7.6 /10 1 Votes
7.9/10 TV No. of episodes 65 Final episode date 13 December 1985 | 7.2/10 Developed by J. Michael Straczynski First episode date 16 September 1985 Number of seasons 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Voices of Darrin BakerLen CarlsonLuba GoyCharles JolliffeValerie PolitisDan HennesseyGuilio Kukurugya Country of origin FranceCanadaJapanUnited States Cast Similar Flash Gordon, Inspector Gadget, Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater, MASK, Cadillacs and Dinosaurs |
Jayce and the wheeled warriors episode 1 escape from the garden of evil
Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors is a French/North American animated TV show which was first broadcast on September 16, 1985. It was produced by DIC Entertainment (originally distributed for syndication by SFM Entertainment) and animated by the Japanese animation studios Sunrise, Shaft, Studio Giants, Studio Look and Swan Production. The show, which ran for 65 thirty-minute episodes, was created to support Mattel's Wheeled Warriors toyline. It has an ongoing plot, however, it did not have a finale, and the plot was left unresolved.
Contents
- Jayce and the wheeled warriors episode 1 escape from the garden of evil
- Background
- Plot
- The Movie
- The Lightning League
- The Monster Minds
- The Lightning League vehicles
- The Monster Minds vehicles
- Voice actors
- Mattel Wheeled Warriors toys
- Home video releases
- Comic
- References

The show featured two duelling forces. The heroes are humans called the Lightning League who drive white and silver vehicles with assorted weaponry led by a teenager named Jayce. The villains are organic plant-based creatures called the Monster Minds who travel via large green organic vines, which can grow in and across interstellar space, and sprout seeds that grow rapidly into further Monster Minds. They are led by the very first of the Monster Minds, Saw Boss.

Background

Most of the episodes were written by the French writers Jean Chalopin and Haskell Barkin. Writers at DIC also included Larry DiTillio, Barbara Hambly and J. Michael Straczynski. Straczynski wrote about a quarter of the episodes attempting, in his words, to "hijack a dopey concept and make it into something more". Haim Saban and Shuki Levy provided the music for the show.

In the United Kingdom, the series was screened on Sunday mornings on Channel 4 and Sky Channel. In France, a French language version of the show titled Jayce et les Conquérants de la Lumière (lit. Jayce and the Conquerors of Light) was broadcast on Salut les p'tits loups !, a children's show on TF1, beginning on September 9, 1985. Its first showing in the United States was seven days later. Nearly a decade later, it was rerun on USA Network's USA Cartoon Express block from July 3, 1994 to August 25, 1995.
No backstory was given with the toys for the Lightning League and the Monster Minds doing battle, and so distinct characters were created by DIC and Straczynski to allow for a structured story.
Plot
The series follows protagonists Jayce, Flora, Herc Stormsailor, Oon, and Gillian in their search for Jayce's father Audric. Meanwhile, they are opposing the main antagonist Saw Boss and his followers, the Monster Minds. Audric was a botanist who performed experiments with biotechnology, one experiment creating Flora. In another experiment, Audric attempted to create a plant that could prevent starvation. But when he succeeded, a nearby star exploded into a supernova. The radiation from the supernova's explosion changed the plant and four others into the Monster Minds: a race of plant-like extraterrestrials who wished to conquer the universe. Audric created a root that could destroy the Monster Minds, but was forced to flee before he could complete the task, after which the Monster Minds made Audric's laboratory their headquarters. Audric kept half of the root himself and gave the other half to his servant, the Eternal Squire Oon, whom he sent to serve Jayce. Jayce and his friends are thereafter on a quest to find Audric and form the complete root.
The Movie
Due to less than successful toy sales, the series' 65 episode run was not extended, and the series ended unresolved. However, according to Straczynski, a movie had also been commissioned along with the series, following in the footsteps of other toy-based animated series such as Transformers and G.I. Joe; if the series had proven successful by increasing toy sales, production would have begun. Straczynski wrote the script, but due to the failure of the toyline, preparation for the movie was shelved.
Had the movie been filmed, it would have provided a finale for the series, with Jayce and his Lightning League meeting the original Lightning League and being trained on the home world of the Guardians. Jayce would be reunited with his father Audric, but Audric would have been killed by Saw Boss as the Monster Minds began a final assault on the galaxy, and in a final battle, Jayce would unite the root and destroy Saw Boss, ending the Monster Mind threat forever.
The Lightning League
The Monster Minds
The Lightning League vehicles
Every Lightning League vehicle can be driven by members of the League. They can also operate on pre-programmed battle plans, without drivers, through commands issued on Jayce's communicator. When it talks to the vehicles, they response with a single phase "Command Acknowledged".
The 1st Lightning League AI Ground Vehicles created by Gillian:
The 2nd Lightning League AI Ground Vehicles created by Gillian:
The Lightning League AI Air And Space Vehicles:
The Monster Minds vehicles
Generally, Monster Mind battles are carried out by clones of the main Monster Minds that are grown from vines. Saw Boss is able to communicate with these clones telepathically. These clones are referred to as "troopers"; Saw Trooper, Terror Trooper, K.O. Trooper, etc. The true Monster Minds change from their humanoid forms into vehicles upon leaving their headquarters, although they are significantly larger and more powerful than their mass-produced clones.
The 1st Monster Minds' Ground Legions:
The second Monster Minds' Ground Legions:
The Monster Minds' Air and Space Legions:
The Monster Minds' Network of Legions:
Voice actors
Mattel Wheeled Warriors toys
Originally conceived as a line of toy vehicles with "stack & attack" as a selling point, the tagline was: "Monster Minds gone mad! Lightning League to the rescue!".
The vehicles could be mixed and matched across most of the product line to allow children to create their own combinations. Accessory packs were released with extra wheels and weapons to allow for even more options. A mini comic was included with the toys, but no overarching storyline was established beyond premise of the Monster Minds versus the Lightning League. Characters included with the toys where blank human drivers as pilots of the Lightning League vehicles and green brains for the Monster Minds.
Mattel ordered an animated series to promote the product, but development on this did not start until after the toys had already been produced and sales of the toys had been disappointing. When the animated series premiered, it had a vastly different storyline and, aside from the vehicles and their names, nothing linked the toys to the animated series so the show did little to boost sales.
Due to the success of the animated series, Mattel developed new drivers for a second series of vehicles that more resembled their animated counterparts, as well as new vehicles, but the toys never made it to the shelves.
Home video releases
In France, the entire series was released on two VHS box sets and later released as two DVD boxed sets by Manga Distribution. In 2014, the entire series was re-released as two DVD box sets by IDP Home Video. In America, several compilations were released on VHS in the 1980s by Magic Window, a sub-division of RCA-Columbia Pictures Home Video.
On October 7, 2003, NCircle Entertainment released a single disc release on DVD in Region 1 entitled Escape from the Garden of Evil, which contains four episodes from the series.
On August 9, 2007, Shout! Factory announced that they had acquired the rights to the series and released Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors – Volume 1, a four-disc set containing the first 33 episodes of the series, on March 25, 2008.
On July 22, 2011, Mill Creek Entertainment announced that they had acquired the rights to the series and planned to release it in its entirety. They subsequently released Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors – Volume 1, containing the first 32 episodes of the series, and a 10 episode "best of" collection on DVD in Region 1 on February 21, 2012. Volume 2, featuring the final 33 episodes of the series, was released on February 19, 2013.
Comic
An uncredited, unfinished comic based on the series was published in the French comic magazine Pif Gadget #922. The 13-page adventure ended on a cliffhanger as the next issue did not include the follow-up story and the conclusion to that story was never published in Pif Gadget. It included characters created specifically for the comic, such as a white-haired young sorceress called Algora who was an ally of Saw Boss. The story, entitled "Le Sortilège d'Algora" ("Algora's Spell") was later re-printed and completed in Poche Junior, a free supplement for younger readers in the French television listing magazine Télé Poche, in several installments: Poche Junior #1 (May 1987), Poche Junior #2 (May 1987), Poche Junior #17 (August 1987), Poche Junior n° 23 (October 1987), and Poche Junior n° 25 (October 1987).