

Right away, every single one of us knew that Tommy was going to be the Green Ranger. But over all, the mini-series keeps it moving and keeps you excited. It drags some during Part IV (just how many times can Green Ranger break into the Command Center?), and the ending is a bit…anti-climactic (Green Ranger is good, new Zord combo, the end! No big fight or anything). John really managed to make a very cohesive five part mini-series without drawing it out too long. It certainly can’t have been an easy undertaking, but Glasberg & St. As much as I do like to mock certain aspects of the series, they really did out-do themselves in many ways. It’s with those eyes that I look back on it now and feel some significant admiration for what they actually did in those five episodes. There was a new team member, a new Zord and all sorts of new possibilities for defeating Rita and saving the world. Each day the tension grew and the fear that maybe the Ranger would be beaten, would get stronger and stronger. At the time, the show came on at 5p CST, so I remember being very antsy about the show starting from my arrival home at 3:45. When “The Green Ranger Saga” began in the fall of 1993, I was pretty vested in Power Rangers so the prospect of a five-part mini-series (the equivalent of a feature length film) that promised to be the most epic thing ever was intense.
Mighty morphin power rangers episodes without jason plus#
Reason for Inclusion: Introduction of the Green Ranger/Tommy, plus being a pretty epic 5-part series John, Paul Schrier, Jason Narvy, David Fielding, Richard Steven Horovitz, Richard Genelle, Barbara Goodman

JohnĬast: Amy Jo Johnson, Jason David Frank, David Yost, Walter Jones, Thuy Trang, Austin St. Subsequently, there will no closing commentary for each individual episode beyond the final thoughts. NOTE: This being what I call “The Green Ranger Saga.” The next 6 weeks will focus on this saga alone, five episodes and one big closing post of analysis and thoughts.
