly, and the episodes (for the most part) follow the exact same pattern. Shakespeare this is not, if you get my drift. This is the kind of fare that captured lightning in a bottle, pumped out as many episodes as possible to capitalize, and put quality storytelling on the back burner because the primary audience didn&#39;t care about it anyway.<br/><br/>How in the world does one rate an experience like this? I&#39;ve settled on an &quot;ambivalent 7&quot;. I can&#39;t rate it any higher, as it truly does not deserve it, but I can&#39;t rank it any lower for how thoroughly it entranced me as a child.<br/><br/>Most interesting, however, is how each season of this original run was quite different from the others:<br/><br/>Season 1: What I would consider &quot;Classic Power Rangers&quot;. With the exception of a very intriguing Green Ranger angle, these episodes are formulaic almost down to the minute: Intro, Rita builds monster, sends putties, Rangers defeat putties/monsters, Rita makes monsters grow, Rangers use Zords to defeat monster, positive/humorous message in closing scene. Minus the Green Ranger, every episode this season follows that same exact pattern. There is a certain charm to this (knowing exactly what to expect each 17 minutes), but it does get old rather quickly.<br/><br/>Season 2: Right from the get-go, it is clear that a bit more effort is being put into the stories during this campaign. More multi-part episodes are seen, and over-arching plot lines are introduced and followed-up on pretty constantly. That being said, however, the &quot;camp humor&quot; aspect is gone, as now everyone is in on the joke. A show like Power Rangers can only really work with the main players being deadly serious (as that is the joke to begin with). As soon as Zordon starts joking around, for example, the shark has been jumped.<br/><br/>Lord Zedd (Robert Axelrod) replaces Rita as the main villain, and at least at first this is a big boost, as Zedd brings a real menace that Rita always lacked. While Rita was always played for laughs, Zedd is much more imposing and awe-inspiring (especially for the kiddies!). Again, however, by the end of the season Zedd is turned rather comical as well.<br/><br/>Not helping matters is that that three new Rangers replace Jason, Zack, &amp; Trini: Rocky (Steve Cardenas), Adam (Johnny Yong Bosch), and Aisha (Karan Ashley). This seems like a big moment when it happens, but the &quot;Original Five&quot; Rangers had formed such a chemistry together that it quickly turns into a letdown. The formula is re-branded as Tommy (now the White Ranger) ostensibly leading the group, but it just doesn&#39;t work as well as &quot;the classics&quot; did.<br/><br/>Season 3: Everything takes a nose-dive in the final campaign. I can honestly say I haven&#39;t come close to watching all the episodes in this season, as they are just so disappointing and bland. Clearly, the lightning was no longer in the bottle (or even in the general vicinity) by this point in the show&#39;s run. It is probably a good thing the show spun off into other incarnations after this, as it truly needed a fresh start.<br/><br/>&quot;Mighty Morphin Power Rangers&quot; will always hold a special place in my nostalgic heart. It was the first serialized show I watched live, and had a huge impact in my subsequent TV fare. Sure, it is cheeseball kids TV at its finest, but it felt special at the time because there weren&#39;t 15 other shows of the same ilk airing beside it on Disney or Nick. As an adult now, I can see all the show&#39;s numerous foibles and faults, but that chill down the spine when &quot;It&#39;s Morphin&#39; Time!&quot; and the music kicks in will never go away each and every episode. The show deserves my respect, at the very least, for that.
I remember watching the show when i was like 9 and now I&#39;m 18. The first power rangers series is the best. The other series after that sucked. That&#39;s why i quit watching the show. I also seen the movie. The show is for kids so for everyone else it may seem dumb. I liked the show when i was kid but now i don&#39;t even watching cartoons or kids shows. My favorite ranger would have to been Tommy when he was the green ranger and white ranger. I will always remember watching the show.

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